Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
What Good Is a Christian Alternative Without Christ?
What Good Is a Christian Alternative Without Christ?
Dec 23, 2025 11:22 AM

During his first term, George W. Bush promised that faith-based organizations that fought addiction and poverty would not be muted in their proclamation of the gospel. The heads of those organizations didn’t believe him.

Read More…

My last entry in this series on passionate conservatism movement concluded with a question: Would John DiIulio, head of the George W. Bush administration’s faith-based office, insist that religion-based programs, to be eligible for federal grants, be devoid of religious teaching or evangelism? I liked John, but such a prospect seemed bizarre to me, and I knew many evangelicals would see it as a betrayal of campaign promises.

On March 7, 2001, both John and I spoke at the National Association of Evangelicals conference in Dallas. I tried to warn him with a story about the Texas mother who saw her daughter in front of their house milking a cow and talking to a strange man. The mom calls out, “Haven’t I always told you not to talk to strangers? e in this house right now.” The girl calls back, “But momma, this man says he’s from Washington.” The wise mother replies, “In that case, bring the cow in with you.”

John told the audience not to worry: “We’re taking a deliberative approach and focusing first on conducting our audits, peting ideas, peting perspectives, and looking forward to … improving government-by-proxy programs through performance-based grant-making.” He gave as an example of what could not be funded: a “faith-based drug treatment program … urging each beneficiary to accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.Its indivisibly conversion-centered ‘treatment modality’ takes the following form: Your problem is X.To cure X, believe Y.”

That did not go over well at the National Association of Evangelicals, nor with others who prized Teen Challenge and similar groups. What if to cure X, believe J turned out to be the most effective program in helping people beat their addictions? Performance-based grant-making might be at war with a ban on speaking about Jesus.

Under evangelical pressure, the Bush administration temporarily pledged not to require groups “to separate their faith from their teaching and counseling” and not to “discriminate against groups from any religion that stress proselytizing, as long as those in need have the opportunity to choose secular alternatives.” One example: “A class that teaches about budgeting and saving by citing biblical verses as normative will receive treatment equal to that of a program resting on secular wisdom.” Under press pressure, even that small concession later disappeared.

Nevertheless, on May 22, 2001, Bush told leaders of Hispanic faith-based groups that “one of mitments is that we will work tirelessly to make sure that bureaucracies don’t stifle the very reason you exist in the first place, and the power of your ministries, which is faith.” Two days later he noted in Cleveland that “my administration will do everything in our power to make sure that those who do interface with government never have to sacrifice their mission, their reason for being.” John DiIulio’s chief assistant, David Kuo, wrote in his 2006 book, Tempting Faith, that the poor ministers and tiny charities thought they could “count on George W. Bush’s White House to fight for them.” Not so.

A week after Bush’s speech, I surveyed several hundred gospel mission heads and saw he had not convinced them that the faith-based initiative would help groups that showed strong faith in God. The head of a Toledo Christian homeless shelter recognized that government should not favor one religious organization over another, but “all that we do, whether providing meals or beds or clothing or counseling, all is done to the glory of God and for ONE purpose, to share the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and to disciple men and women in Christ. …To deny this is to deny our most basic purpose for being.”

My survey showed that only 4% were positive about a grant-making system. Only 5% favored giving vouchers to the alcoholics and addicts, who made up a big part of their clientele, letting them choose where to go: they said most would choose the least-demanding program. Ninety percent echoed ment from a ministry head in Pueblo, Colorado: “Any vouchers or direct government grants would NOT be acceptable to our ministry, as these would undoubtedly lead to government controls and restrictions on the Christian religious nature of our ministry.”

Three of every four ments like this: “The ONLY one of the possibilities that would be acceptable to our ministry would be tax credits.” A Utica, N.Y., leader said tax credits “empower the donor … discretionary grants are least preferable because the government may award them arbitrarily.” A Philadelphia program head stressed that “Evangelical faith-based organizations cannot segment their programs into ‘religious’ and ‘nonreligious’ aspects. Christ is the center of all we do.” mon thread: “The government does not know what is best. We are on the front lines, not them.”

Rep. Mark Souder (R-Ind.), who died last September, understood that. He talked with two leading Democratic opponents of the grant-centered bill heading to House and Senate votes at the end of June. He found receptivity: “Bobby Scott and Chet Edwards were willing to drop [propose] the $500 tax bill with me. On the [House] floor it sounds like we don’t like each other, but we get along fine.” The tax credit idea died, Souder told me, when DiIulio “stopped me in the corridor and insisted that ‘the president really needs this … we’d really appreciate it if you hold off.’ I had to let the president have his shot.”

The House Ways and Means Committee ignored the tax credit approach but approved a measure allowing the 70% of taxpayers who did not itemize to deduct charitable donations. Deductions are much less potent than tax credits, but still something: mittee, though, capped the allowable amount at $25 for single taxpayers, which would amount to $3.75 in annual savings for the typical non-itemizing, 15%-bracket taxpayer. Souder said that the $25 limit and $3.75 result were “close to insulting.”

Nevertheless, Bush motored to the Capitol to ask wavering Republicans to vote for the House bill that centered on government grant-making. Rep. Joe Pitts described Bush’s talk in a basement conference room: “He was very passionate, mitted to this. … You could see he was tearing up. He was saying, ‘Give us a chance.’” Bush did not deal with the question of whether the bill would help groups about which he spoke most highly. He said, “I want you to overlook some of the details and get it done.”It’s unclear why Bush remained wedded to the grant-making approach exclusively, but once he chose DiIulio to head up the administration’s faith-based initiative, it was unlikely that overtevangelism would be allowed in government-funded programs. DiIulio had a strict set of metrics in evaluating programs, and beliefin God was not one of them.

The “get it done” plea became a mantra. John DiIulio later recalled: “One senior staffer chided me at a meeting where many junior staff were present and all ears, ‘Get a faith bill, any faith bill.’” Republicans on virtually a party line vote passed the bill, 233-198. If it became law, it would stop some of the most overt kinds of anti-religious bias. Catholic organizations could keep crucifixes on the wall. But allowing religious symbols and banning religious teaching was superficial religious tolerance that would do nothing, Souder said, for pervasively religious organizations that are “the most effective groups in the country.”

The House bill did not allow government funding of groups that made worship services or religious instruction central to their programs. They could set up a parallel organization for poverty-fighting, but they would not be able to incorporate biblical teaching into all their instructional and counseling activities.They could “consider” religion when they hired staff members but would not be allowed to require that a new hire’s “religious practices” conform to theirs.

It all became moot when a question on hiring became prominent in the Democratic-controlled Senate. The Salvation Army wanted to be able to say no to gays and lesbians, and that goal energized hostility from liberal groups. Sen. Joe Lieberman backed away from his support. Majority Leader Tom Daschle said he would not put it on the Senate agenda. The bill died.

John DiIulio in August announced his resignation, citing health concerns, but in 2002 told journalist Ron Suskind that in the White House “on social policy and related issues, the lack of even basic policy knowledge, and the only casual interest in knowing more, was somewhat breathtaking.” John claimed that “Mayberry Machiavellis” filled the White House: they “consistently talked and acted as if the height of political sophistication consisted in reducing every issue to its simplest, black-and-white terms for public consumption.”

Could the faith-based initiative be saved?

This is the seventh installment of an eight-part series on poverty and welfare reform in America. Click through for partsone,two,three,four,five, and six.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Delta regions of the world, unite!
The current situation in New Orleans can be seen in part as a result of the circumstances and context of the city’s founding in 1718. According to one report, the French settled on the site for New Orleans in response to “the need to control the Mississippi River and its tributaries.” But in order for this to happen, the French “would need to control the mouth of the river in the delta at the Gulf of Mexico. The problem with...
Spendthrift republicans
A wonderful piece by Deroy Murdock today on NRO. Though most fiscal conservatives understandably vote Republican, the record substantiates the theory that spending is less responsible when Congress is dominated by one party—either party—than when each party has enough votes to frustrate the other. Others have drawn attention to the problem of Republican pork, but Murdock does so in an especially devastating way. ...
Fab labbing, Fu-Fu, and the ovine entrepreneur
The BBC reports today a great illustration of human creativity and the intersection of technology and subsidiarity. MIT has set up what they called Fab Labs (Fabrication Labs) in what many might consider the least likely places for technological invention. These Labs consist of basic tools and software than enable people in sometimes remote and rural locations to invent and fabricate the technology they need in their daily work. MIT professor Neil Gershenfeld: In a world of Fab Labs, you...
Corporate faith
Two stats featured in this month’s Go Figure section of Christianity Today: 17: Percentage of the top 50 Fortune 500 corporations’ foundations whose policies prohibit their giving to faith-based groups. 57: Percentage of corporations that mention faith-based organizations and will not match employee contributions to them. ...
Serenity now!
Why review a television show that pleted even its first season nearly three years ago? The confluence of events and circumstances that resulted in the cancellation of the Fox show Firefly in 2002 has done little to destroy the resiliency of the Firefly phenomenon. While only 14 episodes were ever made, and only 11 of those ever shown, once plete series of Firefly came out on DVD, it topped sales at Amazon for months (it’s currently ranked #7). Fans of...
Submerged subsidiarity
Because too much has already been said about the recent gulf hurricanes, I won’t put in my two cents. I will, however, direct the reader to the most insightful take on this situation that I have yet to stumble across. As you read it, think again about the importance of the definitions of the words we use, such as ‘responsibility’ and ‘authority’ as are discussed in the mentioned article. ...
Hurricane relief – Small organizations to the rescue
In the wake of overwhelming need of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, thankfully a number of us are voicing irritation with the inquiry, “How important do you think that faith-based organizations are to helping people”? Before ANY organization — government agency of any kind or national nonprofit — made a move, faith organizations had already moved. In San Antonio, where several Russian students were among New Orleans evacuees, Victory Fellowship, a faith-based, privately funded substance abuse treatment program, simply did the...
Tolerance: True and false
Pope Benedict XVI: “A tolerance which allows God as a private opinion but which excludes him from public life, from the reality of the world and our lives, is not tolerance but hypocrisy,” the pope said in the homily he gave at a three-week-long synod’s opening mass in St Peter’s Basilica. “When man makes himself the only master of the world and master of himself, justice cannot exist. Then, arbitrariness, power and interests rule.” ...
Homo Religiosus
An article by City University of New York professor Richard Wolin celebrates the legacy of Jürgen Habermas, who represents a shift from philosophers such as Marx and Nietzsche. “Among 19th-century thinkers it was an monplace that religion’s cultural centrality was a thing of the past,” but in the words of Habermas, “For the normative self-understanding of modernity, Christianity has functioned as more than just a precursor or a catalyst. Universalistic egalitarianism, from which sprang the ideals of freedom and a...
The nose of a camel: The federal government and education
Federal involvement in education has grown steadily throughout the nation’s history, encroaching on what is still viewed by American’s as mostly a state and local responsibility. Kevin Schmiesing looks at a new book that examines U.S. education policy, the red tape and bureaucracy that has resulted, and the opposition to federal control that arose from parochial school administrators. Read the full text here. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved