In his December 3 New York Times column (subscription
required), Nicholas D. Kristof condemned the "fundamentalist"
writings of atheists such as Oxford University professor Richard Dawkins and
author Sam Harris, claiming that "the tone of this Charge of the Atheist
Brigade is often just as intolerant -- and mean" as that of Christian conservatives.
Kristof concluded his column by claiming that "the Christian Right has
largely retreated from the culture wars," adding that he hopes
"that the Atheist Left doesn't revive them." Kristof provided
no support for his assertion. Nor did he explain how it squares with recent actions by Christian conservative leaders.
For example:
- Last
week, Christian church leaders criticized
evangelical pastor and author Rick Warren for inviting Sen. Barack Obama
(D-IL) to speak at an evangelical
AIDS conference because of Obama's support for abortion rights. Rev.
Rob Schenck, president of the National Clergy Council and chairman
of the Evangelical Church Alliance's
Committee on Church and Society, asserted that
"Senator Obama's policies represent the antithesis of biblical ethics
and morality, not to mention supreme American values, " adding that
"as a supporter of abortion, Sen. Obama nullifies the first of all
human rights, the right to life." Conservative radio host and
columnist Kevin McCullough recently asked: "Why
would Warren
marry the moral equivalency of his pulpit -- a sacred place of honor in
evangelical tradition -- to the inhumane, sick and sinister evil that
Obama has worked for as a legislator?"
- The
Times itself recently noted that
Christian Coalition of America (CCA) president-elect Rev. Joel C. Hunter
stepped down because CCA's executive board had "resisted his
[Hunter's] efforts to broaden its agenda to include reducing poverty
and fighting global warming." The Times
noted that Hunter "has gained a reputation as an
evangelical leader seeking to expand the agenda of conservative Christian
activists from issues like abortion and same-sex marriage."
- Religious
conservative groups such as Focus on the Family supported midterm election ballot initiatives attempting
to ban same-sex marriage in eight states, while other groups such as the
Family Research Council criticized the New
Jersey Supreme Court's decision granting same-sex couples the same
legal rights and benefits as married couples.
- The
Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights is conducting a "2006 Christmas Watch,"
noting: "Every December sees its fair share of 'Grinches,' those
retailers, schools, websites, towns and municipalities who refuse to
acknowledge Christmas as part of the 'holiday season.' These
Christmas kill-joys are all around. This Christmas, the Catholic League, Father
Benedict Groeschel, C.F.R. and the other Franciscan Friars of the Renewal have
joined up to put the spotlight on these folks."
&mdash B.A.
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