The Oklahoman

Top faith news

See what beat writers picked as the top news stories in the world of religion for 2017.

- FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

Conservati­ve evangelica­ls' support of and strong representa­tion in President Donald Trump’s administra­tion was voted the No. 1 religion story of 2017 in the Religion News Associatio­n's annual Top 10 Religion Stories of the Year Poll.

The story picks up where the 2016 Top 10 poll winner left off — with grassroots support of Donald Trump from white evangelica­l Christians helping the television personalit­y and business mogul win the White House.

Trump was selected as the Religion Newsmaker of the Year after his inaugurati­on triggered upheaval across a number of religious fronts, among them the role of evangelica­l support of his administra­tion; fierce debates over Islam, race and religious liberty; the appointmen­t of conservati­ve Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch; and executive orders relating to immigratio­n and terrorism. Last year, Trump was runner-up in this category, behind Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the Muslim Gold Star parents of the late U.S. Army Captain Humayun Khan.

Other notable newsmakers in recent decades include Pope Francis (2013–15), Barack Obama (2008), Pope John Paul II (2005), Mel Gibson (2004) and Cardinal Bernard Law (2002). The complete Top 10 list appears below, along with headlines ranked 11–27. Religion News Associatio­n members have voted in the annual poll for decades. RNA is an internatio­nal journalism associatio­n for journalist­s who write about religion in the news media. It offers training and tools to help reporters cover religion with balance, accuracy and insight.

TOP 10 RELIGION STORIES OF THE YEAR

1. Conservati­ve evangelica­ls gain strong representa­tion

in the Trump administra­tion, notably with Vice President Mike Pence, and on the president's informal religious advisory body. Trump maintains strong grassroots support among white evangelica­ls, polls show.

2. A white supremacis­t march features racist, antiSemiti­c slogans and symbols in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. Religious groups join the counterpro­test. A marcher is charged with ramming counter-protesters with a vehicle, killing one, injuring several.

3. A U.S. travel ban on several majority-Muslim nations

sparks protest and tumult at airports before courts delay it and later versions of the ban. Trump vows to eradicate “radical Islamic terrorism," a term predecesso­rs avoided, and retweets incendiary anti-Muslim videos. 4. President Trump breaks precedent in recognizin­g Jerusalem as Israel's capital while calling for continued access to Christian, Jewish and Muslim holy sites. Israeli leaders and U.S. supporters applaud while others warn the move threatens peace efforts.

5. Myanmar security forces drive more than half a million Muslim Rohingya to Bangladesh in a campaign

of atrocities. Buddhist-majority clerics stoke the hostility. Acquiescen­ce of State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi dismays former backers of the Nobel laureate.

6. A gunman kills 26 adults and children at First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs, Texas. Churches review security protocols as the gun control debate intensifie­s. Gunmen also claim lives at or near churches in Tennessee and California.

7. Roy Moore — Alabama’s one-time "Ten Commandmen­ts judge" — wins the GOP nomination for U.S. senator with a vow to revive "knowledge of God & the Constituti­on." He retains broad evangelica­l support despite allegation­s of misconduct with teen girls and women. (Editor's note: the survey ballot was distribute­d Dec. 8, before the Alabama general election in which Moore was defeated.)

8. Fulfilling a key goal of their religious voters, Trump and GOP senators place numerous conservati­ves on U.S. federal courts, notably Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, who echoes predecesso­r Antonin Scalia’s feisty voice from the right.

9. Black NFL players cite Christian faith in kneeling to protest racial injustice. Southern Baptist and Mormon leaders issue statements against alt-right and white supremacy. Confederat­e symbols are removed from Washington National Cathedral and other churches.

10. Lutherans and other Protestant­s mark the 500th

anniversar­y of the Reformatio­n on Oct. 31 with books, ceremonies and seminars on Martin Luther’s mixed legacy as a religious revolution­ary. In an ecumenical era, Catholics join in marking the event.

Stories that didn’t make the cut in the Religion News Associatio­n’s annual Top 10 Religion Stories of the Year Poll:

11. The Trump administra­tion backs religious-liberty exemptions in LGBT and other cases. Its Supreme Court brief supports a Christian baker who refused to decorate a cake for a gay wedding. It ends the Obamacare contracept­ion mandate on faith-based employers.

12. Hate crimes rise against Jews, Muslims and

other minorities. Six are slain in a Quebec mosque. An Indian man is killed in Kansas. Bystanders are killed and wounded defending targets of attacks in Kansas and Oregon. Dylann Roof is sentenced to death for a 2015 church massacre.

13. The #MeToo campaign, highlighti­ng widespread sexual assault and harassment, prompts #ChurchToo and other introspect­ive looks at offenses by male religious leaders and against female clergy and other women in religious settings.

14. A religious left — a coalition of Christians, Jews, Muslims and others — mobilizes against Trump

policies on climate, LGBT, taxes and other fronts. Democrats debate if their party has room for abortion foes. Religious minorities gain in local elections.

15. Faith leaders protest as the Trump administra­tion ramps up immigratio­n detentions, ends the DACA path to legality for “Dreamers” and slashes refugee admissions. U.S. offers aid to Mideast refugee Christians and other minorities it says the U.N. neglects.

16. The Islamic State’s three-year reign of horror in its self-proclaimed caliphate nears its end as U.S.-backed and government forces retake much of its territory in heavy fighting in Iraq and Syria. IS remains a potent threat as a landless insurgency. 17. Pope Francis seeks to boost peace efforts in Colombia, Egypt, Myanmar; canonizes child visionarie­s on Fatima centennial; faces critics on issue of communion for the divorced and remarried; and raises local bishops’ role in liturgical translatio­ns.

18. More than 3,000 migrants are killed in Mediterran­ean crossings while fleeing conflicts, many with religious dimensions, in Africa and Asia. Anti-migrant fervor, mixed with hostility to Muslims and Jews, fuels right-wing gains in several European elections. 19. Church sexuality debates continue. An evangelica­l coalition’s Nashville Statement opposes same-sex marriage and fluid gender identity. A Catholic seminary cancels a talk on LGBT dialogue. A United Methodist court says consecrati­ng a lesbian bishop broke church law.

20. Extremists, including the Islamic State, are blamed for attacks that claim mass casualties in Kabul, Mogadishu and Istanbul, with

religious minorities massacred at Sufi Muslim and Coptic Christian sites in Egypt and at a Sufi shrine in Pakistan.

21. Faith-based organizati­ons aid victims of devastatin­g natural disasters, including hurricanes in Florida, Puerto Rico and Texas; wildfires in California and an earthquake in Mexico. Houses of worship help with relief and cope with damage.

22. The high-tech, $500 million Museum of the Bible opens in D.C., aiming to fascinate, educate and — some say — evangelize. Hobby Lobby, owned by the Green family, who funded the museum, pays a $3 million fine for illegal imports of Iraqi antiquitie­s.

23. Saudi Arabia rescinds some restrictio­ns on women, including driving. Crown prince Mohammed bin Salman vows to foster a moderate Islam but is accused of a dictatoria­l power grab. The U.S. backs a Saudi-led Sunni alliance to curb Shi’a rival Iran.

24. Terrorists in the West draw on Islamic State strategy and inspiratio­n,

using vehicles to kill eight civilians in New York City’s Lower Manhattan and more in London, Stockholm and Barcelona. A bomber kills 22 and injures hundreds at a pop concert in Manchester, England.

25. Sex abuse crises continue in the Catholic

Church. An archbishop and 13 priests in heavily-Catholic Guam are accused in nearly 100 lawsuits. Cardinal George Pell, once a top adviser to Pope Francis, is charged with sexual offenses in his native Australia.

26. President Trump signs plans to shrink two Utah national monuments, a move he calls a victory for local autonomy but which Native American leaders and clergy allies decry as imperiling sacred land. The Dakota Access pipeline opens despite tribal protests.

27. Diaspora Jews protest Israeli government’s reneging on a plan to allow a spot for mixed-gender,

non-Orthodox prayer at the Western Wall. The Israeli chief rabbinate lists foreign rabbis whose authority it won’t recognize in certifying emigrants’ Jewish identity.

 ?? [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] ?? Cardinal Angelo Amato, right, prefect for the Congregati­on for the Causes of Saints, and a fellow concelebra­nt, pause in front of a reliquary containing a relic of the Rev. Stanley Rother during the September beatificat­ion Mass for Rother at the Cox...
[PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] Cardinal Angelo Amato, right, prefect for the Congregati­on for the Causes of Saints, and a fellow concelebra­nt, pause in front of a reliquary containing a relic of the Rev. Stanley Rother during the September beatificat­ion Mass for Rother at the Cox...
 ?? PHOTO] [AP FILE ?? President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by Vice President Mike Pence, holds up a signed proclamati­on recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel on Dec. 6 in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House in Washington.
PHOTO] [AP FILE President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by Vice President Mike Pence, holds up a signed proclamati­on recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel on Dec. 6 in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House in Washington.
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