God-O-Meter

God-O-Meter

Thompson Overstates Methodist Endorsement

posted by dgilgoff | 9:15am Thursday December 27, 2007

thompson3.jpgGod-o-Meter just stumbled on this story from last week about Fred Thompson overstating his conservative Christian support by inflating the heft of a group called the Wesleyan Center for Strategic Studies (whose web site now appears to be down). God-o-Meter had raised questions about the group earlier this month, after the Thompson campaign emailed an ABC News report about its support for Thompson headlined “Thompson Rallies Conservative Christians.” Turns out the group speaks for virtually no one and doesn’t even have the Washington, DC headquarters it claimed to. Here’s what The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette’s Bible Belt Blogger learned about it:

The religious leaders who endorsed Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson on Friday in Jackson, Miss., represent a group closer to the size of West Memphis,Ark. not the state of California, as the former U.S. senator claimed, one of the ministers said Monday.
Standing beside the Rev. Phillip Knight and the Rev. Benny Tate, the respective president and vice president of the Congregational Methodist Church, Thompson said Friday, “I am honored and blessed to receive the endorsement of these two men who represent 40 million people around the nation from 42 different Wesleyan denominations.”
The endorsement — and the 40 million figure — made the news this weekend and ended up in a Time magazine online article Monday.
But Knight and Tate never have been elected to lead the nation’s Wesleyans and Methodists, who number only 14.2 million, according to the 2001 American Religious Identification Survey. And the Congregational Methodist denomination, based in Florence, Miss., has only 26,000-27,000 members, Knight said in an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on Monday.
Jeff Sadosky, a spokesman for the Thompson campaign, said he couldn’t say whether Thompson was accurate when he claimed the men represented 40 million people.
“I’m not a religion expert,” Sadosky said. “The numbers we used came from conversations with them.”
Knight conceded Monday that there aren’t 40 million Wesleyans and Methodists in the United States. Methodists and Wesleyans trace their spiritual roots to John Wesley, the 18th century Anglican preacher who founded the Methodist movement.
In 2006, Knight and Tate founded the Wesleyan Center for Strategic Studies. The organization has a Washington phone number, which was answered by Knight on Monday, and a Washington post office box.
The group’s Web site, www.vchurches.com/wcss/, and blog are devoted primarily to promoting Thompson’s presidential candidacy.
The Web site also claims that the group has an office in the nation’s capital.
Knight told the Democrat-Gazette that the center has at least three employees.
He also reiterated, “We have an office primarily in Washington, D.C.”
When pressed for the address of the office, Knight said the center doesn’t actually have its own office, but that a group called American Values loans the center space when members travel to the capital.
American Values, based in Shirlington, Va., is headed by former GOP presidential candidate Gary Bauer, who hasn’t publicly endorsed any of the Republican candidates.
In an interview, Bauer confirmed he has offered to rent permanent office space to the founder of the Wesleyan center, but said that no deal has been formalized.
Bauer said he also has offered to let the center borrow space, but that he hasn’t seen anyone from the group in a couple of months.
Tate couldn’t be reached for comment Monday. A secretary at his church, Rock Springs Church in Milner, Ga., said she didn’t have any information on the Wesleyan Center for Strategic Studies.
“No sir,” she said. “I’ve never even heard of that.”

God-o-Meter is glad to learn it’s not the only one.


4



Previous Posts

Closed for the Season
With Election Day finally having come and gone, God-o-Meter is closing up shop till 2012--or at least 2010. Till then, get your faith and politics fix over at Beliefnet editor-in-chief Steve Waldman's blog. 7

posted 4:32:33pm Nov. 19, 2008 | read full post »

On The Religious Left, Great Expectations
The first priorities for Barack Obama's administration will be the economy and a variety of foreign policy issues. But the burgeoning religious left, which worked so hard to get Obama elected, expects some movement on its issues, including a robust White House office of faith-based initiatives, pove

posted 1:49:31pm Nov. 07, 2008 | read full post »

Howard Dean's Vindication
God-o-Meter wrote a piece for today's Roll Call on the vindication of Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean's much-derided 50-State Strategy, which is largely about reaching out to the nation's more religious voters in the red states: Years before Barack Obama showed that a liberal Demo

posted 2:01:06pm Nov. 06, 2008 | read full post »

A Post-Election Chat with Ralph Reed
Amid today's talk that Barack Obama has narrowed the God Gap, God-o-Meter checked in with Ralph Reed, who spearheaded religious outreach for George W. Bush's 2000 and 2004 campaigns and who pioneered such outreach for Republicans as executive director of the Christian Coalition. What surprised you i

posted 3:09:07pm Nov. 05, 2008 | read full post »

More Innacurate Faith Storylines From the Media
God-o-Meter is struck by the number of faith-based storylines the news media appear to have gotten dead wrong this year. One was the line that Obama was poised to make big gains among white votes, especially evangelicals, who were undergoing a generational shift in their political thinking and reexa

posted 11:53:20am Nov. 05, 2008 | read full post »

Advertisement
Comments read comments(1)
post a comment
recovering ex-Pentecostal

posted December 27, 2007 at 1:49 pm


This is not a comment about Thompson (or any other specific candidate for that matter), there just doesn’t seem to be a place to make general comments about there being a “God-o-meter” in the first place.
It is about the entire hijacking of a U.S. Presidential election through the imposition of religious tests on ALL candidates – when there isn’t supposed to be any, according to the Constitution.
It precludes (and offends) a Hindu American, or a Jewish American, or a Buddhist American, or a Muslim American, (etc., etc., etc.) for there even to be asked, “Do you believe every word in the Bible?” Why are candidates being grilled on Scriptures from ONE religion (Christianity) and not others – or on any at all?
WAKE UP AMERICA!



report abuse
 

Post a Comment

By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.

Share this story


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Help

Media Kit

Subscribe

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.