As religious affiliation is becoming more and more of an issue in presidential politics, I thought you might want to share this news release with your congregations.
Rev. Stephanie Boughton Haines
Conference Minister
revshaines@pncucc.org
Pacific Northwest Conference
6218 Beacon Ave. South
Seattle, WA 98108
206.725.8383
This
page is from the
http://www.ucc.org/news/u010704.htm
Howard Dean is one of many
United Church of Christ members: Presidential candidate's church is rich with
heritage, diversity
By J. Bennett Guess
Editor, United Church News
CLEVELAND—Like Bill Clinton and Al Gore,
presidential candidate Richard Gephardt wears the Southern Baptist tag, while
George Bush and John Edwards are United Methodists. John Kerry and Dennis
Kucinich are life-long Roman Catholics.
Carol Moseley Braun, no longer Catholic,
worships as an Episcopalian. Joseph Lieberman is an Orthodox Jew, and the Rev.
Al Sharpton, a Pentecostal minister, spends his Sunday mornings in the pulpit.
But Howard Dean, the former five-term
Vermont Governor who has emerged as the Democratic Party's presidential front
runner, is piquing interest with word that he's a
"Congregationalist"—a faith label much less recognizable to those
living outside the Congregationalist-laden Northeast.
Not since a war-time Richard Nixon cried
Quaker have so many expressed interest in learning about a presidential
aspirant's faith tradition.
To be technically accurate, Dean is a member
of the United Church of Christ, a 1.3-million-member denomination of nearly
6,000 congregations formed in 1957 by the union of the Congregational Christian
Churches and the Evangelical and Reformed Church. But in
Born to a Catholic mother and an Episcopal
father, Dean was raised in the Episcopal Church. But in 1982, the same year
Dean entered public life as a member of
Dean's wife, Judith Steinberg Dean, who also
is a doctor, is Jewish. Their two children have been raised with exposure to
both traditions by observing Jewish and Christian holidays.
The Rev. Robert A. Lee—Dean's
pastor—describes Dean as a "supportive and faithful member of the
congregation."
"Howard Dean is known in this community
and in the church as a person with strong principled views who speaks his mind
and stands up for what he believes in," Lee told United Church News, the
UCC's denominational newspaper, in September.
To illustrate, Lee said that when the
congregation's board of trustees suggested that members donate part of their
2002 tax rebate checks to the church to fund ministries for the poor, "One
of the first letters I received in response to that appeal was from the
Governor of Vermont's office, with a check for [Dean's] entire tax
rebate."
To be sure, the UCC's
But
The UCC's membership includes six U.S. Senators,
representing a broad political spectrum: Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), Daniel Akaka
(D-Hawaii), Jim Jeffords (I-Vt.), Max Baucus (D-Mont.), Jon Corzine (D-N.J.)
and former presidential hopeful Bob Graham (D-Fla.), who was the first
candidate to withdraw from the 2004 contest.
Andrew Young (D-Ga.), the former civil
rights leader, member of Congress, U.N. ambassador and
On Dec. 30, conservative syndicated
columnist Cal Thomas, disparaged the UCC as "a liberal denomination that
does not believe in ministerial authority or church hierarchy." Thomas
further claimed that "each Congregationalist believes he is in direct
contact with God and is entitled to sort out truth for himself."
Meanwhile, The New Republic, in its Dec. 29 cover story on Dean's religious
life, called his church "a denomination famous for its informality and
liberal stances."
More accurately, the UCC's Congregationalist
roots trace back to the early 1600s, when the Pilgrims and Puritans first landed
on the continent. These "Congregationalists," as they were later
called, sought religious independence from persecuting political authorities in
Today, the UCC holds firmly to these early
religious tenets. Yet, while often recognized for its historical and
contemporary social justice commitments, its approach to worship might be
considered traditional by most standards.
Although each congregation's liturgical
style is influenced by its heritage and members' preferences, as is true in
most mainline denominations, the UCC, as one pastor aptly put it, is an
"exasperating and heady mix."
Interestingly, "A Field Guide to U.S.
Congregations," a 2002 publication based on a comprehensive survey of U.S.
Christians, found that UCC members, slightly more than others, listed
traditional hymns and biblically-sound preaching as being essential to good
worship. Surprising to some, the same study also found that slightly more UCC
members self-identified as conservative rather than liberal—a tidbit that
President Calvin Coolidge, a conservative Republican and the nation's last
Congregationalist president (1923-1929), might have found interesting.
As one of the nation's oldest faith
traditions, the UCC includes some of the country's oldest congregations and
structures, including many organized and built nearly four centuries ago. As a
blend of four distinct Christian traditions—Congregational, Christian,
Evangelical and Reformed—each strain of the UCC has left its mark on
Increasingly, the UCC is becoming home to
churches outside the original mix. Since 2001, more than 80 churches have
joined the UCC, including many once-Southern Baptist congregations that have
been "disfellowshiped" by state or national conventions for ordaining
women or welcoming gay and lesbian members.
The UCC has historical ties to hundreds of
educational institutions, including the likes of Harvard, Yale and
Known widely for its leadership on social,
racial and economic justice issues, UCC history includes an impressive list of
firsts. It launched the first attempt at congregational democracy (1630), led
the movement to abolish slavery (1700), was a leading force in the spiritual
revival known as the Great Awakening (1730), staged the nation's first act of
civil disobedience that inspired the "Boston Tea Party" (1773), hid
the Liberty Bell when the British occupied Philadelphia (1777), was the first
mainline denomination to ordain an African-American pastor (1785) and formed
the nation's first foreign missionary society (1810).
The UCC came to the aid of the
illegally-enslaved Amistad captives in 1839, an event that led to the U.S.
Supreme Court's first civil rights ruling. It was the first church to ordain a
woman in 1853 and the first to ordain an openly gay man in 1972.
The Cleveland-based United Church of Christ
has been a consistent leader in the global ecumenical, interfaith movement and
maintains full communion partnerships with the Christian Church (Disciples of
Christ), the Presbyterian Church (USA), the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
and the Reformed Church in America.
©
2003 The
(http://www.ucc.org)

