The Macomb Daily

WHAT LIES AHEAD? LGBTQ RIGHTS

After turbulent 2020, faith in U.S. faces more big issues in 2021

- By David Crary and Elana Schor

For many religious denominati­ons in the United States, there were two shared preoccupat­ions in 2020 beyond the usual matters of faith: How to cope with the coronaviru­s pandemic and how to respond to tumultuous political events. With Joe Biden replacing Donald

Trump as president, and with vaccines eventually expected to ease the threat of COVID-19, the challenges for faith leaders in 2021 will shift. Here’s a look at some important storylines to keep an eye on in the coming year for religion in the country.

RACIAL JUSTICE

During nationwide protests, leaders from many religious traditions spoke out to support the peaceful goals of demonstrat­ors. But in the months since, some segments — particular­ly within Christiani­ty — have taken notably different approaches. Leaders of the six seminaries within the Southern Baptist Convention released a statement in November decrying critical race theory, a broad term often used to describe critiques of societal racism, as “incompatib­le with” central tenets of the faith. Meanwhile, members of other Christian denominati­ons, including Episcopali­ans and United Methodists, are exploring reparation­s to African Americans in greater depth.

CATHOLICS AND THE PRESIDENT

Biden will be just the second Roman Catholic president in U.S. history, after John F. Kennedy. But he has been viewed cautiously by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops over his support for abortion rights. Some argue Biden should be barred from partaking in Holy Communion, and the bishops conference has formed a working group to study how to deal with him. However, there has been a relatively positive response from Cardinal Wilton Gregory, the archbishop of Washington. He says he won’t prevent Biden from receiving Communion and looks forward to cooperatin­g on social issues where the president-elect’s views mesh with church teaching.

WHITE HOUSE FAITH OFFICE

Trump built close ties to conservati­ve evangelica­ls even before his 2016 election, but he didn’t establish a formal White House faith operation until more than a year after his inaugurati­on. His Faith and Opportunit­y Initiative has been led by Florida-based televangel­ist Paula White, a longtime spiritual adviser to Trump who later campaigned for his reelection. While it’s not yet clear how Biden will set up and staff his own White House faith office, his choices will shape his administra­tion’s approach to religious outreach. A recent report by the nonpartisa­n Brookings Institutio­n recommende­d focusing on helping the needy by forming religious and nonreligio­us alliances, rather than elevating specific faith-based groups.

MUSLIM AMERICANS’ GOALS

Muslim American groups have lauded Biden’s plans to end Trump’s curbs on travel from several majority-Muslim nations. And after that, the nation’s diverse Muslim communitie­s have other hopes for his administra­tion. Refugee admissions to the U.S. have plummeted, with a screening system led by several faith-based groups brought to a near halt as Trump slashed the annual refugee ceiling. Biden has pledged to raise it and to build a diverse administra­tion that includes Muslim American voices.

SOUTHERN BAPTISTS

The Southern Baptist Convention, the country’s largest Protestant denominati­on. plans a national meeting in June after canceling it in 2020 due to COVID-19. A new SBC president will be elected at the meeting. For now the only declared candidate is the Rev. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary. He was critical of Trump in 2016 but gradually became a supporter as the president appointed conservati­ve judges and advocated for religious liberty. Mohler is now warning that Biden’s administra­tion will dismay many Southern Baptists with initiative­s bolstering abortion rights and LGBTQ rights.

Under Trump there have been some rollbacks in civil rights protection­s for LGBTQ people that Biden is vowing to restore and expand. But that may prove complicate­d if Republican lawmakers and the Supreme Court, now with a solid conservati­ve majority, endorse the arguments of religious conservati­ves that some of those protection­s infringe on religious liberty. One example: a pending Supreme Court case in which a Catholic social services agency says it should be able to turn away same-sex couples who want to be foster parents, while still receiving local government funding. Religious conservati­ves also vow to oppose efforts by Democrats in Congress to pass the Equality Act, which would extend nationwide the comprehens­ive anti-bias protection­s already afforded to LGBTQ people in 21 mostly Democratic-governed states, covering such sectors as housing, public accommodat­ions and public services.

DISUNITED METHODISTS

The pandemic also forced the United Methodist Church to cancel a potentiall­y momentous national meeting last May that’s now reschedule­d for late August. The same topic will dominate the agenda: Whether America’s largest mainline Protestant denominati­on will split due to difference­s over inclusion of LGBTQ people. Many congregati­ons want to fully recognize same-sex marriage and ordain LGBTQ people as ministers, while conservati­ves want to maintain longstandi­ng but sporadical­ly enforced bans. Under one proposal, conservati­ve congregati­ons and regional bodies would be allowed to separate and form a new denominati­on while receiving $25 million in UMC funds and keeping their properties.

THE CORONAVIRU­S

Even amid a mass vaccine distributi­on effort, religious communitie­s will continue to wrestle with the pandemic’s impact on in-person worship. Religious liberty advocates, particular­ly conservati­ve ones, have criticized state and local restrictio­ns as improperly hindering worship more than secular activities like shopping or dining. Other clerical leaders have embraced online services, saying keeping people safe should take precedence over traditions. Biden illustrate­d the thorniness of the debate recently when he gave a short answer to a question about Americans’ ability to worship during the pandemic: That it should happen “safely.”

 ?? MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Sunday, Aug. 2, 2020 file photo, a storm cloud approaches the Mequon Untited Methodist Church in Mequon, Wis. The coronaviru­s pandemic forced the United Methodist Church to cancel a potentiall­y momentous national meeting last May that’s now reschedule­d for late August 2021.
MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Sunday, Aug. 2, 2020 file photo, a storm cloud approaches the Mequon Untited Methodist Church in Mequon, Wis. The coronaviru­s pandemic forced the United Methodist Church to cancel a potentiall­y momentous national meeting last May that’s now reschedule­d for late August 2021.
 ??  ?? Trump
Trump
 ??  ?? Biden
Biden

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States