The Party of Faith
Democrats and Republicans are sparring to see how religion-friendly they can make their national conventions.
For the first time, an interfaith gathering will mark the official opening of the Democrats' convention week in late August. This year's Denver meeting will be the second time people of faith will have their own caucus. Evangelist and sociologist Tony Campolo, a member of the party's platform committee, said he will push for an abortion-reduction plank.
The convention's CEO, Leah Daughtry, is a Pentecostal pastor who flies from Denver to Washington, D.C., twice a month to preach in her church.
"There's a growing understanding that the faith community is important in elections, an acknowledgment that we need to be more proactive," said Daughtry, who is chief of staff for the Democratic National Committee. "What we're doing now is making our voices more strongly heard."
Steven Waldman, editor of the spirituality website Beliefnet, covered the 2000 and 2004 conventions. He expects Democratic religious outreach to be much more sophisticated than in previous years because of Sen. Barack Obama, who is outspoken about his Christian faith.
"Two conventions ago, [Democrats] had no sensitivity to religious people," Waldman said. "Last convention, they had a little bit. They had this kind of rump operation that was trying to reach out to religious people, but it was kind of poignant."
Whether the Republican convention will have the kind of evangelical-celebrity quotient it had in the past remains to be seen. At press time, the Republicans had yet to release official plans for the early September convention, but spokeswoman Yohana de la Torre said many faith-based organizations will be involved. Christian musicians Michael W. Smith ...

A Fractured and Beautiful Faith
Streaming This Weekend, May 24, 2013

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craigb
it is a remarkable thing that the same party that helps the richest 5% of this country protect and grow its wealth has somehow convinced everyone that it is the more Christian of the two parties.
Keith
I don't understand why Senator Obama is so popular among evangelicals. I hear a lot of platitudes, but little substance. Would someone please explain why I should vote for him? I'm not a McCain fan either, by the way.
John
So much for non-partisan reporting with an advertisement for a book about Obama adjacent to this article. Maybe Chistianity Today should consider this value over the advertising dollar.