THE QUESTION
What does the Eliot Spitzer scandal say about our public and private morality? Should he have resigned?
Posted by Sally Quinn and Jon Meacham on March 14, 2008 5:20 AM
FROM THE PANEL
An ordained United Church of Christ and American Baptist minister, "On Faith" panelist Dr. Willis E. Elliott has been a pastor, teacher, lecturer, administrator, consultant (to Newsweek for 38 years), church executive, and the author of six books. His five earned degrees in religion include a PhD, University of Chicago, where he was divinity research librarian. He taught in colleges, seminaries, & universities--including the University of Hawaii, where he taught "The World's Great Religions" and "Religion and the Meaning of Existence." At the 1966 Triennium of the National Council of Churches, he was the interlocutor with Billy Graham.
Humiliation, the Flipside of Arrogance
May Spitzer use his humiliation wisely, to make a new start by the grace of God. As for his world-class hypocrisy it was a pitiful effort at pseudo-atonement, as if one could be forgiven by being especially hard on sinners of one’s own kind.
Willis E. Elliott Minister, teacher, author |Mar 16, 2008 at 9:42 PM
As editor of the Catholic weekly magazine "America" (americamagazine.org), Rev. Thomas J. Reese promoted discussion on current issues facing the Catholic Church and the world. The "On Faith" panelist is author of Inside the Vatican: The Politics and Organization of the Catholic Church. Father Reese is frequently quoted as an expert on Catholic issues. He is a senior fellow at the Woodstock Theological Center at Georgetown University, where he is working on religion and politics. Besides his theological training as a Jesuit priest, he has a doctorate in political science from the University of California Berkeley. He once worked as a lobbyist for tax reform.
Spitzer Scandal About Crime, Not Sex
Thomas J. Reese, S.J. Senior fellow Woodstock Theological Center, Jesuit priest |R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is the ninth president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary—the flagship school of the Southern Baptist Convention and one of the largest seminaries in the world. The “On Faith” panelist is a theologian and ordained minister and has served as pastor and staff minister of several Southern Baptist churches. He holds a Master of Divinity degree and the Doctor of Philosophy (in systematic and historical theology) from Southern Seminary. He did additional study at the St. Meinrad School of Theology and research at Oxford University. He became seminary president after serving as editor of The Christian Index, the oldest of the state papers serving the Southern Baptist Convention. Called "an articulate voice for conservative Christianity at large" by the Chicago Tribune, Mohler's mission is to address contemporary issues from a consistent and explicit Christian worldview. He hosts a daily radio program for the Salem Radio Network and blogs on moral, cultural and theological issues. He also has contributed chapters to several books including Hell Under Fire, Whatever Happened to Truth, Here We Stand: A Call From Confessing Evangelicals and The Coming Evangelical Crisis. He served as General Editor of The Gods of the Age or the God of the Ages: Essays by Carl F. H. Henry.
Character and Leadership
R. Albert Mohler Jr. President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary |Charles W. "Chuck" Colson is founder of Prison Fellowship, a Christian outreach ministry to the prison population of this country, as well as to ex-prisoners and crime victims. The "On Faith" panelist's daily radio commentary, BreakPoint, is aired daily on over a 1,000 radio outlets nationwide. Colson also is a syndicated columnist, lawyer, and author of 25 books, most recently The Faith (2008). He served as special counsel to the late President Richard M. Nixon (1969-73). After pleading guilty to a Watergate-related charge of obstruction of justice in 1974, Colson served seven months of a one to three-year federal prison sentence. His 1973 Christian conversion was documented in the internationally best-selling book and film, Born Again. He founded Prison Fellowship in 1976. In 1993, Colson was awarded the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion and donated the $1 million prize to Prison Fellowship. In the last 28 years, Colson has visited more than 600 prisons in 40 countries and, with the help of nearly 50,000 volunteers, has built Prison Fellowship into the world's largest prison outreach, serving the spiritual and practical needs of prisoners in 93 countries including the U.S.
Morality Cannot Be Divided
Charles "Chuck" Colson Founder, Prison Fellowship ministry |READER RESPONSE
» Dave | Private matters should be exactly that, private. Life under the microscope of public scrutiny is fraught with personal sphere invasion issues and many...
» Hunt | It is my understanding that Mr. Spitzer has done a lot of good for NY. He may be a hypocrite but so are Vitter and Craig. I'm sure there are a lot o...
» garyd | Mr. Spitzer chose to lie to his wife, cheat on her, and put her health as well as his own at risk. Not only that but he went about it in a fashion tha...
Active Conversations
- Faith and the Environment (452 comments)
- Spitzer and Morality (108 comments)
- Religion and Sex (260 comments)
- End of the World (169 comments)
- Obama\'s Pastor (103 comments)
Categories
Guest Voices Archive

» Deepak Chopra: His teachings are perverted to justify greed, war. We need a New Jesus.
» Ayaan Hirsi Ali» Hamza Yusuf
» Christopher Hitchens
» T.D. Jakes
» Brad Hirschfield
» Timothy Shriver
» Geraldine Brooks
» Nora Gallagher
» Jimmy Carter
» The Dalai Lama
» Michael Gerson
» Full Archive
Links & Resources
- VIDEO: DIVINE IMPULSES with Sally Quinn
- VIDEO: FINDING FAITH by Christy McKerney
- GEORGETOWN/ON FAITH
- THE GOD VOTE by Jacques Berlinerblau
- FAITH IN ACTION by Katherine Marshall
- THE FAITH DIVIDE by Eboo Patel
- UNDER GOD by Claire Hoffman
- RELIGION FROM THE HEART by Timothy Shriver
- FAITHBOOK
- PRAYING FIELDS by Kathy Orton
- NEWSWEEK: Belief Watch by Lisa Miller

