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Jacques Berlinerblau

The God Vote

Jacques Berlinerblau

Jacques Berlinerblau is associate Professor and Director of the Program for Jewish Civilization at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. Many years ago he received a doctorate in ancient Near Eastern Languages and Literature from New York University. Soon after, for reasons that he himself has never fully understood, he completed another doctorate in theoretical sociology from the New School for Social Research. Feeling sufficiently credentialed to write about and research any topic under the sun, his areas of interest include the Bible, its composition, its interpretation, and in particular the way that it has been dragooned into modern political discourse. To this end his new book is called "Thumpin' It: The Use and Abuse of the Bible in Today's Presidential Politics" (Westminster John Knox), described by First Things as "laugh-out-loud funny as well as astute." He also has published "The Secular Bible: Why Nonbelievers Must Take Religion Seriously" (Cambridge:2005). An earlier book, "Heresy in the University: The Black Athena Controversy and the Responsibilities of American Intellectuals" (Rutgers: 1999) probed the manner in which institutions of higher education handle scholarly dissent. He has written extensively in scholarly journals on the subject of heretics, intellectuals, secularism, and Jewish civilization. This confluence of interests accounts, to a great degree, for his fascination with modern Jewish-American literature. A life-long New Yorker, he has recently moved to Washington D.C. with his family and is beguiled by the strange traffic lights that count down the seconds until they finally change colors. Close.

The God Vote

Jacques Berlinerblau

Jacques Berlinerblau is program director and associate professor of Jewish Civilization at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, and author of "Thumpin’ It: The Use and Abuse of the Bible in Today’s Presidential Politics." Full bio »

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Top Ten Faith and Values Developments of 2007

My top ten Faith and Values developments from the 2007 campaign.

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Featured Comments

malis:

Every candidate understands he or she must profess some supernatural belief as a prerequisite for running for office. I'm fairly certain a healthy percentage of political officeholders don't actually hold the religious beliefs they profess, but understand that's the price of being in the arena. Mormanism, Evangelical Christian, Muslim, Wiccan or Pagan...the particular flavor of invisible-friend-with-superpowers doesn't matter.

From a personal point of view (and I understand it's a minority point of view), only if a candidate convinces me of true belief--and would make governing decisions based on that belief (i.e., Huckabee)--is the candidate unqualified to hold office. That does usually rule out Fundamentalists of any flavor, as their faith almost always mandates they establish the rules by which others must act.

WindReader:

I am not so concerned that in this campaign there is such a strong link made between faith and values. in my mind faith and values are pretty much universally linked. of course, there are many flavors of faith and many competing value systems out there. what causes me concern, fear, even dread in my darker moments, is that in this campaign there seems to be an assertion that without faith (and some rather narrow definitions of the concept at that) there are no values.

I am very close with many humanists, both secular and not, who are capable of holding and acting on powerful, healthy, positive and even life-affirming values without the need to have those values grounded in a belief in a deity. in the current political climate it seems that their values do not count.

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