A growing number Connecticut's religious leaders are calling on Sen. Joe Lieberman to appeal to a higher power and change his mind about including a public option in a health care reform bill.
Last night, hundreds of reform supporters from congregations across the state held a candlelight vigil outside Lieberman's home in Stamford, CT. Today, a group of more than 70 religious leaders from Christian and Jewish congregations sent a letter calling on Lieberman to abandon his threats to filibuster any health care reform bill in the Senate that includes a public option.
"A lot of groups who have historically supported [Lieberman] are praying for him to come back home," Rabbi Ron Fish, leader of the Concerned Clergy Of Connecticut, which sent the letter, told TPMDC.
Lieberman calls himself an "observant" Jew, and is often known to refer to his faith in policy situations. Fish said that he and a growing number of religious leaders in Connecticut are starting to see a disconnect between Lieberman's devotion to faith and his opposition to a public option.
Fish said he generally feels that faith and politics should be kept far apart but said there have been times -- he mentioned the Civil Rights movement -- that faith leaders have been required to step into the political fray. He said the health care debate is another one of those times, and Lieberman's public statements on a public option require him and other religious leaders to counter him.
"In this case, Sen. Lieberman so regularly invokes his religion and his 'conscience' to support his positions that I felt it was important that we called him on the incongruity" of his position on health care and his faith, Fish said.
From the letter the group sent to Lieberman:
For us this is not an intellectual exercise. We work in our communities, among the sick and scared, who face not only illness but financial ruin when disease strikes. We see hard working people denied care because of pre-existing conditions. We see families with health insurance that they simply cannot afford. We see doctors and nurses whose vocation is to mend the broken, frustrated that their efforts are directed toward profits and paperwork rather than people and healing. It is for this reason that we insist that the moral imperative of our time is clear. Anyone whose guide in public policy is conscience, anyone who argues that faith and religious tradition should direct our actions, such a person must stand for universal healthcare in America.
Fish said the "moral choice" in the health care debate is "perfect, pure universal coverage." But he said the bills in the House and Senate offer "the possiblity of getting a real improvement" in coverage, which means they need to be supported on moral grounds as well.
"I wouldn't say that the Torah commands a public option per se," he said, "but I think our faith does require we have a debate about the best ways to improve health care for the underprivileged."
Fish said that Lieberman's threat to filibuster the Senate bill shows he's not listening to that obligation. "He's not laying out the goals that he wants. He's just standing in the way of other's ideas."
Fish said he was a committed Lieberman supporter in 2006, as were others in the Concerned Clergy group he now leads. Fish said today his group is growing, and suggested that the faith community in Connecticut could continue to turn away from Lieberman unless he changes his tune on health care reform. Fish said many of leaders he's talked to are saying the same thing about the man they once backed.
"I hear, 'what happened to Joe?,'" he said.

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Schmed- ley
November 16, 2009 3:57 PM
I guess Sister Mary Rose was right: even the Devil has someone to pray for him.
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Powkat
November 16, 2009 4:26 PM in reply to Schmed- ley
I think I like Sr. Mary Rose.
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Beagle
November 16, 2009 3:58 PM
What's in it for LIEberman?
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Xantar
November 16, 2009 4:00 PM
With any other politician, I would say that this is a great tactic. With Lieberman who has shown no evidence of shame or selflessness, I'm not so sure.
Even though I'm not part of an organized religion, I never enjoy reading stories about sincere religious leaders who want to make the world a better place finding themselves betrayed by their political leaders. Of course there are the Dobsons and Robertsons of the world who are only in it to promote themselves, but even they had underlings who only wanted to help out fellow human beings.
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tiowally
November 16, 2009 4:02 PM
Funny, I keep telling him to go to Hell. I think I'm on a much better path for dealing with this cur.
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Indie Pro
November 16, 2009 4:17 PM in reply to tiowally
Hell is his home.
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VictorLH
November 16, 2009 4:35 PM in reply to Indie Pro
He is Jewish, I don't believe there is a Hell in the Jewish faith.
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Indie Pro
November 16, 2009 4:37 PM in reply to VictorLH
his birth faith belies his devilry
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RedMolly
November 16, 2009 5:00 PM in reply to VictorLH
Judaism has Gehenna (or Gehinnom), which isn't exactly comparable to Hell but is a place that souls go in the afterlife for punishment. But only for 12 months, alas.
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wbgonne
November 16, 2009 7:22 PM in reply to RedMolly
12 months? That's just getting warmed up for Catholics!
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foodchain11
November 16, 2009 5:43 PM in reply to tiowally
I'm hoping he goes to hell too, although the guy is such a chicken if the Rabbis scare him, he might change and then quick change back. Fear? Self-promotion? Tough decision Joe.
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dswx
November 16, 2009 6:37 PM in reply to foodchain11
Eric Cantor is a conservative Jew and serves as an honorary board member of the Virginia Holocaust Museum. Apparently the views of the vast majority of Jews (who are also overwhelming Democratic) on HCR mean nothing to him.
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mans_best_friend
November 16, 2009 4:50 PM
A request: When you get him to "come home", can you please just keep him there?
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The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
November 16, 2009 5:03 PM
These poor misguided souls obviously don't understand that the Awesomeness of Joe is such that the wishes of God are as nothing next to the Needs of Joe. And the Needs of Joe are to extract the just and rightous vengence that is Joe's due after the terrible shabby way he's been treated by the Democrats since 2006. And that after all he'd done for them.
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susanhesselgrave
November 16, 2009 5:10 PM
I would suggest a language that Lieberman truly understands - political power. Strip him of his chairmanship and let him filibuster. Every hour of filibuster on the part of him and his Republican cronies will be lost votes and public support of THEM and their obstructionist ways. A filibuster is not the end of the world. But Joe losing his power would be (from his perspective). Call him on his bluff.
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o224hsday
November 16, 2009 10:23 PM
And when this effort falters, we can always give Garland a call.
To wit "...Garland Eastman, 30,(wearing a Ninja outfit) of Vernon(CT) was charged Sunday with breach of peace after he allegedly waved nunchucks on the corner of Route 83 and Regan Road and threatened to beat up U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman.
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JoeTheMechanic
November 17, 2009 6:44 AM
Joe needs love. He is special and must be pampered.
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Winston Smith
November 17, 2009 7:33 AM
Rather then letters, I think they need to send cash.
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Cy Guy
November 17, 2009 9:01 AM
A quick clarification to the original story. The Interfaith Fellowship for Universal Health Care also represents Muslims and Unitarian-Universalist congregations in CT, not just "Christian and Jewish congregations"
As a follow-up to this story, I'd love for TPM to interview Rev. Reynolds to get his take on the RC Bishops attack on HCR via the Stupak amendment.Reply | Flag Abuse
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Stephanie Hunter
November 17, 2009 11:04 AM
He needs it! He has flipped on the health care and the public option more than a coin! Unfortunately, it's going to cost the American people to miss out on care that works! http://cli.gs/23yYaM/
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DonDavis
November 17, 2009 7:11 PM
In Health Care Vigil Outside Joe Lieberman’s Home, Rabbis Invoke New Commandment
http://satiricalpolitical.com/2009/11/17/health-care-vigil-joe-lieberman-home-rabbis/
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