Faith and Politics: How the "Moral Values" Debate Divides America and How to Move Forward Together by Senator John Danforth (Viking) As a former three-term Republican U.S. senator from Missouri and an ordained Episcopal priest, John C. Danforth has watched the changes in his party and the church with growing alarm. After penning two op-eds for The New York Times criticizing the right for its focus on wedge issues—abortion, stem-cell research, gay marriage, the Schiavo case, the public display of religion—that drive people apart, he speaks out again to call for a change.
“The Republican Party has been taken over by something that it’s not,” Danforth says. “People do not want a sectarian political party, including a lot of people who are traditional Republicans.” In Faith and Politics, Danforth provides suggestions for moving toward a more secular Republican party that inspires trust in the people of the United States. Based on years of hard- won political experience and a life of religious service, he calls for Christians to look to the Bible and Christian teachings for ways in which they can practice their faith day to day and turn the country’s focus to a common ground once more.
As a respected former senator, special envoy for peace in Sudan, priest, as an author, Senator Danforth is uniquely qualified to call for the change we so desperately need. He writes openly about his political life and ambition, humbly about his achievements, and above all with clarity and reason that both Republicans and Democrats hear all too little of.
From Publishers Weekly:
Danforth, a Missouri Republican as well as a lawyer and Episcopal minister,
tended to avoid nasty partisan politics during his three terms in the U.S.
Senate (with the notable exception of his defense of his protégé Clarence Thomas
during U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings). After voluntarily retiring
from the Senate in 1995, Danforth accepted appointments by White House
Republicans, including ambassador to the United Nations and envoy for peace in
Sudan. But the partisanship of President George W. Bush, a variety of other
Republicans and quite a few Democrats has now led Danforth to urge political
rivals to pull together to strengthen the United States, so the nation can in
turn promote world peace. Danforth oozes sincerity and good sense as he
excoriates "Christian conservatives" (naming James Dobson, Jerry Falwell, Ralph
Reed and Pat Robertson, among others) for corrupting religious doctrine on
reproduction and marriage and inappropriately inserting it in government.
Conceding that he's an imperfect human being who sometimes failed as a student,
husband, father, lawyer, minister and senator, Danforth comes across as a
welcome paragon of virtue. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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