Obama's faith inclusion vast
By Eric Gorski
Associated Press
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President Obama, signaling early in his administration that religion belongs in the public discourse, has promised to open a big tent to voices from across the spectrum of belief without crossing boundaries separating church and state.
The Democrat's inaugural pomp was steeped in prayer, and one of his first proclamations included a shout out to "an awesome God." Last week, Obama used the platform of the National Prayer Breakfast to unveil a new-look White House Office on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships that features a team of policy advisers from both religious and secular social service circles. Most are ideological allies, but not all.
The question is whether such moves will amount to symbolic window dressing or progress finding common ground on moral issues without stepping on traditional culture-war land mines.
Analysts say Obama's first weeks show there's little question that both major political parties believe religion should be a significant factor in shaping policy. That's disappointing to those on the left who advocate strict church-state separation and unconvincing to Obama's religious critics on the right who believe the president will plow ahead with a liberal agenda regardless of who is advising him.
"There's clearly not going to be any kind of dropping off the cliff in terms of the importance of faith and politics," said David Domke, a University of Washington communications professor who studies religion and politics. "There was some sense (President George W.) Bush was going to be this high water mark — or low water mark. With Obama, faith is going to have an important role, but with a much broader breadth to it."
Obama's retooling of the faith-based office, plagued in the Bush years by accusations that it was underfunded and too political, upset some Obama supporters who hoped it would go away.
Its executive director is Joshua DuBois, a 26-year-old former Pentecostal pastor who headed religious outreach for Obama's Senate office and his presidential campaign.
"This is not a religious office or a religious administration," DuBois said. "We are going to try to find ways to work with faith-based and community organizations that are secular in nature, and don't cross the boundaries between church and state. We understand it is a fine line. But it's a line we're comfortable walking."
That will be tested in how the White House settles the question of whether federal contracts should be awarded to religious groups that only hire members of their own faith. It's a Bush-era practice that candidate Obama signaled he would undo. The issue is to undergo a Justice Department review.