Title: Mobilizing Religious Interests
1Mobilizing Religious Interests
- Religion can be a particularly potent resource
for political mobilization and participation. - There are at least 120 non-profit organizations
in the US that seek to influence polity
formulations from a religious perspective. These
types of religious groups act much like other
secular interest groups attempting to influence
the policy process. Ex. Christian Coalition of
America http//www.cc.org/ and
http//www.cc.org/about_us
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3Religious Interests and Culture
- Culture (and religion as a potent communicator of
culture) performs 3 primary functions (1) it
offers identity, (2) it prescribes norms, and (3)
it defines boundaries for relationships. - Religion has so much political potential because
it prescribes not only how we as individuals
should live but also suggests the nature of the
just society. - Karl Marx said religion was the opiate of the
masses but religion can be the catalyst for
tremendous societal change.
4Sources of Motivation
- Group identity religion construct collective
identities, which can serve as powerful
motivations for political participation because
group identifications provide cognitive
structures through which the world can be viewed.
- Group status according to Weber, economic status
is partially a function of religion. Since the
beginning of capitalism in Europe, Protestants
have been more successful than Catholics
economically because Protestants embraced
religious values that transformed work from
drudgery into a calling through which glorify
God. While Catholics were viewing poverty as a
sign of grace, Protestants understood material
gain to be an indication of salvation and favour
with God.
5Sources of Motivation Theology
- Religious groups become politically active
because they desire congruence between their
religious perspectives and public policies. - Certain common ways of thinking about religion
may spill over into politics. A conservative
approach to religion may support a conservative
approach to politics. - An emphasis on sinfulness as the essential
condition of humankind seems quite compatible
with a skeptical orientation toward the prospect
of improving conditions through political action.
Similarly, if human pleasures are judged inferior
to spiritual rewards, there is little urgency
about improving material conditions. The liberal
belief in social sin and the dignity of earthly
existence, which contrast sharply with
conservative religious assumptions, spurs efforts
to eradicate structural barriers to justice and
to improve the material conditions of life.
Belief in a warm, caring God who is part of the
world tend to enhance commitment to social
welfare, whereas the image of a cold and
authoritative deity lends support to governments
role in securing order and property.
6Sources of Motivation Theology
- Liberal faith Judaism venerates learning and
charity as major virtues and is relatively silent
about the origin of sin and the prospect of life
and death. That combination of values encourages
optimism about the human condition and a sense of
urgency about the application of reason to human
problems. It seems almost to demand social and
political involvement on behalf of liberal
causes. - Lutheran thought treats humans as creatures of
passion and sin who should not interfere with the
divine plan for the world. Lutherans accept the
world as it is because true happiness for man and
total release from the bondage of sin are not
possible until after death. This is also way
Lutherans have a pronounced economic, social,
racial, and political conservatism.
7Sources of Motivation Institutional Interests
- Institutional interests provide the final source
of motivation for the political engagement of
religious faith. Denominations, faith-oriented
communions and associations, individual churches
and synagogues, interest groups, religious
schools, religious broadcasters, religious social
service providers, and charitable organizations
all have a stake in particular public policies
and may attempt to mobilize constituents in
support of their causes. While ostensibly acting
on behalf of the public good, all are
simultaneously institutions with a more narrow
economic and ideological interests as well.
8Establishing Means the role of Elites
- The discontent must be framed and organized in a
manner that supports political activity. It makes
sense to think of grievances as latencies, tools
that are available for exploitation by strong or
aspiring leadership (clergy and leaders of
organized interest groups). People may hold their
pastors ideas in particular esteem and give his
or her issue positions more credibility than
positions they hear through some other medium.
Ministers views not only inform their own
activity they can shape the perspectives of
their congregations.
9Establishing Means Clergy as Political Leaders
- Clergy might send political messages. Ministers
views not only inform their own activity they
can shape the perspectives of their
congregations. They are by definition opinion
leaders. They think ideologically, can
communicate their positions through religious
culture, have access to institutional resources,
and have an audience who voluntarily comes to
hear what they have to say. Ex. Civil Rights
movement and Martin Luther King
Martin Luther King, Jr. 1929-1968 Baptist
Minister In 1963 March on Washington he delivered
his Have a Dream speech. In 1964 receive the
Nobel Peace Prize.
10Establishing Means Religious Activists
- Another major set of opinion leaders in the
religious community are activists in religiously
based organizations or interest groups. While
clergy may episodically focus on politics, their
essential responsibility is to meet and care for
the spiritual needs of their congregations.
However, the primary orientation of religiously
based activists is centered on public policy. - Religious activists have long used the secular
media and religiously oriented media to
communicate their perspective and to
differentiate themselves from other subcultures
in society (Ex. Pat Robertson http//www.cbn.com/
and http//www.patrobertson.com/ )
11Establishing Means Community Activists
- Community activists are harnessing the potential
of religious faith to organize people to address
the material realities of their lives. Working
through congregations, these organizers use
religious practices, worldview, and culture to
address the concerns of their communities. - Elites use religious culture to frame and
contextualize grievances (deriving from
structural inequality) and employ religious
resources to organize and strengthen in
individual resolve to do something about them.