Election 2000

October 22, 2000

Source: The New York Times

On October 22, 2000, The New York Times reported that "at New Salem Missionary Baptist, the little country church in Tennessee where Senator Albert Gore's private funeral was held, folks were not at all sure that a woman should be allowed to speak from the pulpit, even if she was an Episcopal bishop, in from Washington, D.C. And some mourners on the other side of the cultural and religious divide that day did not understand them or their point of view. 'At the New Salem Bible Thumping Good News Evangelical High Hope Church -- it had one of those names,' Vice President Al Gore's Harvard mentor and friend Martin Peretz said, laughing, 'there was a little bit of anxiety' about whether she would be allowed to preach. Mr. Gore, though, had spent all his life straddling the two worlds -- of Tennessee and Washington, high church and low, gut-level religion and Ivy League intellectualism. So when they collided, perhaps inevitably, on that of all days, two years ago in December, he knew how to bridge the gap. He suggested that the Tennessee preacher ask himself, 'What would Jesus do?' And in the end, Bishop Jane Holmes Dixon did speak at the service. Those close to the famously scientific-minded vice president, a man who by his own estimation is sometimes a little too rational, say he had not just picked up the right words to use on that occasion, but is himself a believing Southern Baptist whose faith drives him. Yet his Baptist roots are only one part of an intricate and eclectic spiritual life, one that from the start mirrored his larger experience of growing up in two places. For two weeks every summer as a youngster, he was a regular at the revival meetings at New Salem, near his family's farm outside Carthage, Tenn. 'We'd be in the middle of getting the tobacco crop in, and I'd carry Al with us,' his closest childhood friend, Steve Armistead, said. Then, come winter, he would be back at St. Albans prep school in Washington, attending daily chapel services -- Episcopalian services -- at the National Cathedral, where even whispering was not allowed... 'I had a real smorgasbord of religious experiences,' Mr. Gore said in a recent interview about his faith. 'On Sundays in Washington I'd go to the Presbyterian Church around the corner from the Fairfax,' the hotel where his family lived during the school year, 'and in Carthage we'd alternate between my mother's Church of Christ and my father's Baptist church. Except when we went to the Methodist church.' Mr. Gore has continued to branch out over the years, too, studying mysticism as well as ethics, his primary focus during three semesters at Vanderbilt Divinity School, and at least toying with New Age ideas...

"His oldest daughter, Karenna Gore Schiff, said his spiritual search reminded her of the year he spent trying to decide whether to enlist in the Army. 'I remember hearing about the way he was thinking about going to Vietnam, and there's a similar strain in how he's open to religious faith,' she said. 'There's a discomfort with being so sure about something. I see him searching, seeking and striving and don't see his faith as static.'"