Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jan 2001 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 The Vancouver Sun Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Douglas Todd Born-Again Charity REDEMPTION, NOT REFORM Evangelical Canadians are likely to lobby for the the U.S. trend to tie government funds for social problems to a sin-based philosophy. You can't take the stress any more. You're taking heavy drugs. You fear you're hooked. In desperation, you go to a taxpayer-funded detox centre. The first thing you see inside the door is a big sign: "Drug addiction is not a disease. It's a sin." This is not yet Vancouver, where such a bold merger of religious belief with a government program would be illicit. But it is contemporary Texas. It's a sign in a church-based drug treatment centre that teaches being born-again in Jesus Christ is the solution to every problem. It's part of a taxpayer-funded program championed by Texas Governor George W. Bush, who Saturday takes the oath of office as president of the United States. Bush wants more government-financed, religion-run programs for the addicted, the poor, the pregnant, the sick, the unemployed, the elderly, the incarcerated and those seeking an education. He just set up an Office of Faith-Based Programs. Bush maintains the greatest hope for the suffering lies not in "reform," but in religious "redemption." He promises: "In every instance where my administration sees a responsibility to help people, we will look first to faith-based organizations." Powerful U.S. Senator Jesse Helms wants foreign aid also to be distributed by religious groups. Expect Bush's ideas about religion-based social programs to soon travel north across the border to be debated in Canada, where evangelical Canadian Alliance leader Stockwell Day has signalled interest in the approach. Bush's hope of redefining the separation between church and state is based on his own evangelical theology and the guidance of his mentor, Marvin Olasky, Texas author of Compassionate Conservatism. Olasky, an ultra-orthodox Baptist, is convinced faith is the cure for poverty. He says: "Guys who've been homeless for a long time or are alcoholics or addicts, when they do come out of it, nine times out of 10 it's a religious transformation." Civil liberties groups are crying foul. They say governments can't sell salvation when they lend people a hand. And they're shocked Texas law doesn't require staff at religion-based centres to undergo criminal checks or be certified counsellors. A supervisor at one Texas Christian-run state home was recently arrested for beating and tying down teenagers in the name of Christian discipline. The surprising thing, given the controversy, is that Al Gore and other key Democrats have given tentative approval to the faith-based welfare approach, which is often called "Charitable Choice." The Republican Congress backed it in 1996. Moderate advocates remind skeptics that charitable choice is not new: Christian groups in North America have for decades run a small proportion of tax-funded operations for the sick, addicted and needy. The Salvation Army manages programs in the U.S. and Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, and the Roman Catholic church runs some taxpayer-funded hospitals in B.C. But they're all under strict government regulations, and their religiosity is restrained. The difference now is that Bush intends to dramatically expand the reach of religious-run services, while giving them a virtual carte blanche to do it in an explicitly religious way. There may be benefits to faith-based services -- many struggling people do benefit from spiritual conversion -- but there are also drawbacks. Last year, I visited the welfare arm of Baltimore's giant Payne Memorial Church, which belongs to the African Methodist-Episcopalian denomination. Payne was one of the first of about 50 religious groups outside Texas to take up the Congress offer, providing government-financed assistance to its poor neighbourhood. Although impressed by Payne's work, I was taken aback by the spiritual pride of the church's key welfare official. She acted as if faith was the answer not only for her -- but for her 2,000 clients. She didn't understand the hard church-state questions posed to her. She was just thrilled with her church's greater outreach and financial health. She dismissed suggestions atheists or Muslims might feel uncomfortable in her Christian programs. She didn't think it a problem she almost exclusively hires Christian staff. A deeper defence of charitable choice came from an official of the non-profit Center for Public Justice, who emphasized that Congressional law states any religious group, not only Christians, can run welfare programs. Therefore, he argued, charitable choice doesn't contravene the church-state divide, because it doesn't mean government is promoting one religion over another. He added that federal law stipulates alternatives to religion-operated programs are supposed to be available to all clients. However, a lawyer from The Jewish Council for Public Affairs, had tough questions about charitable choice. What's to stop vulnerable clients being subjected to proselytizing? she asked. Is it likely a Jewish welfare program, say, would be available in a Christian-dominated state like Texas? Will religious providers impose on clients their condemnation of abortion, homosexuality or divorce? Will vote-rich religious groups with polished political connections get the richest government contracts? Will tax welfare dollars go to religious groups that support racial discrimination, such as the Church of the Aryan Nations? These dilemmas haven't yet been resolved in the U.S. To get a handle on them, The Polis Center, a non-partisan think-tank at Indiana University, has published a booklet entitled, "Ten Good Questions About Faith-based Partnerships." Polis says some religious welfare programs are wonderfully in-tune with clients; others are rife with problems. It wisely concludes there is no justification yet for generalizing that spiritual groups provide better services than secular agencies. In other words, the jury is out on faith-based social work. Let the Canadian debate begin. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake