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Progressive faith leaders regroup, look to future.


Religious leaders who mounted an unsuccessful bid to resurrect progressive values in the 2004 elections say they refuse to yield the "moral high ground" to conservative Christians who helped President Bush win a second term.

According to according to
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1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

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 Religion News Service, more than two dozen Jewish and Christian progressive faith leaders held a two-day strategy session in Washington in early December, assessing an election in which the vast majority of the voters who cited "moral values" as a top concern went for Bush.

Participants, convened by the liberal think tank Center for American Progress The Center for American Progress is a progressive American political policy research and advocacy organization. Its website describes it as "...a nonpartisan research and educational institute dedicated to promoting a strong, just and free America that ensures opportunity for all. , said they must refocus on the spiritual roots of their agenda and not allow conservatives to define "moral values" solely around gay marriage and abortion but also health care, education and the environment.

And, in a signal of shifting strategy, participants said they would shun the "progressive" label in favor of "prophetic," which they said implies a greater degree of religious motivation.

"Progressive' sounds like it's an ideological position with values attached," said the Rev. James A. Forbes The Rev. Dr. James Alexander Forbes, Jr. (born 1935), is the Distinguished Senior Minister Emeritus of The Riverside Church, an interdenominational (American Baptist and United Church of Christ) church on the border of the Morningside Heights and Harlem neighborhoods on the Upper  Jr., pastor of New York's Riverside Church The Riverside Church in the City of New York is an interdenominational (American Baptist and United Church of Christ), interracial, international church in New York City, famous not only for its elaborate Gothic architecture — which includes the world's largest carillon , "but 'prophetic' carries with it that you're willing to be (held) accountable by the God you claim to serve."

Forbes said all the post-election introspection about the importance of values "is like cut flowers flowers cut from the stalk, as for making a bouquet.

See also: Flower
" that will soon wither unless it is rooted in solid foundations of theology and activist faith.

The session was a follow-up to a June meeting called by John Podesta podesta

(Italian: “power”) In medieval Italian communes, the highest judicial and military magistrate. The office was instituted by Frederick I Barbarossa in an attempt to govern rebellious Lombard cities.
, a former Clinton White House chief of staff and a Democratic strategist. Podesta reiterated his willingness to help progressives continue work begun in 2004. Without religious voices, the Democrats will be perpetual also-rans, he said.

"People trying to sell progressive (ideals) and vision would be well served by listening to people in this room," he said. On Thursday, participants met with House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).

The meeting came on the eve On the Eve (Накануне in Russian) is the third novel by famous Russian writer Ivan Turgenev, best known for his short stories and the novel Fathers and Sons.  of a key gathering of Democratic leaders at Walt Disney World Noun 1. Walt Disney World - a large amusement park established in 1971 to the southwest of Orlando
Orlando - a city in central Florida; site of Walt Disney World
, as part of the process to select a new party chairman in February. Several party leaders are pushing for a chairman who will incorporate the voices of religious leaders. Alexia alexia /alex·ia/ (ah-lek´se-ah) a form of receptive aphasia in which ability to understand written language is lost as a result of a cerebral lesion.  Kelley, who served a short stint as religious outreach director for the party this year, said Democrats can gain the upper hand in the values debate because progressives "have the moral high ground."

"What does God expect of us?" asked Kelley, a Catholic. "It's not to have 45 million people without health care."

The Rev. Bob Edgar, general secretary of the National Council of Churches and a former Democratic congressman from Pennsylvania, said "the good news about the bad news" from the election is that the party seems to be taking religious voices more seriously.

However, he said progressives need to recapture the language of faith.

"We sound like secularists when we need to sound like the prophetic religious leaders we are," Edgar said.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Americans United for Separation of Church and State
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:People & Events
Publication:Church & State
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2005
Words:479
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