God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It
Submitted by Faith in Action on April 17, 2007 - 5:48pm.
Book Club: Religion
Secular liberals and religious conservatives will find things to both comfort and alarm them in Jim Wallis's God's Politics. That combination is actually reason enough to recommend the book in a time when the national political and theological discourse is dominated by blanket descriptions and shortsightedness. But Wallis, editor of Sojourners magazine, offers more than just a book that's hard to categorize. What Wallis sees as the true mission of Christianity--righting social ills, working for peace--is in tune with the values of liberals who so often run screaming from the idea of religion. Meanwhile, in his estimation, religious vocabulary is co-opted by conservatives who use it to polarize. Wallis proposes a new sort of politics, the name of which serves as the title of the book, wherein these disparities are reconciled and progressive causes are paired with spiritual guidance for the betterment of society. Wallis is at his most compelling when he puts this theory into action himself, letting his own beliefs guide him through stinging criticisms of the war in Iraq. In his view, George W. Bush's flaw lies in the assumption that the United States was an unprecedented force of goodness in a fight against enemies characterized as "evil." Indeed, although both the right and left are criticized here, the idea is that the liberals, if they would get religion, are the more redeemable lot. Wallis's line between religion and public policy may be drawn a little differently than most liberals might feel comfortable with, and while he pays some lip service to other faiths most of his prescription for America seems to come from the Bible. Still, for a party having just lost a presidential election where "moral issues" are said to have factored heavily, God's Politics is a sermon worth listening to. --John Moe
from amazon.com
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Thanks to be_not_dismayed for suggesting this title!

Bush's flaw lies in the assumption that the United States was an unprecedented force of goodness in a fight against enemies characterized as "evil."
May God forgive me for being too critical, but that statement is only rhetorically correct and Bush used it to blind us and portray the United Sates as a greedy imperial country that it even made us, citizens, fools.
And I do like how this was stated:
Wallis proposes a new sort of politics, the name of which serves as the title of the book, wherein these disparities are reconciled and progressive causes are paired with spiritual guidance for the betterment of society.
Must be a good book to read.
It took me a while to get through it (a week, but I have school and stuff), but it a moving book.
There's a spelling error towards the end of the book. I forget which page. It said "So and so overseas this organization".
And he ends a couple of his sentences in prepositions, but other than that, and I know this is cliche, this is a inspirational book. Even I wanted to go to Africa to fight AIDS after reading this.

but this is my next book to read... I think there is no greater feeling when you can help.
Spelling error? lol well you can find plenty of them on my posts. The classic one is writing sargent instead of sergeant, and I am still embarrassed by it because I have wrote it at a FOUR STAR site. Not to mention my personality disorder from switching to past tense to future tense, and plenty of other grammatical errors.

If you get that far...