| |
African-American
churches
urge
flock
don't
vote in
Nov.
By
RACHEL
ZOLL
AP
Religion
Writer
Some
black
clergy
see no
good
presidential
choice
between
a Mormon
candidate
and one
who
supports
gay
marriage,
so they
are
telling
their
flocks
to stay
home on
Election
Day.
That's a
worrisome
message
for the
nation's
first
African-American
president,
who
can't
afford
to lose
any
voters
from his
base in
a tight
race.
The
pastors
say
their
congregants
are
asking
how a
true
Christian
could
back
same-sex
marriage,
as
President
Barack
Obama
did in
May. As
for
Republican
Mitt
Romney,
the
first
Mormon
nominee
from a
major
party,
congregants
are
questioning
the
theology
of the
Church
of Jesus
Christ
of
Latter-day
Saints
and its
former
ban on
men of
African
descent
in the
priesthood.
In 2008,
Obama
won 95
percent
of black
voters
and is
likely
to get
an
overwhelming
majority
again.
But any
loss of
votes
would
sting.
"When
President
Obama
made the
public
statement
on gay
marriage,
I think
it put a
question
in our
minds as
to what
direction
he's
taking
the
nation,"
said the
Rev. A.R.
Bernard,
founder
of the
predominantly
African-American
Christian
Cultural
Center
in New
York.
Bernard,
whose
endorsement
is much
sought-after
in New
York and
beyond,
voted
for
Obama in
2008. He
said
he's
unsure
how
he'll
vote
this
year.
It's
unclear
just how
widespread
the
sentiment
is that
African-American
Christians
would be
better
off not
voting
at all.
Many
pastors
have
said
that
despite
their
misgivings
about
the
candidates,
blacks
have
fought
too hard
for the
vote to
ever
stay
away
from the
polls.
Black
church
leaders
have
begun
get-out-the-vote
efforts
on a
wide
range of
issues,
including
the
proliferation
of state
voter
identification
laws,
which
critics
say
discriminate
against
minorities.
Last
Easter
Sunday,
a month
before
Obama's
gay
marriage
announcement,
the Rev.
Jamal-Harrison
Bryant
of
Baltimore
formed
the
Empowerment
Network,
a
national
coalition
of about
30
denominations
working
to
register
congregants
and
provide
them
with
background
on
health
care,
the
economy,
education
and
other
policy
issues.
Yet,
Bryant
last
month
told The
Washington
Informer,
an
African-American
newsweekly,
"This is
the
first
time in
black
church
history
that I'm
aware of
that
black
pastors
have
encouraged
their
parishioners
not to
vote."
Bryant,
who
opposes
gay
marriage,
said the
president's
position
on
marriage
is "at
the
heart"
of the
problem.
Bryant
was
traveling
and
could
not be
reached
for
additional
comment,
his
spokeswoman
said.
The
circumstances
of the
2012
campaign
have led
to
complex
conversations
about
faith,
politics
and
voting.
The Rev.
George
Nelson
Jr.,
senior
pastor
of Grace
Fellowship
Baptist
Church
in
Brenham,
Texas,
participated
in a
conference
call
with
other
African-American
pastors
the day
after
Obama's
announcement
during
which
the
ministers
resolved
to
oppose
gay
marriage.
Nelson
said
Obama's
statement
had
caused a
"storm"
in the
African-American
community.
Still,
he said
"I would
never
vote for
a man
like
Romney,"
because
Nelson
has been
taught
in the
Southern
Baptist
Convention
that
Mormonism
is a
cult.
As
recently
as the
2008 GOP
primaries,
the
SBC's
Baptist
Press
ran
articles
calling
the LDS
church a
cult.
This
year,
however,
prominent
Southern
Baptists
have
discouraged
use of
the term
when
addressing
theological
differences
with
Mormonism.
Many
Southern
Baptist
leaders
have
emphasized
there
are no
religious
obstacles
to
voting
for a
Mormon.
Nelson
planned
to vote
and has
told
others
to do
the
same. He
declined
to say
which
candidate
he would
support.
"Because
of those
that
made
sacrifices
in days
gone by
and some
greater
than
others
with
their
lives.
It would
be
totally
foolish
for me
to
mention
staying
away
from the
polls,"
he said
in an
email
exchange.
Romney
has
pledged
to
uphold
conservative
positions
on
social
issues,
including
opposing
abortion
and gay
marriage.
But many
black
pastors
worry
about
his
Mormon
beliefs.
Christians
generally
do not
see
Mormonism
as part
of
historic
Christianity,
although
Mormons
do.
African-Americans
generally
still
view the
church
as
racist.
When LDS
leaders
lifted
the ban
on
blacks
in the
priesthood
in 1978,
church
authorities
never
said
why. The
Mormon
community
has
grown
more
diverse,
and the
church
has
repeatedly
condemned
racism.
However,
while
most
Christian
denominations
have
publicly
repented
for past
discrimination,
Latter-day
Saints
never
formally
apologized.
Bernard
is among
the
traditional
Christians
who
voted
for
Obama in
2008 and
are now
undecided
because
of the
president's
support
for gay
marriage.
But
Bernard
is also
troubled
by
Romney's
faith.
"To say
you have
a value
for
human
life and
exclude
African-American
human
life,
that's
problematic,"
Bernard
said,
about
the
priesthood
ban.
"How can
I judge
the
degree
to which
candidate
Romney
is going
to allow
his
Mormonism
to
influence
his
policies?
I don't
know. I
can't."
Romney
said in
a 2007
speech
that LDS
authorities
would
have no
influence
on his
policies
as
president.
He also
said he
wept
when he
learned
that the
priesthood
ban had
been
abolished
because
he was
anxious
for it
to be
lifted.
But that
has done
little
to
change
perceptions
among
African-Americans
and
others.
"Obama
was
supposed
to
answer
for the
things
that
Rev.
Wright
said,"
said the
Rev.
Floyd
James of
the
Greater
Rock
Missionary
Baptist
Church
in
Chicago,
at a
recent
meeting
of the
historically
black
National
Baptist
Convention.
"Yet
here's a
guy
(Romney)
who was
a leader
in his
own
church
that has
that
kind of
history,
and he
isn't
held to
some
kind of
account?
I have a
problem
with
that."
Obama
broke in
2008
with his
longtime
Chicago
pastor,
Jeremiah
Wright,
after
videos
of his
incendiary
sermons
were
broadcast.
Many
Democrats
and
Republicans
have
argued
that
Romney's
faith
should
be off
limits.
The Rev.
Derrick
Harkins,
faith
outreach
director
for the
Democratic
National
Committee,
travels
around
the
country
speaking
to
African-American
pastors
and
other
clergy.
He said
concerns
over gay
marriage
have
receded
as other
issues
take
precedence,
and no
pastors
have
raised
Mormonism
in their
conversations
with him
about
the two
candidates.
"There's
just no
space in
this
campaign
for
casting
aspersions
on
anyone's
faith,"
Harkins
said in
a phone
interview.
"It's
not
morally
upright.
It's not
ethically
appropriate."
The Rev.
Howard-John
Wesley,
who
leads
the
Alfred
Street
Baptist
Church
in
Alexandria,
Va.,
said he
is
telling
his
congregants,
"Let's
not make
the
election
a
decision
about
someone's
salvation."
Last
spring,
when it
became
clear
that
Romney
would be
the GOP
nominee,
congregants
starting
asking
about
Mormonism,
so
Wesley
organized
a class
on the
faith.
He said
congregants
ultimately
decided
that "we
could
not put
Mormons
under
the
boundaries
of
orthodox
Christianity."
But
Wesley
said, "I
don't
want
Gov.
Romney
to have
to
defend
the
Mormon
church,
the way
President
Obama
had to
defend
Jeremiah
Wright."
Wesley,
whose
congregation
has more
than
5,000
members,
said he
will be
voting
for
Obama.
The Rev.
Lin
Hill, an
associate
pastor
of
Bethany
Baptist
Church
in
Chesapeake,
Va.,
said in
a phone
interview
that he
plans to
travel
with
other
local
pastors
to about
50
congregations
over two
weeks to
hold
discussions
and
distribute
voter
guides
that
will
include
a
contrast
between
historic
Christianity
and
Mormonism,
and
educate
congregants
about
the
former
priesthood
ban.
Hill is
active
in his
local
Democratic
Party
but said
he's
acting
independently
of the
campaign.
He said
Mormon
theology
becomes
relevant
when
congregants
argue
that
they
can't
vote for
Obama
because,
as a
Christian,
he
should
have
opposed
gay
marriage.
"If
you're
going to
take a
tenet of
a
religion
and let
that
dissuade
you from
voting,
then we
have
to,"
discuss
Mormon
doctrine,
Hill
said.
"We want
folks to
have a
balanced
view of
both
parties,
but we
can't do
that
without
the
facts."
The Rev.
Dwight
McKissic,
a
prominent
Southern
Baptist
and
black
preacher,
describes
himself
as a
political
independent
who
didn't
support
Obama in
2008
because
of his
position
on
social
issues.
McKissic
said
Obama's
support
for
same-gender
marriage
"betrayed
the
Bible
and the
black
church."
Around
the same
time,
McKissic
was
researching
Mormonism
for a
sermon
and
decided
to
propose
a
resolution
to the
annual
Southern
Baptist
Convention
that
would
have
condemned
Mormon
"racist
teachings."
McKissic's
Mormon
resolution
failed. |