- Joined
- Jul 13, 2007
- Messages
- 63,466
Jeb Bush converted to Catholicism. This is extremely relevant from a political perspective, although the importance is nearly lost on most Americans. What does this represent from a recent American historical perspective, and current politics? Any thoughts?
(This thread is not meant to be about religion, but about the politics surrounding religious groupings. Religion discussions are for a different sub-forum.)
(This thread is not meant to be about religion, but about the politics surrounding religious groupings. Religion discussions are for a different sub-forum.)
Jeb Bush moved away first from Texas, and then from his family’s patrician identity as White Anglo-Saxon Protestants.
"I’ve actually converted to Catholicism … I’m whatever a W-A-S-C would be. I’m a proud Catholic and a converted one, principally because this was the faith of my wife, and I wanted our children to grow up in a non-mixed marriage. So … no longer a WASP."
...
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/02/is-jeb-bush-a-republican-obama/385168/
NEW YORK, NY (The Deacons Bench) - After gobbling up tons of bandwidth over the Kennedys, let's now turn to the other side of the aisle, and another political dynasty, okay?
...
"At Communion and Liberation's annual Rimini Meeting last week, Jeb Bush, the former governor of Florida, spoke about why he decided to become a Catholic and of his opposition to those elected officials who think they should keep their faith in a safety deposit box.
...
...Bush said what primarily attracted him to the faith were the sacraments of the Catholic Church, the timeless nature of the message of the Catholic Church, and the fact that the Catholic Church believes in and acts on absolute truth as its foundational principles and doesn't move with modern times as my former religion did.
"A former Episcopalian who was received into the Church in 1995, Bush said, In the United States many people think that to keep your faith, you need to put it into a safety deposit box if you're an elected official until you finish your service as a public servant, and then you can go and get it back. I never thought that was appropriate."
"Bush added, As it relates to making decisions as a public leader, one's faith should guide you. That's not to say that every decision I made would be completely in keeping with the teachings of the Catholic Church, but it was a guide post that kept me out of trouble.
...
More: http://www.catholic.org/news/national/story.php?id=34357