Two weeks ago, I criticized national magazines’ coverage of Sarah Palin’s faith for providing more facts than explanations. Today I criticize Newsweek’s cover story about Palin for … providing more facts than explanations. As you can see, I am breaking new intellectual ground!
Newsweek’s story attempts to answer the question of how a small-town, working-class woman became the Republican Party’s vice-presidential nominee. Part of its answer focuses on her religious faith, especially her former membership in the Assemblies of God.
Her sense of personal mission may be rooted in her religious upbringing. She was raised in a tradition that tended to emphasize an intimate connection with God, through the Holy Spirit—a tradition that puts the believer at the center of the spiritual drama, in direct communion with the Lord. Formed in such a milieu, it is not surprising that someone like Palin would have a heightened sense of self, and of the possibilities of self, for she was taught from her earliest days that she could be directly moved by God. Friends say the Ten Commandments imbued her with a strong sense of right and wrong. Even now, when she talks about complex political matters, she sometimes speaks in religious terms …
Like succeeding paragraphs, this paragraph does not tell readers much about Palin’s denomination. It shows only that Palin is a religious monotheist and a politician, not a Pentecostal. We are told that her religious upbringing emphasized “an intimate connection with God” and “put the believer at the center of the spiritual drama.” How this theology differs from that of Judaism, Christianity, or Islam is left unstated. And we are told that she has a “heightened sense of self.” How this self-understanding differs from that of a Western politician is similarly unmentioned.
In the next two paragraphs, Newsweek’s story attempts to flesh out Palin’s former beliefs as a member of the Assemblies of God:
Palin was raised a devout Christian, attending an Assembly of God church from the age of 4 until she was 38, and baptized in the cold waters of Alaska’s Little Beaver Lake when she was 12. (She now attends different churches, one in Wasilla and one in Juneau.) As a child, she went to services on Sundays and Bible class on Wednesdays. She participated in after-school religious groups, and sang in the church choir. Her entry in the Wasilla High School yearbook of her senior year included one quote: “He is the Light and in the Light there is Life.”
The Assemblies of God puts great importance in the believer’s receiving the Holy Spirit. The faithful sometimes show this by the “gift of tongues” — the babble of holy but unintelligible language that emerges when a believer is said to be caught up in the spirit of God. The practice wasn’t encouraged in Palin’s church when she was young, says her childhood pastor, Paul Riley, who is now retired. He preferred to preach that the Holy Spirit could move believers in other ways, and that tongues, while true, could be a showy “one-time experience.” Palin didn’t speak in tongues, Riley told NEWSWEEK, “but I do recall her being a gifted leader and a gifted speaker.”
These two passage, too, don’t explain much. All readers really learn is that Palin was always a religious Christian. It doesn’t show us that Palin herself spoke in tongues, only that members of her church did. It does tell us that Palin was a “gifted leader and a gifted speaker.” But how does that relate to her religion? Would it not relate just as much to her having entered beauty contests and played in the high-school basketball state championship game?
Put simply, Newsweek’s explanations are unsatisfactory. Its story does not show us how her views as a former member of an Assemblies of God church affect her politics. It does not even show us that she is out of the mainstream on cultural issues, which given her opposition to abortion in cases of rape and incest, she is.
Granted, the story does show that Palin’s religious rhetoric is not that of a typical politician or a traditionally religious politician:
To a church gathering, she described a $30 billion natural-gas pipeline project, backed by state tax money, as “God’s will.” Similarly, she urged her audience to pray that the war in Iraq was “a task that is from God … That’s what we have to make sure that we’re praying for — that there is a plan and that that plan is God’s plan.”
Yet the story does not link Palin’s former views as a member of an Assemblies of God church to the quotes above. In short, this story left me with a question similar to that of USC student and reporter Tara Graham,
if Pentecostalism is indeed on the rise, what role might it play in the political discourse and election outcomes of the future?
That’s a great question. It’s too bad that Newsweek has not answered that question in not one but two issues of the magazine.
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Comments (7) |







September 12, 2008, at 1:42 pm
One thing I’m looking for is coverage of Palin’s current religious beliefs and practices. Isn’t she no longer pentecostal and more of a non-denominational evangelical? Personally, I’m more interested in this information because the generic Christian label covers such a huge tent of beliefs and practices - some detail would be greatly appreciated.
From my own experience, the way my religious beliefs affected my life is much different than before I became a practicing Catholic. If someone wrote an article based on what I was doing several years ago, it would hardly reflect the influence of my faith in my life now. It just seems odd that all the coverage is focused on a church she hasn’t been a member of for years and only goes to occasionally - unless I completely misunderstand the situation and her beliefs are still pentecostal she just goes to a different church because she moved to a different town or something.
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September 12, 2008, at 2:17 pm
So much for the Republican party supposedly downplaying her faith. Sounds like it’s the media that is purposely downplaying her faith.
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September 12, 2008, at 2:48 pm
One thing I’ve been looking for but have not seen is a discussion about Gov. Palin’s history with Pentecostalism and any potential impact that (and the attending media coverage which has in some outlets tended toward ridicule) might have on the Hispanic vote, a group which has apparently seen rising numbers of Pentecostals in recent years.
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September 12, 2008, at 4:34 pm
Mark, do you mean to suggest that Assembly of God is not a Christian faith? It seems a poor choice of words.
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September 12, 2008, at 5:04 pm
No, I did not. You’re right: my choice of words was poor.
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September 12, 2008, at 11:35 pm
Mark—A really good analysis of the Newsweek article. And the Hispanic -Pentecostal-political angle is clearly something that should be looked into.
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September 13, 2008, at 10:22 am
Religions are useful to describe the human condition and to articulate how people ought to behave with one another. I think the problem with some religions such as Islam and Christianity is that some practitioners believe that they are right and everyone else is wrong. But organizing human beings to achieve things, whether starting a business or running a government, is simply a skill and has absolutely nothing to do with what religion, if any, you practice. There’s a big difference between a nation that’s founded on religious principles and one that essentially uses a Christian “Ouija board” to determine what it ought to do next. According to Palin’s Assembly of God Pastor, I’m going to hell. I voted for Kerry in the last election.
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