Political Hotsheet
By

Stephanie Condon /

CBS News/ August 10, 2009, 2:28 PM

Faith Groups to Help Obama on Health Care

5196009Having let his push for comprehensive health care refom become bogged down by confusion over the details of his plan, President Obama this month is turning to the religious community to rally support for the fundamental idea of expanding health care accessibility.

As part of a major new initiative from the faith community, Mr. Obama on Aug. 19 will participate in a call-in and audio Webcast with at least 25 faith leaders -- from evangelical Christian, Jewish, Muslim and other religious traditions -- to aggressively encourage their congregations to support health care reform.

"Every so often there is an issue that is so clear and compelling, or so alarming and disconcerting, that it really does galvanize the faith community," said Reverend Jim Wallis, president of Sojourners, one of the groups sponsoring the new initiative. "Inclusive, accessible, affordable health care for all of God's children is for us a moral issue."

As the health care debate turns more hostile, dozens of religious organizations are joining in an effort to emphasize the moral argument for reform. Their 40-day campaign kicks off today with the launch of an advertisement on national cable networks featuring local evangelical, Catholic, and mainline pastors and people of faith with the message that "millions of people of faith are supporting health care reform."

On Tuesday, faith leaders will hold 50 prayer vigils and rallies in 45 cities in 18 strategically chosen states to communicate to members of Congress that health care reform is a priority for the religious community. More than 14,000 people are expected to participate, organizers said in a conference call today.

Additionally, various congregations have committed to generating 55,000 phone calls and e-mails on the issue to their congressmen over the next 45 days, and faith leaders will converge in Washington on Sept. 15 to directly lobby Congress.

Along with Sojourners, the "40 Days for Health Reform" campaign is being sponsored by the groups PICO National Network, Faith in Public Life, Faithful America and Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good.

"The concept of universal, accessible health care resonates deeply with our common values," said Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. "We see the people who've lost their jobs and health insurance... the people who are left out of what is one of the most remarkable health care systems in the world. They are included in the people we see every Sabbath."

"We cannot sit idly by while we have a system that just doesn't work for everyone," he added.

The sites of Tuesday's rallies are listed on the campaign's Web site and include cities in Florida, Colorado, Missouri and Louisiana. The event organizers said they are targeting areas with moderate Democrats and areas where religion is of special significance.

"One of the reasons Colorado is a key state is Senators Bennet and Udall are both new to the Senate," said Karen Timmons, a PICO lay leader from the Montview Presbyterian Church in Denver. "They are supportive of health care reform in general but still have expressed some hesitation, and we want to drive the message home that people here, in Colorado particularly, in the faith community are strongly supportive of health care reform."

The campaign, however, is not intended to be partisan.

"The people who are falling through the cracks are as likely to be Republican as they are Democrat," Saperstein said. "We come to this precisely because it is a human rights issue that supercedes any ideology."

Wallis railed against the distortions and hostility that have come to dominate much of the health care debate.

Health care, he said, is "not something we can allow to be demagogued in the street. There are people who want to shut down democracy, and we can't let that happen."

Wallis said it was "really irresponsible to be stoking those kinds of fears" that are prompted by lies about euthanasia in the health reform bill.

With respect to the explosive issue of abortion, he said both sides of the debate should agree to an "abortion-neutral" health care bill.

"Abortion shouldn't be paid for by public funds," he said, adding that, "It can't be prohibited by private insurance because it's legal."

"We can help shape a bill where abortion doesn't become an issue that scuttles health reform," Wallis said.

The details of any reform effort will be left up to policymakers, Wallis said, but the bottom line for the religious community is that coverage must be expanded.

"What's not acceptable is to end this process and still have 47 million of God's children uncovered," he said.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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jhenry1208 says:
Program runs through Nov 1, 2009 or when the funds are exhausted, whichever comes first.


Jhenry
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Noreen Mazelis says:
Any day now we can expect to see our pastor or rabbi trundling into our Senior Centers to "counsel" us on how to "let go". These "religious" syncophants are disgusting.
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ProfElwood says:
Racism hasn't died, it's just changed form. The core of racism is to throw people into a group, and talk down at the group. Here's two real-life examples that I experienced at a previous job:

A group of coworkers were talking down at blacks, so I asked them about a couple of African-Americans that they worked with. The ones that the knew were good people, but blacks were still a problem. These were blue-collar Democrats, by the way.

At the same job, I was asked to prepare a way for the workers to enter their activities directly into our computer system. They insisted that this system be idiot-proof and allow for review by management because the workers weren't all that bright. Once again, I named a few of the workers one by one, and they agreed that those workers were capable people, but the workers, as a group, couldn't be trusted with the task.

Here I see "religious whackos", "Evangelical Baptist CrackerScum" to name a couple. How is this different from racism?
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thebob-bob says:
So the left doesn't like it when the extreme-right convinces the conservative evangelical Christians that they should mobilize politically and the right doesn't like it when social activists engage the more liberal congregations. How about we make a deal.

Keep all the religious whackos out of Politics and have a secular government that focuses on civil authority and leave the religious fantasies, the folks who hear voices and the Pastafarians out of it, OK?
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alien_view says:
THIS IS A VIOLATION OF SEPERATION OF CHURCH AND STATE. BUT WHAT THE HECK THE CONSTUTION IS GETTING TRASHED ANYWAY. WHAT A WAY TO HIDE YOUR AGENDA, GET THE CHURCHES TO SUPPORT YOUR NIGHTMARE IN WAITING. YOU HAVE ALWAYS SPOKE THE TRUTH TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE....RIGHT. NO CHURCH IN THEIR RIGHT MIND WOULD SUPPORT THIS STUPIDITY UNLESS THEY ARE ALL ON DRUGS.
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truthinnumbers says:
Jack, Baptist Cracker Trash!? What do you personally gain from such retoric? What do you gain by not doing your homework and listending but not absorbing what your president and his cronies are saying? Please don't come back with "and your president" because I do not claim him at all. If he was that interested in the total population, he would say things like we need to at life questions when it comes to that etc. It is neither his right nor decision when it comes to me and my family when it comes to life. I know he enjoys his right to life status when it comes to aborting babies and unborns but stay away from me and my family. I only want him to do one thing which is is currenlty doing miserably and that is protect me and my family from nuts like you and your kind. Your are very dangerous Jack, it's obvious. I will pray for you and your family, especially if you have children and or grandchildren.
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endurorob says:
If it were conservatives using religious groups like this the lefties would be all over them but the normally anti religion lefties will probably embrace this because it is Obama.
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Bill434 says:
One answer to what Obama is doing:

Separation of Church and State. Period.
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Bill434 replies:
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_Jack_Steen,

You and others here need to quit with the "sinceObama may need this to get his health care initiative passed, we'll let it go" hypocrisy.

Let go of the hypocrisy. If it's separation of church and state for 1 pres, it's separation of church and state for all. Trying adhering to principles, regardless of who's in office, you may like it!

It's separation of church and state for Bush AND Obama, or it isn't. That is adhering to principles. period. End of discussion.
Bill434 replies:
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Some here show themselves to be lying sacks of trash alright. They won't hold the same standard for Obama that they held for Bush. I say hold the same standard for them both and all presidents. Separation of church and state, period. But who cares, Obama is trashing the constitution and those that are defending Obama on this thread could care less about Obama trashing the constitution.
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