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cbayer

(146,218 posts)
Fri Jul 26, 2013, 02:44 PM Jul 2013

The Rise of the Christian Left in America

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/07/the-rise-of-the-christian-left-in-america/278086/

The religious right has been in decline for years. Can progressives build a new "moral majority"?

JONATHAN MERRITT
JUL 25 2013, 6:00 AM ET


Led by Jerry Falwell (right), the Moral Majority helped elect Ronald Reagan in 1980 and began decades of religious conservative dominance in politics. (Associated Press)

In June 1979, a coalition of conservative religious leaders led by a Jewish Howard Phillips, Catholic Paul Weyrich, and evangelical televangelist Jerry Falwell banded together to wage a political "holy war" against the liberal establishment. They called their organization the "Moral Majority" to signify the large number of social conservatives they believed were being ignored across American culture.

Forming a political action committee, the organization registered 4 million voters in 1980 and purchased $10 million in radio and television ads questioning President Carter's patriotism and Christianity. Its message struck a chord with a large swath of Americans, and their efforts are credited with helping to elect Ronald Reagan. More importantly, the birth of the coalition began of a period of political dominance for the religious conservatives that would span at least three decades.

But according to a new survey by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) in partnership with the Brookings Institution, the religious balance of power is shifting in ways that could make the religious left the new "Moral Majority," figuratively speaking. If current trends persist, religious progressives will soon outnumber religious conservatives, a group that is shrinking with each successive generation, the data show.

PRRI reports that 23 percent of 18- to 33-year-olds are religious progressives, 17 percent are religious conservatives, and 22 percent are nonreligious. By contrast, only 12 percent of 66- to 88-year-olds are religious progressives, while about half are religious conservatives. The survey used a religious-orientation scale that "combines theological, economic, and social outlooks."

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The Rise of the Christian Left in America (Original Post) cbayer Jul 2013 OP
Let's hope not. trotsky Jul 2013 #1

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
1. Let's hope not.
Fri Jul 26, 2013, 02:50 PM
Jul 2013

Basing a political movement on a religious one is a recipe for disaster, no matter where on the political spectrum it's happening.

And please, when you want to hotlink to an image of two monsters, do the rest of us a favor and put a "WARNING: GRAPHIC" in your subject line. Thank Koresh for AdBlock.

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