Obama Revamps White House Faith-Based Office
President Obama signed an executive order Thursday establishing a
revamped White House Office on Faith-Based and Neighborhood
Partnerships.
The move fulfills Obama's campaign promise to expand and tweak a
faith-based office founded by former President Bush.
The office will be led by Joshua DuBois, a 26-year-old Pentecostal
minister, who headed religious outreach for Obama's Senate office and
later his campaign.
Obama is also expected to name 25 religious and secular leaders to an
advisory board, including the Rev. Joel Hunter, senior pastor of
Northland Church, a megachurch in Flordia; Rabbi David Saperstein,
director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.
Before the signing, the president attended the National Prayer
Breakfast in Washington, D.C. where he assured religious groups that
his administration will help them, but said his expansion of the
faith-based White House office will strive to keep secular and
religious groups on a level playing field.
"The goal of this office will not be to favor one religious group over
another -- or even religious groups over secular groups," Obama said.
"It will simply be to work on behalf of those organizations that want
to work on behalf of our communities, and to do so without blurring
the line that our founders wisely drew between church and state."
The most contentious issue surrounding the updated office, potential
restrictions on the hiring practices of religious groups that receive
taxpayer dollars, will undergo a thorough legal review before Obama
makes a decision on hiring guidelines.
The order would also direct White House officials and lawyers to work
with the Justice Department to develop a hiring policy, according to a
religious leader with knowledge of the plans. The official spoke on
condition of anonymity because the details have not been released.
The deliberate approach is unlikely to please either conservative
religious leaders, who worry they'll need to compromise their
religious beliefs to participate, or liberal religious and secular
leaders, who want to quickly undo Bush administration hiring
practices.
"Neither side is going to get exactly what they want," the religious
leader said.
Obama on Thursday warned that "far too often," faith is used as a
"tool to divide us from one another."
But, he said, "there is no religion whose central tenet is hate" and
all religions teach people to love and care for one another. That is
the common ground underlying his faith-based office, he said.
To secular and religious groups that want to contribute to their
communities, he said: "People trust them. Communities rely on them.
And we will help them."
During his presidential campaign, Obama said he wanted to expand the
White House faith-based efforts Bush began. But while he endorsed
Bush's initiative to give religious groups more access to federal
funding, he also promised to tweak the program.
"Now, make no mistake, as someone who used to teach constitutional
law, I believe deeply in the separation of church and state, but I
don't believe this partnership will endanger that idea -- so long as
we follow a few basic principles," Obama said during a campaign speech
in Zanesville, Ohio.
Obama's advisers want to be certain tax dollars sent to the
faith-based social service groups are being used for secular purposes,
such as to feeding the hungry or housing the homeless -- not for
religious evangelism. The administration doesn't want to be perceived
as managing the groups yet does want transparency and accountability.
Obama pledged during the campaign to allow religious institutions
funded through his revamped faith-based office to hire and fire based
on religion -- but only for their activities that are privately
funded.
One question is whether the faith-based office will continue to hand
out grants under the Bush rules while the hiring issue is under legal
review.
Jim Wallis, a member of the new advisory council, downplayed the
significance of the hiring issue. He said it came up only once in
transition meetings, and that poverty, human trafficking and the
Middle East were discussed in much more detail.
"I'm sure it will come up, but it's not the dominant issue," said
Wallis, founder of the liberal Christian social-justice network
Sojourners.
The council is also expected to weigh in on the hiring issue, with no
timeframe set for resolution.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Post made: Thu, Feb 5 2009 - 17:17 PM
Category: Funding

