Willis E. Elliott

Willis E. Elliott

Minister, teacher, author

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. Close.

Willis E. Elliott

Minister, teacher, author

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. more »

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April 2008 Archives



April 5, 2008 9:56 AM

King, Weeping Word-Master and Master Stage-Manager

The Question: The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated 40 years ago. What are your memories of that day? What impact did it have on you? How is King relevant to you and to us today?

My response to QUESTION 1: After the shock of grief and wave of sadness, I said to myself, “The curtain has come down on the stage he managed, but the play has not ended.” On the staff of a national church-organization deeply supportive of “the Movement,” I knew King as a strategist as well as as a word-master and was personally conversant with his best-known lieutenants.
(We were paying the salary of one of them. King asked us to send him the checks so he could be the paymaster, and we complied. He was a tight manager of his stage-crew.)

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April 8, 2008 7:40 AM

Islam as a Political Football

The Question: John McCain's spiritual guide, televangelist Rod Parsley, calls Islam a "false religion" that should be "destroyed." Should McCain renounce Parsley? Will Islam be an issue in this year's U.S. presidential election?

I am pleased, amused, and worried about all this media-chatter about the putative influence of “spiritual guides” on presidential candidates.

What PLEASES me is that most of my long life has been spent in the profession of “spiritual guide” - being one, helping to prepare hundreds for the work, and teaching clergy on the job (continuing education). It’s nice to feel important (though with a tinge of guilt) after feeling too little important (with a larger dollop of guilt).

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April 10, 2008 1:54 PM

Pope Benedict's Double Yes

The Question: Pope Benedict's recent baptism of a well-known Italian Muslim has prompted criticism in much of the Islamic world. Has Benedict done enough to build bridges to Islam?

Christianity and Islam are dynamic (missionary) rather than static (cultural) religions and have always experienced cross-conversions. In the new world of the emergent global mind, we can expect this two-way flow to increase. But there is this difference: If a prominent Christian converts to Islam, it won’t cause a ripple: the Christian religion has no specific penalty against leaving. However, when this prominent Muslim converted to Christianity, “much of the Islamic world” is said to have complained: the Qur’anic-Muslim punishment for defection is death.

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April 15, 2008 2:34 PM

Benedict XVI: The Shows and the Rifts

The Question: What can Pope Benedict XVI say and do to repair the growing rifts between the Vatican, the clergy and the laity in America?

“Nothing” is my first thought: you don’t send the problem to fix the problem.

The problem is not the excellent scholar Joseph Ratzinger, or this good man in the papal role. The problem is the traditional autocratic papacy itself, of which he is the current embodiment.

The Roman pope is the structural descendant of the Roman emperor, whose power was absolute. Most of the Roman Church’s modern woes have this absolute power (in lesser forms distributed in the hierarchical pyramid of bishops under the pope) as a component.

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April 24, 2008 12:19 PM

No and Yes to Benedict XVI

The Question: In his speech to U.S. bishops last week, Pope Benedict XVI said: "Any tendency to treat religion as a private matter must be resisted . . . To the extent that religion becomes a purely private affair, it loses its very soul." Do you agree or disagree? Why?

As I read the Pope’s 4.16.08 address to the Roman Catholic bishops of America, I became convinced that this was his formative question in composing it: “What would I say and do if I were a bishop in the United States?”

Benedict XVI’s diagnosis of our religio-cultural condition contained the expected catalog of isms – privatism, secularism, materialism, individualism, moral relativism, latitudinarian pluralism.

The current “On Faith” question suggests a central concern of the speech:
“In his speech to U.S. bishops last week, Pope Benedict XVI said: Any tendency to treat religion as a private matter must be resisted ... To the extent that religion becomes a purely private affair, it loses its very soul. Do you agree or disagree?”

I must disagree before I agree.

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