Pubdate: Sun, 28 Sep 2003 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2003 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: Robyn E. Blumner Note: Headline from print edition THE POLITICS OF CONVERSION Despite diversions such as the war in Iraq, President Bush's efforts to evangelize the provision of social services keeps chugging along. Last week, the administration announced new rules making it easier for overtly religious institutions to access $20-billion in federal social service grants and another $8-billion in Housing and Urban Development money. Tax dollars can now be used to construct and renovate houses of worship as long as the funds are not used to build the principal room used for prayer, such as the sanctuary or chapel. The fungibility of money makes this caveat pretty much worthless. Soon too, hundreds of millions of federal dollars may be available for drug and alcohol addicts to get on the road to recovery by being reborn - the way President Bush wrestled his own alcohol monkey. During his last State of the Union speech, the president called for $600-million over three years in new substance-abuse treatment money, and a somewhat pared down first-year allotment is currently before a congressional conference committee. To make sure programs steeped in prayer and proselytizing qualify for the money and sidle past church-state separation requirements, Bush has called for the services to be paid for with federal vouchers. Bush's efforts suggest that up until now the government has not enlisted religiously affiliated groups to provide social services. But that is simply not true. The Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, Jewish Welfare Federations and Lutheran Social Services are just some of the many groups that have done a significant degree of social service work under government contract. These groups tend to hire licensed social workers recruited from all faith traditions, and they utilize a science-based, therapeutic model without allowing religiosity to infuse the help provided. All to the good, right? Not from Bush's vantage. When he publicly singles out a faith-based program for special recognition, inevitably he highlights one that cares less about hiring certified counselors and maintaining standard treatment protocols than about pounding religion into a client's head. During the State of the Union speech Bush's invited guests were Tonja Myles of the "Set Free Indeed Program" at Healing Place Church in Baton Rouge, La., and Henry Lozano of Teen Challenge California; both programs use religious conversion as treatment. One of Bush's favorite faith-based programs is the prison-based InnerChange Freedom Initiative started by Charles Colson, the former Watergate figure. Bush brought InnerChange into the Texas prison system when he was governor and it now operates programs, paid for with prison funds, in four states. InnerChange is an intensive Bible-centered program, ostensibly open to inmates of all religious persuasions, but every month inmates are evaluated on whether they "demonstrate a belief in Jesus Christ." Those inmates who fail to show the proper level of piety are removed and lose the special freedoms and privileges dangled before inmates as incentives to participate. What underlies all this is a conservative evangelical worldview that sees modern science, from Darwin on, as bad. According to Winnifred Sullivan, senior lecturer at the University of Chicago Divinity School, proponents of faith-based initiatives "want government funds to go to the kinds of churches that regard conversion as part of your rehabilitation. It's a critique of secular professional social service standards." The fight is theological, between religious providers who believe the fruition of faith is to do good works and provide help to the needy in a nonsectarian way, and evangelicals who reject tested treatment therapies in favor of Bible thumping. This wouldn't be much of a concern for the rest of us - both perspectives have a place in our religiously free country - were it not for the fact that we are all about to fund the latter approach. Make no mistake, Bush's plan is to have taxpayers underwrite conversion. Which makes him part missionary, but also part clever politician, stacking his own party's deck. By directing taxpayer-funded vouchers to religious schools and service organizations, Bush is socially engineering an expanded Christian Right. But whether young people are educated, addicts are cured, or even if souls are saved, is secondary to the real prize: the born-again voter. Polls show they are substantially more likely to self-identify as Republican than Democrat. Imagine that. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)