Quote of note:
"Historically when societies have gone off kilter, there has been rampant same-sex marriage," Mr. Jackson said in an interview.
My instinctive reaction to this statement was to call bullshit. I mean, I can't recall any society where one could call same-sex marriage rampant. I'm hard pressed to think of one where it was even acknowledged.
And the issue is just a distraction to the Black communities. Not, of course, to gay Black folks. But these sorts of noises are the admission price to Bush's faith based financing .
Anyway...
Black Churches Struggle Over Their Role in Politics
By NEELA BANERJEE
A tug of war is under way inside black churches over who speaks for African-Americans and what role to play in politics, spurred by conservative black clergy members who are looking to align themselves more closely with President Bush.
The struggle, mainly among black Protestants, is taking place in pulpits, church conventions, on op-ed pages and on the airwaves, and the president himself began his second term with a meeting in the White House with black clergy members and civic leaders who supported his re-election.
Bishop Harry R. Jackson Jr., the pastor of the Hope Christian Church in College Park, Md., is part of a new breed of leaders who have warmed to the Republican stand on social values. He paraphrases Newt Gingrich as he stumps the country to promote a "Black Contract With America on Moral Values," whose top priorities include opposition to same-sex marriage and abortion.
"Historically when societies have gone off kilter, there has been rampant same-sex marriage," Mr. Jackson said in an interview. "What tends to happen is that people tend to devalue the institution of marriage as a whole. People start rearing kids without two parents, and the black community already has this incredibly alarming and, if I may say, this shameful number of babies being born without fathers."
He said he hoped to collect a million signatures of support this year.