Don’t look up ‘President’ in the ‘Christian Yellow Pages’

Given that he worked with Jerry Falwell to create the Moral Majority a quarter-century ago, conservative commentator Cal Thomas, who remains an outspoken evangelical, would seem to be an unlikely voice on making the presidential election more secular.

And yet, the far-right Republican commentator did just that in his most recent column, insisting that candidates’ faith traditions are utterly irrelevant — and the political world should stop pretending otherwise. (via AU)

In the wake of Mitt Romney’s speech last week on religion in America, Thomas stated his case for ignoring spiritual qualifications for any secular job.

In the 1970s, a curiosity called the “Christian Yellow Pages” made the rounds of churches and certain businesses run by evangelicals. It contained names of professions one finds in the regular Yellow Pages — plumbers, taxi drivers, auto mechanics, dry cleaners — except these were owned and operated by certified, God-fearing, Bible-believing Christians. The clear implication was that businesses found in the Christian Yellow Pages would do a better job at a better price than the presumed “heathen” who advertised in the bigger yellow book.

I never saw any data that proved a connection between faith in Jesus and the ability to repair a car at a reasonable cost, so I usually went with the shop that did the best job at the lowest price and didn’t bother to ask if the repairman went to church. […]

This election should be more about competence and less about ideology, or even faith. It shouldn’t matter where — or if — a candidate goes to church, but whether he (or she) can run the country well, according to the principles in which the voter believes. And, if those principles include a person of faith, so much the better. God can be the ultimate check and balance on earthly power.

To be sure, Thomas, a Fox News contributor, isn’t exactly moving to the left here. He’s just making the argument that the recent spiritual scrutiny is misguided.

Of course, Thomas is articulating this, not from a secular perspective, but from an evangelical one.

While requiring politicians to express belief in Jesus and the Bible, many evangelical voters ignore Christ’s statements about the source of genuine power. They also conveniently forget what Christ said about how they would be regarded and treated by a world that had rejected Him (and still does as the best-selling atheistic works of Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins attest). Jesus, in whom Mitt Romney said he believed, warned, “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first” (John 15:18) and “If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also” (John 15:20). Those warnings are not the creed of contemporary evangelicals who think persecution is a negative newspaper editorial or a disparaging remark by a skeptic on a cable TV show. Too many contemporary evangelicals want the blessing without obeying their real commander in chief, who said doing things His way would bring real persecution.

I wouldn’t make the argument quite that way, but the sentiment is nevertheless appreciated.

Regrettably, Thomas glides past it, but he helped create the political movement that led to these conditions in the first place. That said, it’s refreshing to see him coming around to offer such a sensible approach.

As someone who participated in the creation of a political movement from the best of motives, who later watched in amazement as it was hijacked by idiots and morons and turned into th exact opposite of what was intended at the beginning, I think Cal Thomas can get at least a partial pass for “helping create” the Moral Majority. He’s at least maintained a consistency over the years that makes this article not all that surprising to anyone who’s kept track of him over the years.

  • Thomas probably just wants Romney to win, and to have that happen he needs the evangelical morons to dial down their anti-Mormonism. As soon as Romney folds and they’re stuck with Huckleberry the Preacher Dolt, Thomas will crank up the Jesus crap. You watch.

  • …it’s refreshing to see [Cal Thomas] coming around…

    But Thomas has only come around out of concern (or preference) that Romney will be the Republican presidential nominee. Like so many in the Christian (so-called) right, Thomas has a tendency to contradict himself as the circumstances demand.

  • Too many contemporary evangelicals want the blessing without obeying their real commander in chief, who said doing things His way would bring real persecution.

    So I guess maybe God likes atheists, who everyone loves to hate?

    Can polygamists use that argument too? Does their persecution mean that they’re doing things God’s way?

    Sorry, I can’t resist shooting fish in a barrel.

  • Chris: “Thomas has only come around out of concern (or preference) that Romney will be the Republican presidential nominee”

    Not necessarily. As Tom Cleaver indicates, Thomas is consistent with the view he spelled out in his 1999 book Blinded by the Might. In a nutshell, he laments the secularization of everything in America except the political process, which he thinks is too religious.

  • Cal Thomas wrote:

    This election should be more about competence and less about ideology, or even faith. It shouldn’t matter where — or if — a candidate goes to church, but whether he (or she) can run the country well, according to the principles in which the voter believes. And, if those principles include a person of faith, so much the better

    They made their bed– now they have to lie in it!

  • Responding to Grumpy’s comment, I’m not specifically familiar with Thomas’ positions and was relying on our experience with Christian commentators from the right and Steve’s comment that “[Thomas] helped create the political movement that led to these conditions in the first place.” I’m wondering where Thomas has stood on prayer in public schools, displays of the ten commandments, Constitutional amendments regarding gay marriage, and choice (among others)??? I’m perfectly willing to be mistaken, but remain skeptical.

  • God as our Commander in Chief? Jeez give me a break. If God is the CiC then Jesus is his wimpy peacenik son that he wants to sent to military school to become a real man.

    Jehovah Codpiece.

  • Another good argument for seperation of Church and State. Coming from a bible thumper no less. Maybe there is hope for this country.

  • Thomas is quoted as saying, “The clear implication was that businesses found in the Christian Yellow Pages would do a better job at a better price than the presumed “heathen” who advertised in the bigger yellow book.”

    This strikes me as disingenous. I think that the implication was that fundementalists and evangelicals would keep the money within the movement. It also reduced the need for contact with non-beleivers. It’s all very cult-like and the cult leaders have always had their eyes on political power and enforcing their agenda on the rest of the populace.

  • Thomas’s views are nuanced, but I think I understand where he draws the line. Thomas does not believe in church/state separation and is pro-life and, IIRC, anti-gay. However, he also thinks that churches corrupt themselves when they become political machines. For example, he regrets that the Moral Majority whipped up anti-gay hysteria for the express purpose of raising money.

  • Given the candidates running for the Republican nomination, how can religion be a factor for the right? None of these guys has anything near an adequate litmus test. So it makes perfect sense for right wing pundits to be telling voters that religion should not be a factor.

  • The clear implication was that businesses found in the Christian Yellow Pages would do a better job at a better price than the presumed “heathen” who advertised in the bigger yellow book.

    Of course, that’s not the ‘clear implication.’ The implication has nothing to do with the quality of work, it is that you don’t want to give your money to Jews, Muslims, atheists, or anybody else who doesn’t believe what you do, quality be damned.

  • Lo, and Ba’al shall be set to running before the righteousness of Jebediah and Noah!!

    HOW does CAL THOMAS deal with the INDISPUTED FACT that SCRIPTURE tells us how to deal with an offer from a Mohamettan to have our windshields cleansed?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?

    “Lo, and if the Philistinite approacheth, look on him with THE LORD as thy staff, and offer unto him 50 sheckles;

    But if he recoil at the sight of the sheckles, offer him 75– but no more.

    This is the word of THE LORD.”

    Philistines, 24-2:1

    Read the Bible before giving us your over-heated opinion, Mr. Thomas!! There is more than enough guidance from the text to guide us on dealing with the non-christians!

  • Dear Cal T,

    I’ve lost the path. Instead of striving to live like Christ, I keep trying to live better than everybody else, competing to be a better Christian than everyone in my path. When someone is a good, sincere Christian living according to Christ’s teachings, instead of loving and respecting them for it, and emulating their dedication, I envy them and try to be better than they are, and find fault. I am so sef-centered and small that I barely ever recognize that there is something really wrong with this, and that this attitude has absolutely nothing to do with the life Christ called us to live. But because my personality is so bad, I don’t even try to change it, I just assume this is the way things are. Also, you know that character, Gollum, in Lord of the Rings? Instead of striving to live like Christ, I am so scared of life that I cling to my Bible and just use it as an excuse to not love others like Christ did and to not ever really think about anything. In fact, I’ve made the Bible more of an excuse and a roadblock in my life that something to help me find Christ- that’s how scared and obsessed I am. Another thing: in my faith, and my faith as it is taught in my church, the failings and sins of blacks and of the poor and compromised are focused on and criticized much more than the sins of the middle class (I belong to a predominantly white + middle class church). So if someone is weak and poor and has a bad upbringing, we treat everything they do as willful, direct dealing with Satan- things like homosexuality, too- and everything a white middle class guy does, like a white minister who steals money from his flock, lies to people, or rapes women, is not so bad. I feel like we are real hypocrites and need to change our ways or we will never find Christ. At least, we will not be morally honest people. What can we do? It is as if our church says that not living like Christ is okay as long as you are baptised in the church. It is as if they care about us giving them dollars to spend on cars more than they care about us living as Christ ordered us all to live.

    -Christian Youth

  • The clear implication was that businesses found in the Christian Yellow Pages would do a better job at a better price than the presumed “heathen” who advertised in the bigger yellow book.

    I’m of two minds about this. Hubby and I do our best to support to support GLBT causes and small businesses. We consider it giving back to the community, because many of this businesses give a certain percentage of their profits to civil rights and HIV/AIDS causes.

    Of course, another reason is the centuries of discrimination we have suffered. The prinicple is the same for those xtians, except for the fact that they were the ones doing the discriminating.

  • It’s almost as if the way modern conservative christianity is practiced in America is a scam- a scheme that claims it can get you to Heaven quick without you really having to try- the churches say that all you have to do is join the church and keep going to church, and make it look like you believe it.

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