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Many prominent Catholic politicians, for example, have been criticized by church leaders for supporting legal abortion, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. During the 2004 presidential campaign, St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke said he would deny communion to Democratic candidate John Kerry because of the senator's support for abortion rights. Catholics make up about 30 percent of Congress, according to information gathered by Congressional Quarterly and the Pew Forum in 2008. Protestants account for more than half the members of Congress, and about 8 percent are Jewish. Not everyone who lists a religion is devout, by any means. In Washington, "there are people who simply use their faith or their appearance of faith" for political gain, said Wogaman. Making a show of faith can open a politician up to charges of hypocrisy when personal conduct doesn't measure up. Sen. John Ensign of Nevada, for example, stepped down from the Senate Republican leadership last summer after admitting he had an affair for much of the previous year with a married woman on his campaign staff. Ensign was among several Christian lawmakers who lived in a house on C Street SE owned by a Christian prayer group. Faith leaders say members of Congress sometimes approach them simply because they need some reflection time. Rev. Cletus Kiley, former president of the Faith & Politics Institute, said lawmakers have compared their life to a TV set
-- with somebody else controlling the remote and surfing channels. "Every 15 minutes, it seems like they're in a different meeting. ... How do you hold it all together? For many of them, it's faith," said Kiley, who used to lead weekly reflection groups for lawmakers. "When they're under political pressure, they particularly show up because they're looking for a place that reminds them they had a life before they came here, they'll have a life after they leave here." Still, some faith leaders said lawmakers sometimes lapse back into politics during pastoral discussions. Political tensions did enter some of Ogilvie's Bible studies and other conversations with senators. "Oh, yes, I would try and administer both sides of the conflict," Ogilvie said, and "encourage them to come to the best solution for the nation and to work together." Rev. Samuel Lloyd, dean at the Washington National Cathedral, says he sees political and government officials a handful of times a month. "They've got their passions," he said. "Some even have their talking points."
[Associated
Press;
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