Defining Faith & Politics: We Believe OhioAired May 17, 2006 Today, a number of local clergy and lay leaders - Jewish, Catholic and Protestant - will join a growing group of religious leaders in Ohio who are seeking to define their faith, and their politics, outside of the domain of the religious right. The organization is called We Believe Ohio, and it's a newcomer on the political scene. ideastream's Dan Moulthrop has more.
Organization founder, Pastor Tim Ahrens.
Ahrens says he was inspired to start the movement when he witnessed a political rally lead by World Harvest Church pastor Rod Parsley. He's an avowed member of the Religious Right and a supporter of republican Ken Blackwell, and Ahrens remembers his words that day were fairly inflammatory.
Parsley's political action has drawn the attention of the Internal Revenue Service - that's largely due to complaints filed by a group of 31 clergy members who alleged his political activity violates his church's non-profit status. Ahrens says some of those clergy members do belong to We Believe Ohio, but the organization did not endorse the IRS complaint. Despite this obvious leftward slant of those complaint-filing clergy, Ahrens, and his Jewish co-leader Jack Chomsky, who is cantor at Columbus's congregation Tifereth Israel, say they represent the religious mainstream, and they resist being labeled liberal. Cantor Jack Chomsky.
One of the first items on the organizational agenda is tackling the Tax and Expenditure Limitation constitutional amendment, which is being pushed by gubernatorial candidate Ken Blackwell and which would place sharp limitations on government growth and spending. The organization has yet to take an official stance, but Chomsky has a strong opinion about the TEL.
The TEL may not be the immediate focus of We Believe's work. Pastor Tim Ahrens says while the religious right calls gay marriage and abortion the moral issues of the day, his view is different.
That's a message that resonates with some church members. Marjorie Ramp has been with the United Church of Christ since its founding fifty years ago.
She says those stances are informed by her faith.
Ahrens acknowledges the religious right has been a bit more effective in recent years in getting their message out, but he says he hopes the religious left can mobilize as it did during the civil rights struggle and the era of the Vietnam War.
We Believe Ohio holds its first meeting at the Cleveland Playhouse this morning. Local leaders include the Reverend Otis Moss of the Olivet Institutional Baptist Church and Rabbi Richard A. Block of Beachwood's Temple Tifereth-Israel, among many others. We wanted to interview Rod Parsley for this story as well, but he wasn't available. We did receive a statement from him, via email through a public relations firm. Mr. Parsley writes: "I applaud the efforts of people of all faiths to stand up for issues about which they feel strongly. As I've said so many times before, this is what democracy is all about - the freedom of choice. We will continue to advocate for the issues we are passionate about, knowing that there are others who have opposing views." Additional Information: |