'Progressive' Christians Say Media Coverage Skewed to Religious Right

Nathan Burchfiel

CNSNews.com

A group of religious leaders and liberal media critics on Tuesday criticized what they view as a media bias in favor of conservative evangelicals and against "progressive" Christianity.

Conservative religious leaders were quoted, mentioned or interviewed in television and print news stories 2.8 times as often as were "progressive" religious leaders, according to a report released by the liberal media watchdog Media Matters for America and the religious group Faith in Public Life.

The report, which examined coverage since the 2004 election, found an increase in coverage of religious issues but determined that "this increased coverage not only over-represents some voices and under-represents others, it does so in a way that is consistently advantageous to conservatives."

Media Matters Senior Fellow Paul Waldman said that when the media looks for a leader to comment on political and religious issues, "overwhelmingly those voices are conservative and the progressive voices by and large are getting ignored."

At the same time that the groups were releasing the study, the Faith in Public Life website hosted a statement by the group praising media coverage of religious issues in the aftermath of the death of Jerry Falwell on May 15.

"Presented with an opportunity to reflect not only on Rev. Falwell but on the movement he began, reporters have turned out story after story on new evangelical leaders and the priority they place on a whole spectrum of compassion issues," the website stated.

The statement pointed to six articles published after Falwell's death that examined the future of the evangelical movement from the perspective of the "progressive" or "emergent" church.

Katie Barge, director of communications of Faith in Public Life, told Cybercast News Service the positive comments shouldn't be taken as a sign that the report is already outdated.

"[W]hile we celebrate and are encouraged by the coverage of emerging evangelical leaders dedicated to a broad range of causes following Falwell's passing, we are well aware of the persistence of the overall trend in the media of overrepresentation of conservative religious views," Barge said in an emailed response to queries.

Brian McLaren, a pastor and author active in the "emergent" church movement, said at a news conference launching the report that most Americans do not subscribe to the views of leaders like Falwell and James Dobson.

Falwell and Dobson, along with Pat Robertson and liberal religious figures Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, were not included in the study's data, because they are "newsmakers," the report says.

The most mentioned religious pundit was conservative Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, who was mentioned almost 700 times. Jim Wallis, president of the liberal Sojourners/Call to Renewal, was mentioned 500 times.

"These names represent a kind of outgoing tide," McLaren said of the conservative voices. "There is a far broader range of voices than any of us are paying attention to."

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godshammer
6/1/2007 7:39 AM
the real problem here is that there is no such thing as progessive christians. these so called christians do not hold to the truth of the bible and deniy the works of Christ. Christianty does NOT change, it is of God and Jesus who the bible says never change . So how can the religion that Christ brought to the world change with the times?
One other thing ,insted of wineing so much mabey the should give their live to Jesus insted of the sinfull world.
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