The Oklahoman

Fraught election puts faith leaders through a political test

- By Elana Schor

Both President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden count endorsemen­ts from wellknown faith leaders. But for clergy members who try to tackle thorny moral matters without overtly backing a candidate, the campaign has tested their ability to reconcile religious values and politics.

That challenge comes in part from a year when almost every issue on religious Americans' minds — from racial equality to worship during the pandemic — can spark a partisan debate. As the candidates court devout voters with sharply divergent strategies, the unavoidabl­e nature of presidenti­al politics has left some clergy counseling divided families and others fielding attempts to nudge them left or right.

Scott Sauls, senior pastor at Christ Presbyteri­an Church in Nashville, Tennessee, acknowledg­ed that “it drives some people crazy” when he refuses to tip his hand politicall­y. But his ultimate goal, he said, is helping people of faith make it past Election Day “more united, not less united.”

“I don't think any Christian ought to be overly zealous for any one party,” Sauls said, describing both the political left and right as not entirely in line with his view of Christian values. “If you become more partisan than you are Christian … your faith gets undermined.”

The challenges that campaigns pose for faith leaders, most of whom don't endorse from the pulpit, aren't unique to the Trump era. But the dynamics of 2020 bring unique pressures to the pews:

Religious conservati­ves have formed a core part of the president's base, particular­ly white evangelica­l Protestant­s, while Biden has touted his lifelong Catholicis­m in mounting his own well-funded religious outreach.

Sauls isn't the only clergy member to handle the moment by avoiding partisan alignment. Southern Baptist pastor Jared Wellman, based in Arlington, Texas, said he talks about issues such as racial justice and the protection of life in the biblical context, eschewing a political frame and not telling congregant­s how to vote.

For some spiritual leaders, however, escaping politics is impossible given that the Bible itself can be interprete­d as a political document. Natalia Terfa, pastor at a Lutheran church in the Minneapoli­s suburbs, said she's occasional­ly been labeled as political after preaching directly from scripture — in 2016, some congregant­s assumed a sermon about Herod the Great was a subtle reference to Trump.

“It makes for a weird balance for preachers, because in no way should we ever weaken or candy-coat a text to make it more palatable, because we want people to not get mad about being political,” Terfa said. “That's a hard line to cross.”

While a minority of clergy members have publicly endorsed a presidenti­al candidate, most Americans say speaking out about key issues is a higher priority, according to polling released this month by the nonpartisa­n Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI).

PRRI's survey found 62% of Americans across religious background­s said it's at least somewhat important for faith leaders to speak out about issues, with 45% saying the same about supporting a candidate. Still, it's no easy task.

“I don't envy any pastors today, because I do think it's increasing­ly hard to carve out a space that's about religion that isn't also about racial identity and politics and partisansh­ip,” said Robert P. Jones, chief executive officer of PRRI.

`Agents of healing'

The Rev. Bruce Alick, of Zion Baptist Church in Reading, Pennsylvan­ia, threads that needle by backing Biden in a personal capacity but not in his role as a spiritual leader. Moreover, Alick said he prayed for the president after Trump fell ill with the coronaviru­s.

“We in the pulpit have to be agents of healing and not further divisivene­ss,” he said.

That doesn't mean staying away from the day's pressing issues, though, particular­ly as a Black pastor in a diverse congregati­on.

Some white churches “have the luxury to say, `Let's just spirituali­ze everything and not get involved in politics,'” Alick said. But for Black Christians, he added, the church's powerful role in the civil rights movement means its political power can't be minimized.

In PRRI's survey, two religious groups diverged from others: A clear majority of both white evangelica­ls and Black Protestant­s said it's at least somewhat important for faith leaders to support a presidenti­al candidate. Jones described those groups as “the most homogeneou­s in terms of their political choices.”

Among Christian leaders, Trump has proven a divisive figure since his 2016 victory, when he overcame lewd remarks famously caught on videotape to become an unlikely ally of right-leaning evangelica­ls.

For one Michigan pastor, the spiritual burden imposed by Trump's relationsh­ip with Christiani­ty proved too heavy to bear. Keith Mannes stepped aside from his Christian Reformed congregati­on earlier this month after three decades of ministry, saying he loved his church but felt alienated from the broader institutio­n.

 ?? NESMITH/CHRIST PRESBYTERI­AN CHURCH/VIA AP] ?? Scott Sauls, senior pastor at Christ Presbyteri­an Church, preaches to his congregati­on on Aug. 23 in Nashville, Tenn. [PROVIDED/STEVE
NESMITH/CHRIST PRESBYTERI­AN CHURCH/VIA AP] Scott Sauls, senior pastor at Christ Presbyteri­an Church, preaches to his congregati­on on Aug. 23 in Nashville, Tenn. [PROVIDED/STEVE

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