Lessons Learned in the Obama White House About the Future of Faith in America
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"The former Obama administration 'ambassador to America's believers' gives an inside account of living with faith in the White House and argues that Christians have a responsibility to be a hopeful and faithful presence in public life. As a young Christian in his early twenties, Michael Wear found himself deep inside the halls of power in the Obama administration as one of the youngest ever White House staffers. Throwing himself wholeheartedly into transforming hope into change, Wear experienced first-hand the highs and lows of working as a Christian in government. From the central role of Christians in achievements such as the adoption tax credit and directing the president's attention to human trafficking to the religious controversies and tensions that defined much of the president's time in office, Reclaiming Hope gives an unvarnished account of life inside the most powerful office in the world. At a time when large numbers of thoughtful Christians argue for a withdrawal from participation in public institutions, Wear uses his experience at the white-hot center of civic life to show how and why Christians must be involved in every aspect of cultural life--even if failures seem to outnumber successes--while working on behalf of the nation's common good"--
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Short Review: This is part memoir, part history of the Obama presidency, part policy exploration and part political theology. Overall I think it was well balanced, readable and worth paying attention to. Hope, although tinged with realism, is throughout the book and that is not incidental. Wear has real hope that politics is not completely lost. He has hope that Christians can be engaged without being inappropriately partisan or by ignoring our faith. But he is realist enough to see that simply being a person of faith isn't enough. Part of what has happened is that the GOP became the faith party and Democrats abandoned faith as a core component. That has left Christians in GOP less able to make a difference because GOP views Christians as a group that will always be with them (Trump's election confirmed that.) And Democrats have been weakened by not understanding many religious issues because too many of the policy staff are just ignorant of religious issues. Wear makes the argument that we need people of faith on all sides of politics and that all sides of politics needs to be open to hearing, and being changed by, political conscious of faith.
My full review is on my blog at http://bookwi.se/reclaiming-hope/