Al Gore's announcement that Orthodox Jew and U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman will be his running mate has religion writers working overtime. The New York Times focuses on the reaction among conservative evangelicals, quoting Jerry Falwell as saying, "I think the vice president made an excellent choice." Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, tells the paper, "American evangelicals respect persons of great moral substance and conviction, and we certainly share with Senator Lieberman a great moral heritage to which we are both committed, in terms of the Old Testament -- the Hebrew Scriptures -- and, most essentially, the Ten Commandments." Other things Lieberman shares with many evangelicals is support for school vouchers, action against religious persecution abroad, and a vocal dislike of violent and hypersexual entertainment. But Lieberman is also a supporter of abortion (he voted against a ban on partial-birth abortion) and gay rights. So, notes the paper, he's unlikely to sway many evangelicals to the Gore ticket. As Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, tells
The Charlotte Observer, "It has more to do with position on the issues than one's particular personal faith." New York Post columnist Rod Dreher, in a piece for
Beliefnet (which differs from his
NY Post column) comes to the same conclusion: "They may sincerely wish mazel tov to Joe Lieberman, a morally serious man and a sometime ally. But vote for him? What are you, meshuga?" (Other Beliefnet articles on Lieberman are available
here.) Almost every major paper in the country has an article explicitly on Lieberman's faith. Here are a few by
USA Today,
The Washington Post (also
here),
The [Baltimore] Sun,
Associated Press (also
here),
Chicago Tribune, and
The Washington Times.
They all went down to Amsterdam
As many of you know, ChristianityToday.com Weblog hasn't appeared for the last week or so because the author of the feature has been in Amsterdam covering the Amsterdam 2000 conference for preaching evangelists (see the latest article
here). Still, we missed some other excellent media coverage. Here are a few:
The president will attend Willow Creek Community Church for a
Leadership Summit. The pastor, Bill Hybels, has
advised Clinton in spiritual matters. "The focus will be on leadership and leadership lessons learned," says church spokesman David Staal. The Daily Herald, a suburban Chicago newspaper, says many
Willow Creek members are upset. The
Chicago Tribune also notes the visit.
As Amsterdam 2000 was ending, missionaries, pastors and laity from 158 countries began attending the third triennial World Assemblies of God Congress in Indianapolis. David Yonggi Cho, chairman of the World Assemblies of God Fellowship and pastor of the largest church in the world, will speak today. See more coverage from
The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Ky., and the meeting's
official Web site.