Abstract

The role of religious groups in changing inequality has usually been a bottom up approach. Whether it was serving meals to the needy or sheltering the homeless, the vast majority of religious groups have addressed problems of inequality, not by addressing the causes of hunger and homelessness, but rather by offering assistance to those already in need. Rarely have religious groups become engaged in explicitly political activities that challenge structures that create large scale inequality. In this article, I examine the first state level efforts by LA Voice, a congregation-based community group that has worked to ameliorate inequality through political organizing with churches in largely poor minority communities throughout Los Angeles. Drawing on extensive qualitative data from field research and interviews during their first campaign season in 2012, I examine how these religious groups organized around a controversial political issue—an important move away from their traditional community-based organizing—and how their understandings of faith informed this work. Specifically, LA Voice helped pass a state-level initiative that directly challenged systems of inequality; Proposition 30, which raised taxes on the wealthy to fund public education. This political work highlighted long known internal struggles between congregation members who fought these actions and those who recognized the need in their communities and enthusiastically took up this work. This article ends with a discussion of how these early efforts resulted in further engagement by other member congregations.

Highlights

  • The role of religious groups when it comes to income inequality has always been a complicated one (Wilde & Glassman, 2016)

  • Through telling stories, maneuvering around potential problems in the congregations, and linking the pain of the parishioners with the political change, the congregations in this study became politically savvy organizations that were able to make a difference in challenging a system that often perpetuates inequality

  • LA Voice organizer Sherrie noted that by getting congregations to think about systems versus service, these congregations were able to start changing the realities of what life looked like for their members and society at large: Congregations who are deeply worried about homelessness, for example, can talk about homelessness till they’re blue in the face, but if they’re never talking about mental healthcare and affordable housing we’re just going to be feeding people for the rest of our lives....And so I think congregations need to not be afraid to engage in those bigger system level changes and to know that that’s really all part of transforming the world

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Summary

Introduction

The role of religious groups when it comes to income inequality has always been a complicated one (Wilde & Glassman, 2016). I examine how these congregations became engaged; focusing on the role of religious and lay leadership in shaping the political engagement of their congregations, how their religious views connected with political activism, and how these congregations successfully worked around unwilling members. These early efforts later resulted in expanded political work at many more LA Voice member congregations, as well as new impactful policies for California

Previous Research
Congregations and the Politics of Inequality
Data and Methods
Changing Inequality through Congregational Political Engagement
Religious Leaders and Congregational Engagement
Framing Religious Values as Political Values
Overcoming Congregational Obstacles
Congregational Political Success
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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