Bush's Call to Prayer
After Al Gore's concession, evangelical leaders unify around faith-based initiatives, morality, and prayer as the incoming Bush administration gears up.
By Tony Carnes | posted 12/01/2000 12:00AM
After over a month of bitter court wrangling, George W. Bush last night emerged as President-elect. Before a prime-time television audience Wednesday night, Vice-President Al Gore conceded the race and urged the nation to remember that "in one of God's unforeseen paths, this belatedly broken impasse can point us all to a new common ground."
Most evangelical leaders that were interviewed from around the nation and across the political party divides were remarkably united in their belief that God had prepared the way for healing and a new spiritual charge to the nation.
African-American Bishop Harold Calvin Ray of Redemption Life Fellowship, West Palm Beach was at ground zero of the political trench warfare in Florida. With chads all around and "thousands screaming and fighting," Ray, a leader in Florida's African American community, thought, "I have been here before" during other times of great national crisis.
Along with the army of lawyers, Ray was swept along into the U.S. Supreme Court, where he witnessed the intensifying bitterness. Yet, Ray says that at the first hearing of the Court he sensed even then that God was at work.
"A gentleman dressed as a homeless person was off by himself on that Thursday afternoon outside of the Supreme Court. He was walking back and forth with a sign, 'It is time to heal the wounds.'"
There on the steps of the Court, Ray says he realized that he was part of a history that God was making. "That man on Thursday—the Man Thursday, was a prophet of God for us. God is going to heal the wounds."
Other evangelical leaders had similar experiences. Coming out of an emotional meeting with Andrew Cuomo, Clinton's U.S. Secretary of Housing, editor and author Jim Wallis observed too that the bitterness was offset with hope.
"We haven't seen this kind of bitter division in a long time," says Wallis, founder of Sojourners magazine. "Millions of Americans have lost confidence in the Supreme Court. Bush has a problem with legitimacy."
Yet, like almost all evangelical leaders, left or right on the political spectrum, Wallis thinks that both Bush's and Gore's commitment to faith-based initiatives, character and prayer are threads that could stitch together the nation.
"We are all sitting at the same table," he says. "Faith-based initiatives were going to be in every branch of government no matter whether Bush or Gore won."
From the right, former Republican presidential candidate Gary Bauer shares Wallis's views on the unifying effects of faith-based social programs: "On these issues you can find Democratic votes. As is so often the case, the conventional wisdom is wrong. It won't be difficult for Bush to govern if he follows his values."
Bauer also struck a theme picked up by many evangelicals, the importance of moral unity. Bauer, who now heads the nonprofit American Values, says that the different sections of America are united on the need for character and values. "Whether Asian- or African-American," he says, "Americans care about the value issue."
Wallis too says, "You find common ground by moving to higher ground." He believes that the nation is poised to "do something great together of moral consequence. So, all eyes are on faith-based organizations now." Wallis suggests working with the Democrats on faith-based initiatives to help children in poverty.
George W. Bush told a Houston, Texas, Baptist church that he believed that he had been chosen by God to be a good steward of the nation. In San Antonio, Texas, Alamo City Christian Fellowship pastor David Walker says that as a group of local church leaders prayed over George W. Bush they felt a divine presence anointing the occasion. "We felt God's presence and that He might do something for the nation," he recalls.
December (Web-only) 2000, Vol. 44