The President's Spiritual Scribe:
For a White House speechwriter, coining flowery phrases for your boss
is less important than accommodating his speaking style and deepest
convictions. For Michael Gerson, 40, George W. Bush's chief scribe
since the 2000 presidential campaign (he will become a policy adviser
in the West Wing), breaking that code meant knowing as much about the
New Testament as about Bush's Texas roots. That proved easy. The
former journalist shares Bush's devout Christian faith and his view
that the role of Providence in human affairs should be reaffirmed in
the public square.
Though even some G.O.P. supporters have criticized the President for
his regular religious references, such lines are not likely to
disappear from his speeches. "Scrubbing public discourse of religious
ideas," says Gerson, "would remove one of the main sources of social
justice in our history."