Give us the faith-based details

orwellIn his famous essay “Politics and the English Language,” George Orwell criticized modern writers for all manners of sins, not the least of which were a lack of detail and specificity. He cited a well-known verse from Ecclesiastes: “I returned and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong …” Then he translated it in modern English: “Objective consideration of temporary phenomena compels the conclusion …”

Though written more than 60 years ago, Orwell’s passage is still relevant today. Take the major print coverage of Barack Obama’s faith-based announcement yesterday.

Most of the stories focused on the right topic: the program’s hiring and firing provisions. But their descriptions were almost as general and opaque as Orwell’s second passage.

The New York Times
, as Daniel noted, gave readers the most information about Obama’s plan. Yet reporters Jeff Zeleny and Michael Luo described the controversial provision in only the haziest of terms:

Mr. Obama’s plan pointedly departed from the Bush administration’s stance on one fundamental issue: whether religious organizations that get federal money for social services can take faith into account in their hiring. Mr. Bush has said yes. Mr. Obama said no.

“If you get a federal grant, you can’t use that grant money to proselytize to the people you help and you can’t discriminate against them — or against the people you hire — on the basis of their religion,” Mr. Obama said. “Federal dollars that go directly to churches, temples and mosques can only be used on secular programs.”

So, too, did Jennifer Loven of the Associated Press:

Obama’s support for letting religious charities that receive federal funding consider religion in employment decisions was likely to invite a storm of protest from those who view such faith requirements as discrimination.

Only Jonathan Weisman of The Washington Post filled readers in on the details, if partially:

Those aides said an Obama administration would get tough on groups that discriminate in hiring practices and doling out assistance. The groups would have to abide by federal hiring laws that reject discrimination based on race, sex and religion. Obama said he supports federal legislation that would extend those protections to gay people as well, a flash point with some religious organizations that say hiring or assisting gays would run counter to their beliefs.

Except for Weisman’s passage, those of the NYTimes and AP, as well as The Politico, were vague. An otherwise informed reader would wonder what’s the fuss all about. Little would the reader know that Obama’s plan is a big deal: An orthodox Jewish group would have to consider hiring gay Catholics, while a liberal Lutheran organization would need to consider bringing on board conservative Muslims.

In other words, while religious groups can receive federal funds to help the needy, they cannot do so to pick their own co-religionists. Was this not the policy in place before President Bush? If so, the reporters mischaracterized Obama’s plan as an expansion of Bush’s program. In fact, Obama’s plan would all but rescind it.

Another major deficiency in the coverage is a lack of specificity about how Obama would prevent religious groups from discriminating against employees. Does he propose adding an office to the Justice Department?

These stories suggest that God is indeed in the details. They also suggest that You Know What exists in their absence.

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  • http://none janet hammond

    “An orthodox Jewish group would have to consider hiring gay Catholics, while a liberal Lutheran organization would need to consider bringing on board conservative Muslims.”

    And how God, and all of Heaven, would rejoice that each of HIS “worshipers” had finally learned His love for each of us! For the religious tasks, they could be discriminating and proceed without federal funds. But to do His true work, everyone, including the government, would pitch in together. That really would give “you know who” a run for his money. Obama’s got my vote :o )

  • Julie

    Janet Hammond

    Great response!

  • Belden

    Which religions are we talking about?

    Obama said he supports federal legislation that would extend those protections to gay people as well, a flash point with some religious organizations that say hiring or assisting gays would run counter to their beliefs.

    I know of no faith or creed whose central tenets that prohibit giving a job or “assistance” to a gay person. This is paticularly true of Christianity.

    And, right on Janet Hammond.

  • Jerry

    Another major deficiency in the coverage is a lack of specificity about how Obama would prevent religious groups from discriminating against employees.

    You’re criticizing a set of guiding principles because it is not a full legal proposal. If you’re really serious, then you should be asking the same question for every proposal of any candidate for any office. Methinks I’m hearing the sound of an axe being ground.

    In other words, while religious groups can receive federal funds to help the needy, they cannot do so to pick their own co-religionists

    That is not, in fact, his proposal. Reporting 101: I went to Obama’s web site and looked for what he said. They pointed at THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH article which said:

    • They would not be allowed to use federal funds to proselytize or provide religious sectarian instruction.

    • They could not discriminate against nonmembers of their church or religion, but must remain open to all and cannot practice religious discrimination against populations they serve.

    • Religious organizations that receive federal dollars could not discriminate with respect to hiring for government-funded social service programs.

    • Taxpayer dollars could only be used on secular programs and initiatives.

    Obama supported some ability to allow religious charities that receive federal funding to hire and fire based on faith. But such religious institutions only could hire and fire based on faith in the non-taxpayer funded programs and services they provide.

    In other words, if you take federal money there are strings attached including running the program using secular principles. A religious organization is free to use non-federal money in any way they wish. If a group disagrees with this, they’re perfectly free to not ask for federal funds.

  • Dave

    In fact, Obama’s plan would all but rescind [Bush's plan].

    Mark, this “fact” is not evident at all. It’s more accurate to say that Obama’s plan would put Bush’s plan on a sound constitutional basis for the first time.

  • Roxanna

    So can someone tell me how many millions of dollars will be spent ensuring that these funds are not used incorrectly or what a religious institution is (I just started my own religion today)?
    Religion and the United States Government must not intermingle.
    It’s in the constitution.
    Raise your own money and build smaller and less opulent houses of worship. Don’t use my tax dollars.

  • Daniel

    Mr. Bush has said yes. Mr. Obama said no.

    How can that possibly be described as “the haziest of terms”?

  • FW Ken

    I’m confused by the Jennifer Loven quote. Senator Obama is, or isn’t, supporting faith-based organizations having control of hiring requirements? I can’t imagine that he would allow a penny of tax money be given to an organization that refused to hire legally protected groups.

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  • danr

    For the religious tasks, they could be discriminating and proceed without federal funds. But to do His true work, everyone, including the government, would pitch in together.

    Janet, your comment illuminates part of the issue – you arbitrarily consider His “true work” to be non-religious (secular). You have a right to that belief, but others who are part of religious ministries doing some work of a secular nature – but from a religious motive – consider it a religious non-negotiable to ally themselves in the same ministry with those who clearly don’t adhere to even the basic foundational tenets of their respective religious beliefs.

    What’s unconstitutional is for the state to establish a religion. By being ecumenical and supporting Christian, Jewish, Muslim ministries etc, it’s been argued that the current initiative did not cross constitutional boundaries. To the contrary, it proposed to prevent unnecessary religious discrimination by not blocking ministries from competing equally for tax dollars for doing good civic works – which at least some are proven to do efficiently and effectively.

    Obama seems once again to have couched a liberal position in religious tones – “You can have your religious ministry with government funding! (simply stifle any and every religious distinction that dictates whom you might work with).” Though I would not judge the man, his rhetoric in this instance comes across convenient, spurious, and political. But tis the season.

    Raise your own money and build smaller and less opulent houses of worship.

    Roxanna, many churches (including my own) operate on a shoestring budget, meeting in a rented basement and still doing good works. You may find another religious strawman to beat down.

  • Claude

    The whole point of charity is to give something of your own to help someone else. To be charitable with someone else’s money is not charity at all. Let the government do its work with taxpayer funds. Let Churches do their work with their own money.

  • danr

    Fine Claude, but I hope you’re consistent with your dichotomy between government and charity. That is, you think government shouldn’t use tax dollars to fund either church-based charities OR secular ones.

  • Stan

    An excellent example of faith groups forming a Consortium and government partnership that provided outstanding assistance during Katrina. The power of collaborating leveraged the already existing network. 100% of taxpayer dollars went to help the victims.

    The church put FEMA to shape, resulting in government funding being managed by the church, which has a large network of experts across the country.

    United Methodist Committee on Relief, (UMCOR), the humanitarian relief and development agency of the United Methodist Church, manages the Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA sponsored program. Nine national partners and sixteen grassroots organizations—experts in availability of benefits, resources and services—deliver assistance to 300,000 of the most vulnerable survivors in communities across America.

    Consortium agencies are working from offices in 31 states utilizing case managers to assist people that have been affected by the storm. In addition to the $66 million grant funds from FEMA, donated by foreign governments, consortium members have also committed an estimated $35 million ($5 million from UMCOR) including in-kind contributions totaling $101 million for long term recovery.

    UMCOR raised $64.5 million for hurricane relief, causing Newsweek magazine to rank the agency sixth in a survey of “Big Names in Katrina Relief.”

    UMCOR is a United Way organization that is listed as having 3% administrative cost, which is extremely low.

    http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/
    http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/newsroom/releases/archives08/katrinaaidtoday/

  • Claude

    As I recall, several church workers have gone to prison for stealing government funds directed to aid Katrina victims, so I seriously doubt that 100% of taxpayer dollars went to aid the victims. Or did they only steal money donated by citizens?

    Of course, church charities should aid people. But they should do so with their own money. Otherwise, they are just administering government programs.

    Government assistance should be secular. The government has no business funding religion and churches have no business running government.

  • FW Ken

    Stan –

    You make a good point. Public/private partnerships are an excellent way of doing many things, disaster relief chief among them. That is true whether the private entity is religious or not. Moreover, I work for a public agency (state) that has a lot of interaction with private, faith-based entities. It’s an excellent deal for all, but I’ve come to the conclusion that taking the whole thing beyond the local level creates serious philosophical and constitutional issues.

    It should be clear that disaster relief and social services – drug treatment, for example – are very different matters. The Texas Baptist Men, a local Southern Baptist group, have all their disaster relief gear in place and are ready to go to any site they might be needed. They were even trying to get into Myanmar this year. They can do that without religious content to what they do (although I doubt they accept government money). However, were they to get into prisoner re-entry services, the effectiveness of that ministry would depend on their spiritual witness, and that can’t be funded by the government. Feeding the hungry after a hurricane is different than feeding homeless people; the latter require a spiritual outreach, or you are just enabling.

    Finally, if you really want to see the corrosive effects of government money on Christian witness, I refer you to Catholic Charities.

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