2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1468-5906.2003.00200.x
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The Political Attitudes and Activities of Mainline Protestant Clergy in the Election of 2000: A Study of Six Denominations

Abstract: This study examines clergy across six mainline Protestant denominations in terms of their social characteristics, their theological positions, and their political attitudes and behavior. The analysis is based on data collected through random surveys of clergy in each denomination conducted in 2001 using the same instrument. The predominant focus of the article is on the nature and level of political activities exhibited by mainline Protestant clergy in the election year of 2000. The analysis revealed that main… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…When scholarship does consider institutional contexts, it explores stances of the elite rather than those of average adherents (Ecklund, Park, and Sorrell ; Ellis ; Neiheisel and Djupe ; Olson and Cadge ; Smidt et al. ; Wilde and Danielsen ). By examining the micro level, the present study highlights how institutional settings shape local strategies of dissent.…”
Section: Religious Dissent Converts and Microinteractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When scholarship does consider institutional contexts, it explores stances of the elite rather than those of average adherents (Ecklund, Park, and Sorrell ; Ellis ; Neiheisel and Djupe ; Olson and Cadge ; Smidt et al. ; Wilde and Danielsen ). By examining the micro level, the present study highlights how institutional settings shape local strategies of dissent.…”
Section: Religious Dissent Converts and Microinteractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first focuses on ideology. As typified by Guth et al (1997) (see also Guth et al, 2003;Smidt et al, 2003), clergy are assumed to have particular ideological preferences that are closely associated with the denomination or tradition in which they serve. As such, mainline Protestant ministers are expected to encourage greater political liberalism among their parishioners than, say, evangelical pastors.…”
Section: Clergy Reference Groups and Utility Maximizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A majority of Mainline Protestant clergy believe that churches should engage in social justice including reducing racial prejudice, and roughly a fifth of White Mainline, Catholic and Evangelical clergy classify their congregations as maintaining a commitment to social justice [15,16]. Similarly, social justice tends to inform the political behavior of both Mainline and Catholic clergy [15,17].…”
Section: Religion and Tolerance Among Whitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, social justice tends to inform the political behavior of both Mainline and Catholic clergy [15,17]. Congregants are seemingly aware of such discourse, as over half of church-attending Whites report hearing messages about the importance of improving race relations at least once a year in their houses of worship [18].…”
Section: Religion and Tolerance Among Whitesmentioning
confidence: 99%