Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Religion > Methodist > Journalist scru...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 7512 of 7989
Post > Topic >>

Journalist scrutinises religion beat amid spiritual 'intolerance'

by **Rowland Croucher** <rccroucher@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 16, 2008 at 12:09 PM

May 16, 2008

Journalist scrutinises religion beat amid spiritual 'intolerance'

The theological and political divisions within the US religious 
landscape have made the once-quiet "religion beat" one of the most 
interesting, if intense, journalistic assignments in the United States 
today, writes a prominent award-winning re****ter who covers religion.

"As a re****ter covering religion at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for the 
last four years, I've been a witness to attitudes and language on my 
beat that would make veteran political re****ters cringe," writes Tim 
Townsend in a reflection in the May/June issue of the New York-based 
Columbia Journalism Review, a magazine that examines trends and 
critiques performance within the US journalistic community.

Townsend says that re****ters who cover the "fractured, volatile, weighty 
world of religion" need to be equally respectful of all beliefs. But he 
also says journalists who cover religion "also need to weigh that broad 
respect for belief against a larger truth".

"If a particular tenet of a particular faith has the potential to 
influence the public discourse outside the walls of the church, 
synagogue, or mosque, re****ters are responsible for holding it up to the 
same scrutiny as any other idea tossed into the public square for 
debate," Townsend says.

Townsend was named 2005 religion re****ter of the year by the Religion 
Newswriters Association, a professional grouping of US journalists who 
cover religion. He noted that a blog he wrote for the St. Louis 
Post-Dispatch newspaper "became such a target for corrosive, hateful 
comments that I was forced to shut it down".

As one example of the divisions, Townsend quotes Kevin Eckstrom, the 
editor of the Wa****ngton-based news agency Religion News Service about 
the current divisions within the US Episcopal (Anglican) Church on the 
issue of ***uality:

"The chasm is so deep that neither side trusts the other or is willing 
to give it the benefit of the doubt on anything," Eckstrom said. "The 
traditionalists feel their way of life is being taken away from them by 
the tyranny of the majority, while the progressives think a bigoted 
minority is holding the Holy Spirit hostage. [And] even those fights 
aren't about ***, or even theology, but about power, and who gets to 
make the decisions that will tie the hands of everyone else."

Townsend's article, "Love Thy Neighbour: The Religion Beat in an Age of 
Intolerance" suggests that the divisions of the US religious landscape 
can be traced at least as far back as the Bible itself, which contains 
quite differing views of Jesus' ministry.

As depicted in the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus is both seen as peacemaker 
("Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth ... Blessed are 
the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God") and as 
stirrer of discontent ("Do not think that I have come to bring peace to 
the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword").

"If even Jesus could be divisive, what can be expected of the sinners 
who call themselves his followers?" Townsend writes.

"And how about his contem****ary American disciples, who s****t anonymous 
Internet handles and spend their days trolling blogs dedicated to the 
disparagement of other faiths? What about those who insist that Jesus 
himself have a stronger voice in the US Congress?"

Townsend finds a strong historical basis for such divisions within US 
Christianity, noting that spiritual polarisation is nothing new. 
"Intolerance might as well have been the motto of the Puritans, 
separatists who crossed the Atlantic in 1630, fleeing religious 
persecution," he argues. Puritan leader John Winthrop, Townsend writes, 
told his fellow Christian pilgrims they "were not voyaging to New 
England to set up a democracy. The idea was to found New Jerusalem, a 
Christian government that would complete an unfinished reformation."

He adds, "The United States is a young nation, and maybe it's not so 
strange that these impulses toward exceptionalism and religious 
intolerance — paired as perfectly as a cold Budweiser [beer] and a Ball 
Park Frank [hot dog] — have passed so easily down sixteen generations 
from our Puritan ancestors. By now, they seem encoded into our 
red-white-and-blue DNA."

Tim Townsend's article: 
http://www.cjr.org/review/love_thy_neighbor.php?page=1

-- 


Shalom/Salaam/Pax!                         Rowland Croucher

http://jmm.aaa.net.au/
  (20,000 articles 4000 humor)

Blogs - http://rowlandsblogs.blogspot.com/

Justice for Dawn Rowan - http://dawnrowansaga.blogspot.com/

Funny Jokes and Pics - http://funnyjokesnpics.blogspot.com/
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Journalist scrutinises religion beat amid spiritual 'intolerance
**Rowland Croucher** <  2008-05-16 12:09:58 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan13V112 Fri Jul 25 12:41:42 CDT 2008.