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Christian Fundamentalism Permeates the Republican Party: Sarah Palin's links to the Christian Rightby F. William EngdahlSat, 13 Sept 2008http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va & aid=10167Some days ago, most Americans had never heard of Alaska Governor Sarah

Palin. Now, following her Vice Presidential acceptance speech, viewed

live by more than 40 million people, Palin is viewed favorably by 58%

of American voters according to the latest Rasmussen Reports survey.

The self-described 'hockey mom''s poll ratings, if they are to be

believed, are that of a rock superstar who is rated now higher than

either McCain or Democrat Obama. The same Bush-Cheney propaganda

apparatus that made the nation believe that Saddam Hussein was the new

Hitler and that Georgia was a helpless victim of ruthless Russian

aggression after 8.8.08 in Georgia is clearly behind one of the most

impressive media propaganda efforts in recent history - the effort to

package Republican Vice Presidential candidate, Sarah Palin, Governor

of Alaska for less than 19 months, to be the American dream candidate.

Her religious roots are something she has been deliberately vague

about. It's worth a closer look.

As I discuss in some detail in my soon-to-be-released book, Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order,

one of the most significant transformations of American domestic

politics over the past three decades since the early 1970's, when

George H.W. Bush was head of the CIA, has been the deliberate

manipulation of significant segments of the population, most of them

undoubtedly sincere believing people, around the ideology of

'born-again' evangelical Christian Fundamentalism to create something

known as the Christian Right. Within the broad spectrum of

fundamentalist denominations there are some currents which are

particularly alarming. Sarah Palin comes out of such a milieu.

The phenomenon of the rapid spread within the United States since

the 1980's of evangelical Pentecostalism is a political phenomenon

which has become so influential that the two elections of George W.

Bush as well as countless races for Senate or Congress often depend on

the backing or lack of it from the organized Religious Right.

The spawning of some Christian Right sects also creates an ideology

to drive the shock troops willing to literally 'die for Christ' in

places such as Iraq or Afghanistan, Iran or elsewhere that the Pentagon

needs their services. That ideology has been used to build a

fanatical activist base within the Republican Party which backs a

right-wing domestic agenda and a military foreign policy that sees

Islam or other suitable opponents of the US power elite as Satanism

incarnate. How does Sarah Palin fit into this?

The CNP: manipulating religion to political ends

Many of the religious evangelical groups in America are coordinated top-down by a secretive organization called the Committee on National Policy. Former close Bush adviser, Rev. Ted Haggard, was a member of the Committee on National Policy until a sex and drugs scandal forced him out in late 2006.

Haggard was Pastor of the New Life Church in Colorado Springs

described as the 'evangelical Vatican,' and was head of the National

Association of Evangelicals. Ted Haggard was also a member of a highly

significant and little-understood sect known as Joel's Army or the Manifest Sons of God, the same circles which spawned Sarah Palin.

Another noteworthy member of the CNP as was Grover Nyquist, the man once described as the 'Field Marshall of the Bush Plan.'

The CNP, created in the early 1980's during the Reagan era, is the

nexus for several odd and quite powerful organizations. It was

described by ABC's Marc J. Ambinder as 'the conservative version of the

Council on Foreign Relations.' CNP Members include names such as

General John Singlaub, shipping magnate J. Peter Grace, Texas

billionaire Nelson Bunker Hunt, Edwin J. Feulner Jr of the right-wing

Heritage Foundation, Rev. Pat Robertson of the Christian Broadcasting

Network, Jerry Falwell, Tim LaHaye and most of the prominent names in

the Christian Right around Bush. It has included prominent politicians

including Senator Trent Lott, Senator Don Nickles, former Attorney

General Ed Meese, Col. Oliver North of Iran-Contra fame, and Right-wing

philanthropist Else Prince, mother of Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater the controversial private security firm.1

CNP members have also included not only the Rev. Sun Myung Moon

Unification Church, definitely a bizarre formation whose founder openly

states that he is superior to Christ. The CNP as well reportedly

includes the Church of Scientology.2

CNP member and GOP strategist, Gary Bauer, links both. Bauer's

Family Research Council was a signatory of the Scientology Pledge to

remove psychology from California schools and replace it with L. Ron

Hubbard's Dianetics. Bauer was also a speaker at Sun Myung Moon's

Family Federation for World Peace and Unification Conference in 1996.

Religious researchers Paul and Phillip Collins describe the CNP as follows:

 

'The CNP appears to be a creation of factions of the power elite

designed to mobilize well-meaning Christians to unwittingly support

elite initiatives. The CNP could also be considered a project

in religious engineering that empties Christianity of its metaphysical

substance and re-conceptualizes many of its principles and concepts

according to the socially and politically expedient designs of the

elite. These contentions are supported by the fact that many

CNP members are also members of other organizations and/or criminal

enterprises that are tied directly to the power elite.'3

 

In order to shape public debate over the course of national

military and foreign as well as domestic policy, the US establishment

had to create mass-based organizations to manipulate public opinion in

ways contrary to the self-interest of the majority of the American

people. The Committee on National Policy was formed to be a central part of this mass manipulation.

The Committee on National Policy is a vital link between

multi-billion dollar defense contractors, Washington lobbyists like the

convicted felon and Republican fundraiser, Jack Abramoff,

and the Christian Right. It's at the heart of a new axis between

right-wing military politics, support for the Pentagon war agenda

globally and the neo-conservative political control of much of US

foreign and defense policy.

The CNP has been at the center of Karl Rove's carefully-constructed Bush political machine. Tom Delay and dozens of top Bush Administration Republicans are or had been members of the CNP. Few

details about the organization are leaked to the public. As secretive

as the Bilderberg Group if not more so, the CNP releases no press

statements, meets in secret and never reveals names of its members

willingly.

The elite circles behind the Bush Presidency have crafted an

extremely powerful political machine using the forces and energies of

the Christian Right and millions of American Christians unaware of the

darker manipulations. Is Sarah Palin a part of such darker

manipulations?

Sarah Palin and Dominionism

Sarah Palin it appears now, was chosen very carefully

as she comes out of the very fundamentalist evangelical circles that

the CNP uses to mobilize and shape America's political agenda.

Palin reportedly drew early attention from state GOP leadership

when, during her first mayoral campaign, she ran on an anti-abortion

platform. Normally, political parties do not get involved in Alaskan

municipal elections because they are nonpartisan. But once word of her

evangelical views made its way to Juneau, the state capitol, state

Republicans put money behind her campaign. According to researcher, Charley James, "Once

in office, Palin set out to build a machine that chewed up anyone who

got in her way. The good, Godly Christian turns out to be anything but."

The religious background of Sarah Palin is not unrelated to her bid

to take the nation's second highest office. She herself has been

extremely vague about that background. Given the details, it becomes

clearer perhaps why.

Sarah Palin has spent more than two and a half decades of

her life as a member of an Alaska church which is part of a fanatical

Christian-named cult project that is sweeping across America. Palin comes out of the most radical stream of US Born-Again Evangelism known as 'Joel's Army,' an offshoot of what is called Dominionism and sometimes also called the Latter Rain cult or Manifest Sons of God. The movement deliberately attempts to remain below the radar screen.

A Dominionist soldier in McCain's Army

Sarah Palin is a product of an extreme fringe of the American Evangelical movement known variously as the Third Wave Movement, also known as the New Apostolic Reformation,

or as Joel's Army, a part of what is called Dominionism. Until 2002

according to their own website, Palin was a member of Wasilla Assembly

of God with Senior Pastor Ed Kalnins. Online video clips of Palin

speaking from the pulpit of this church are revealing. Curiously,

between the time this article was begun on September 9th and the 11th,

the video was removed without explanation.

As one researcher familiar with the history of the Third Wave Movement or Dominionism describes,

'The Third Wave is a revival of the theology of the Latter Rain tent

revivals of the 1950s and 1960s led by William Branham and others. It

is based on the idea that in the end times there will be an outpouring

of supernatural powers on a group of Christians that will take

authority over the existing church and the world. The believing

Christians of the world will be reorganized under the Fivefold Ministry

and the church restructured under the authority of Prophets and

Apostles and others anointed by God. The young generation will form

'Joel's Army' to rise up and battle evil and retake the earth for God.'4

 

The excesses of this movement were declared a heresy in 1949 by the

General Council of the Assemblies of God, and again condemned through

Resolution 16 in 2000.

Sarah H. Leslie, a former Christian Right leader, describes the ideology of Dominionism:

 

'The Gospel of Salvation is achieved by setting up the 'Kingdom of

God' as a literal and physical kingdom to be 'advanced' on Earth in the

present age. Some dominionists liken the New Testament Kingdom

to the Old Testament Israel in ways that justify taking up the sword,

or other methods of punitive judgment, to war against enemies of their

kingdom.

'Dominionists teach that men can be coerced or compelled to enter the kingdom.

They assign to the Church duties and rights that belong Scripturally

only to Jesus Christ. This includes the esoteric belief that believers

can 'incarnate' Christ and function as His body on Earth to establish

His kingdom rule. An inordinate emphasis is placed on man's efforts;

the doctrine of the sovereignty of God is diminished.'5

 

Leslie quotes from Al Dager's Vengeance Is Ours: The Church In Dominion:

 

'Dominion theology is predicated upon three basic beliefs: 1) Satan

usurped man's dominion over the earth through the temptation of Adam

and Eve; 2) The Church is God's instrument to take dominion back from

Satan; 3) Jesus cannot or will not return until

the Church has taken dominion by gaining control of the earth's

governmental and social institutions.'6

 

Sarah Leslie pinpoints to the central deception behind the current

spread of Dominionism among various Protestant denominations across

America today:

 

'Dominion theology is a heresy. As such it is rarely presented as

openly as the definitions above may indicate. Outside of the

Reconstructionist camp, evangelical dominionism has wrapped itself in slick packages

- one piece at a time - for mass-media consumption. This has been a

slow process, taking several decades. Few evangelicals would recognize

the word 'dominionism' or know what it means. This is because other terminologies have been developed which soft-sell dominionism, concealing the full scope of the agenda.

Many evangelicals (and even their more conservative counterparts, the

fundamentalists) may adhere to tidbits of dominionism without

recognizing the error...

'To most effectively propagate their agenda, dominionist leaders

first developed new ecclesiologies, eschatologies and soteriologies for

targeted audiences along the major denominational fault lines of

evangelical Christianity. Then the 1990s Promise Keepers

men's movement was used as a vehicle to 'break down the walls', i.e.,

cross denominational barriers for the purpose of exporting dominionism

to the wider evangelical subculture. This strategy was so effective

that it reached into the mainline Protestant denominations. Dominionists have carefully selected leaders to be trained as 'change agents' for 'transformation' (dominion) in an erudite manner that belies the media stereotype of southern-talking, Bible-thumping, fundamentalist half-wits.'7

 

Wasilla Assembly of God

Sarah Palin comes out of the circles of such Dominionist networks.

Sarah Palin was reportedly re-baptized at age twelve at the Wasilla

Assembly of God church. Palin attended the church from the time she was

ten until 2002, over twenty-eight years. Palin's association with the

Wasilla Assembly of God has continued nearly up to the day she was

picked by Senator John McCain as running mate.

Palin is now under investigation for possible improper use of state

travel funds for a trip she made on June 8 to Wasilla. Her trip in

turns out was to attend a Wasilla Assembly of God 'Masters Commission'

graduation ceremony, and a multi-church Wasilla event known as 'One

Lord Sunday.' At the latter, Palin and Alaska LT Governor Scott Parnell

were publicly blessed, onstage before an estimated crowd of 6,000,

through the "laying on of hands" by Wasilla Assembly of God's Head

Pastor Ed Kalnins, her former pastor.

The pastor, Ed Kalnins, and Masters Commission students have

traveled to South Carolina to participate in a 'prophetic conference'

at Morningstar Ministries, one of the major ministries of the Third Wave movement. The head of prophecy at Morningstar, Steve Thompson,

is currently scheduled to do a prophecy seminar at the Wasilla Assembly

of God. Other major leaders in the movement have also traveled to

Wasilla to visit and speak at the church.

In his sermons, Kalnins promotes such exotic theological

concepts as the possession of geographic territories by demonic spirits

and the inter-generational transmission of family 'curses'.

Palin has also been 'anointed,' by an African cleric, Bishop Thomas

Muthee, prominent in the Joel's Army movement, who has repeatedly

visited the Wasilla Assembly of God and claims to have effected

positive, dramatic social change in a Kenyan town by driving out a

'spirit of witchcraft.' 8

As Governor in Juneau, six hundred miles from Wasilla, Palin attends

the Juneau Christian Church of Pastor Mike Rose, an Assembly of God

Third Wave church.

Sarah Leslie describes the movement which has supported Sarah Palin for most of her life:

 

'New Apostolic Reformation. This dominionist sect is a direct

offshoot of the Latter Rain cult (also known as Joel's Army or Manifest

Sons of God). Chief architect of this movement for the past two decades

is C. Peter Wagner, President of Global Harvest Ministries and Chancellor of the Wagner Leadership Institute.

His spiritual warfare teachings have been widely disseminated through

mission networks such as AD 2000, which was closely associated with the

Lausanne Movement. A prominent individual connected to this sect is Ted Haggard, current head of the National Association of Evangelicals.'9

 

C. Peter Wagner is quoted by Leslie defining his view of what he calls 'The New Apostolic Reformation,':

 

'Since 2001, the body of Christ has been in the Second Apostolic

Age. The apostolic/prophetic government of the church is now in place.

.. . . We began to build our base by locating and identifying with the

intercessory prayer movements. This time, however, we feel that God

wants us to start governmentally, connecting with the apostles of the

region. God has already raised up for us a key apostle in one of the

strategic nations of the Middle East and other apostles are already

coming on board. Once we have the apostles in place, we will

then bring the intercessors and the prophets into the inner circle, and

we will end up with the spiritual core we need to move ahead for

retaking the dominion that is rightfully ours.'-- C. Peter Wagner

 

Wagner, who took over Haggard's Colorado Springs center when the

latter was forced to resign in disgrace, claims that there are as many

New Apostolic Reformation churches in the US as Southern Baptist

churches. The movement worldwide is estimated as high as 100 million people. And yet its impact is completely under the radar of most researchers outside of those in the movement itself.

An 'end-time soldier in God's army'?

All evidence suggests Palin was carefully selected by the

leadership of the Bush-Cheney-McCain Republican party to galvanize the

Party's activist Evangelical base, something McCain had been unable to

do.

Some theological and political background to the Joel's Army or

Third Wave movement as it is also known, is instructive. It teaches a

radical fundamentalist creed that its adherents must actively engage in politics, to become what they term, 'soldiers in God's Army.'

The Joel's Army movement focuses on recruiting

young people to sessions of writhing on the floor in uncontrollable

ecstasy, calling it a sign of the 'Holy Spirit.' Children as

young as five speak of having 'gotten saved.' The movement is extremely

authoritarian according to those conservative Christian churches who

have studied and openly oppose the sect as heretical. It

teaches a dogma that echoes the infamous Manichean line of George Bush

following the shock of September 11, 2001: 'There are two kinds of

people in the World: Those who love Jesus, and those who don't.'

Until recently a 'general' in Joel's Army was a 32-year old Canadian, Todd Bentley. In one case, on YouTube, clips of his most dramatic healings have been condensed into a three-minute highlight reel. Bentley describes God ordering him to kick an elderly lady in the face.

A report published by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a watchdog

group, describes the Joel's Army mass recruiting techniques of Bentley:

 

'Todd Bentley has a long night ahead of him, resurrecting the dead,

healing the blind, and exploding cancerous tumors. Since April 3, the 32-year-old, heavily tattooed, body-pierced, shaved-head

Canadian preacher has been leading a continuous "supernatural healing

revival" in central Florida. To contain the 10,000-plus crowds flocking

from around the globe, Bentley has rented baseball stadiums, arenas and

airport hangars at a cost of up to $15,000 a day. Many in

attendance are church pastors themselves who believe Bentley to be a

prophet and don't bat an eye when he tells them he's seen King David

and spoken with the Apostle Paul in heaven...Tattooed across

his sternum are military dog tags that read "Joel's Army." They're

evidence of Bentley's generalship in a rapidly growing apocalyptic

movement that's gone largely unnoticed by watchdogs of the theocratic

right. According to Bentley and a handful of other

"hyper-charismatic" preachers advancing the same agenda, Joel's Army is

prophesied to become an Armageddon-ready military force of young people

with a divine mandate to physically impose Christian "dominion" on

non-believers.' 10

 

Their name comes from their special focus on the Old Testament Book of Joel, Chapter Two. On his website, Bentley declares,

 

'An end-time army has one common purpose -- to aggressively

take ground for the kingdom of God under the authority of Jesus Christ,

the Dread Champion...The trumpet is sounding, calling on-fire,

revolutionary believers to enlist in Joel's Army. ... Many are now

ready to be mobilized to establish and advance God's kingdom on earth.'

 

This past March, at a 'Passion for Jesus' conference in Kansas City

sponsored by the International House of Prayer, or IHOP, a ministry for

teenagers from the heavy metal, punk and goth scenes, one Joel's Army

pastor, Lou Engle, called on his audience for vengeance:

'I believe we're headed to an Elijah/Jezebel showdown on the Earth,

not just in America but all over the globe, and the main warriors will

be the prophets of Baal versus the prophets of God, and there will be no middle ground," said Engle. He

was referring to the Baal of the Old Testament, a pagan idol whose

followers were slaughtered under orders from the prophet Elijah.

 

'There's an Elijah generation that's going to be the forerunners

for the coming of Jesus, a generation marked not by their niceness but

by the intensity of their passion," Engle continued. 'The kingdom of

heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force. Such force

demands an equal response, and Jesus is going to make war on everything that hinders love, with his eyes blazing fire.'

 

Joel's Army believers are hard-core Christian 'dominionists,' meaning they

believe that America, along with the rest of the world, should be

governed by conservative Christians and a conservative Christian

interpretation of biblical law. There is no room in their doctrine for

democracy or pluralism. To paraphrase George W. Bush, 'You're either with us or you are against us.'

Joel's Army followers are most often labile teenagers and young adults. They are taught to believe they're members of the final generation to come of age before the end of the world. Sarah Palin was twelve when she first came into these circles.

Palin recently told interviewer Charles Gibson of ABC News that

Georgia should be granted membership of NATO. When pressed on whether

this would mean that the US would be obliged to defend Georgia if

Russian troops went into the country again, she replied, 'Perhaps so. I

mean, that is the agreement when you are a NATO ally, is if another

country is attacked, you're going to be expected to be called upon and

help...We have got to show the support, in this case, for Georgia.' Is

this Sarah Palin a stateswoman with foreign policy experience, or is it

Sarah Palin the Dominionist who sees a potential war with Russia as

part of an 'Elijah/Jezebel showdown on the Earth'?

This is the background of the woman who might well become Vice

President to a 72-year old President John McCain, a man reported to

have severe skin cancer and other major health problems. According to

the US Constitutional succession, should McCain be incapacitated or die

in office, she would become President.

Notes

1 Selected CNP Member Biographies, here.

2 Paul Collins & Phillip Collins, The Deep Politics of God: The CNP, Dominionism, and the Ted Haggard Scandal , Feb. 19th, 2007.

3 Ibid.

4 Bruce Wilson, Sarah Palin's Churches and the New Wave Apostolic Reformation, here.

5 Sarah H. Leslie, Dominionism and the Rise of Christian Imperialism, accessed here.

6 Ibid.

7 Ibid.

8 Bruce Wilson, Ibid.

9 Sarah H. Leslie, Op. Cit.

10 Casey Sanchez, Theocratic Sect Prays for Real Armageddon, Southern Poverty Law Center.August 30, 2008, accessed here.----------The Christian Right and the Rise of American Fascismby Chris HedgesMon, 15 Nov 2004http://www.theocracywatch.org/chris_hedges_nov24_04.htmDr. James Luther Adams, my ethics professor at Harvard Divinity

School, told us that when we were his age, he was then close to 80, we

would all be fighting the "Christian fascists."

The warning, given to me 25 years ago, came at the moment Pat Robertson and other radio and televangelists began speaking about a

new political religion that would direct its efforts at taking control

of all institutions, including mainstream denominations and the

government. Its stated goal was to use the United States to create a

global, Christian empire.

It was hard, at the time, to take such fantastic rhetoric

seriously, especially given the buffoonish quality of those who

expounded it. But Adams warned us against the blindness caused by

intellectual snobbery. The Nazis, he said, were not going to

return with swastikas and brown shirts. Their ideological inheritors

had found a mask for fascism in the pages of the Bible.

He was not a man to use the word fascist lightly. He was in Germany

in 1935 and 1936 and worked with the underground anti-Nazi church,

known as The Confessing Church, led by Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Adams was

eventually detained and interrogated by the Gestapo, who suggested he

might want to consider returning to the United States. It was a

suggestion he followed. He left on a night train with framed portraits

of Adolph Hitler placed over the contents inside his suitcase to hide

the rolls of home movie film he took of the so-called German Christian Church, which was pro-Nazi,

and the few individuals who defied them, including the theologians Karl

Barth and Albert Schweitzer. The ruse worked when the border police

lifted the top of the suitcases, saw the portraits of the Fuhrer and

closed them up again. I watched hours of the grainy black and white

films as he narrated in his apartment in Cambridge.

He saw in the Christian Right, long before we did, disturbing

similarities with the German Christian Church and the Nazi Party,

similarities that he said would, in the event of prolonged social

instability or a national crisis, see American fascists, under the

guise of religion, rise to dismantle the open society.

He despaired of liberals, who he said, as in Nazi Germany, mouthed

silly platitudes about dialogue and inclusiveness that made them

ineffectual and impotent. Liberals, he said, did not understand the power and allure of evil nor the cold reality of how the world worked.

The current hand wringing by Democrats in the wake of the election,

with many asking how they can reach out to a movement whose leaders

brand them "demonic" and "satanic," would not have surprised Adams.

Like Bonhoeffer, he did not believe that those who would fight

effectively in coming times of turmoil, a fight that for him was an

integral part of the Biblical message, would come from the church or

the liberal, secular elite.

His critique of the prominent research universities, along with the

media, was no less withering. These institutions, self-absorbed, compromised by their close relationship with government and corporations,

given enough of the pie to be complacent, were unwilling to deal with

the fundamental moral questions and inequities of the age. They had no stomach for a battle that might cost them their prestige and comfort.

He told me that if the Nazis took over America "60 percent of the

Harvard faculty would begin their lectures with the Nazi salute." This

too was not an abstraction. He had watched academics at the University

of Heidelberg, including the philosopher Martin Heidegger, raise their

arms stiffly to students before class.

Two decades later, even in the face of the growing reach of the Christian Right, his prediction seems apocalyptic. And yet the

powerbrokers in the Christian Right have moved from the fringes of

society to the floor of the House of Representatives and the Senate.

Christian fundamentalists now hold a majority of seats in 36 percent of

all Republican Party state committees, or 18 of 50 states, along with

large minorities in 81 percent of the rest of the states. Forty-five

Senators and 186 members of the House of Representatives earned between

an 80 to 100 percent approval ratings from the three most influential

Christian Right advocacy groups - The Christian Coalition, Eagle Forum,

and Family Resource Council.

Tom Coburn, the new senator from Oklahoma, has included in his campaign to end abortion: a call to impose the death penalty on doctors that carry out abortions once the ban goes into place.

Another new senator, John Thune, believes in Creationism.

Jim DeMint, the new senator elected from South Carolina, wants to ban single mothers from teaching in schools.

The Election Day exit polls found that 22 percent of voters

identified themselves as evangelical Christians and Bush won 77 percent

of their vote. The polls found that a plurality of voters said that the

most important issue in the campaign had been "moral values."

President Bush must further these important objectives, including

the march to turn education and social welfare over to the churches

with his faith-based initiative, as well as chip away at the wall

between church and state with his judicial appointments, if he does not

want to face a revolt within his core constituency.

Jim Dobson, the head of Focus on the Family, who held weekly

telephone conversations with Karl Rove during the campaign, has put the

President on notice. He told ABC's "This Week" that "this president has

two years, or more broadly the Republican Party has two years, to

implement these policies, or certainly four, or I believe they'll pay a

price in the next election."

Bush may turn out to be a transition figure, our version of Otto von Bismarck.

Bismarck used "values" to energize his base at the end of the 19th

century and launched "Kulturkampt," the word from which we get "culture

wars," against Catholics and Jews. Bismarck's attacks split

the country, made the discrediting of whole segments of the society an

acceptable part of the civil discourse and paved the way for the more

virulent racism of the Nazis. This, I suspect, will be George Bush's

contribution to our democracy.

DOMINIONISTS AND RECONSTRUCTIONISTS

The Reconstructionist movement, founded in 1973 by Rousas Rushdooney,

is the intellectual foundation for the most politically active element

within the Christian Right. Rushdooney's 1,600 page three-volume work, Institutes of Biblical Law,

argued that American society should be governed according to the

Biblical precepts in the Ten Commandments. He wrote that the elect,

like Adam and Noah, were given dominion over the earth by God and must

subdue the earth, along with all non-believers, so the Messiah could

return.

This was a radically new interpretation for many in the evangelical

movement. The Messiah, it was traditionally taught, would return in an

event called "the Rapture" where there would be wars and chaos. The

non-believers would be tormented and killed and the elect would be

lifted to heaven. The Rapture was not something that could be

manipulated or influenced, although believers often interpreted

catastrophes and wars as portents of the imminent Second Coming.

Rushdooney promoted an ideology that advocated violence to create the Christian state.

His ideology was the mirror image of Liberation Theology, which came

into vogue at about the same time. While the Liberation Theologians

crammed the Bible into the box of Marxism, Rushdooney crammed it into

the equally distorting box of classical fascism. This clash was first

played out in Latin America when I was there as a reporter two decades

ago. In El Salvador leftist priests endorsed and even traveled with the

rebel movements in Nicaragua and El Salvador, while Pat Robertson and

Jerry Falwell, along with conservative Latin American clerics, backed

the Contras fighting against the Sandinistas in Nicaragua and the

murderous military regimes in El Salvador, Guatemala, Chile and

Argentina.

The Institutes of Biblical Law called for a

Christian society that was harsh, unforgiving and violent. Offenses

such as adultery, witchcraft, blasphemy and homosexuality, merited the

death penalty. The world was to be subdued and ruled by a Christian

United States. Rushdooney dismissed the number of 6 million Jews killed

in the Holocaust as an inflated figure and his theories on race echoed

Nazi Eugenics.

 

"The white man has behind him centuries of Christian culture and the

discipline and selective breeding this faith requires... "The Negro is

a product of a radically different past, and his heredity has been

governed by radically different considerations."

"The background of Negro culture is African and magic, and the

purposes of the magic are control and power over God, man, nature, and

society. Voodoo, or magic, was the religion and life of American

Negroes. Voodoo songs underlie jazz, and old voodoo, with its power

goal, has been merely replaced with revolutionary voodoo, a modernized

power drive." (see The Religious Right , a publication of the ADL, pg.

124.)

 

Rushdooney was deeply antagonistic to the federal government. He

believed the federal government should concern itself with little more

than national defense. Education and social welfare should be handed

over to the churches. Biblical law must replace the secular

legal code. This ideology remains at the heart of the movement. It is

being enacted through school vouchers, with federal dollars now going

into Christian schools, and the assault against the federal agencies

that deal with poverty and human services. The Office of

Faith-Based and Community Initiatives is currently channeling millions

in federal funds to groups such Pat Robertson's Operation Blessing ,

and National Right to Life, as well as to fundamentalist religious

charity organizations and programs promoting sexual abstinence.

Rushdooney laid the groundwork for a new way of thinking about

political involvement. The Christian state would come about not only

through signs and wonders, as those who believed in the rapture

believed, but also through the establishment of the Christian nation.

But he remained, even within the Christian Right, a deeply

controversial figure.

Dr. Tony Evans, the minister of a

Dallas church and the founder of Promise Keepers, articulated

Rushdooney's extremism in a more palatable form. He called on

believers, often during emotional gatherings at football stadiums, to

commit to Christ and exercise power within the society as agents of

Christ. He also called for a Christian state. But he did not advocate

the return of slavery, as Rushdooney did, nor list a string of offenses

such as adultery punishable by death, nor did he espouse the Nazi-like

race theories.

It was through Evans, who was a spiritual mentor to George Bush that

Dominionism came to dominate the politically active wing of the

Christian Right. The religious utterances from political leaders such

as George Bush, Tom Delay, Pat Robertson and Zell Miller are only

understandable in light of Rushdooney and Dominionism. These leaders

believe that God has selected them to battle the forces of evil,

embodied in "secular humanism," to create a Christian nation. Pat

Robertson frequently tells believers "our aim is to gain dominion over

society." Delay has told supporters, such as at a gathering two years

ago at the First Baptist Church in Pearland, Texas , "He [God] is using

me, all the time, everywhere, to stand up for biblical worldview in

everything I do and everywhere I am. He is training me, He is working

with me." Delay went on to tell followers "If we stay inside the

church, the culture won't change."

Pat Robertson, who changed the name of his university to

Regent University, says he is training his students to rule when the

Christian regents take power, part of the reign leading to the return

of Christ. Robertson resigned as the head of the Christian

Coalition when Bush took office, a sign many took to signal the

ascendancy of the first regent. This battle is

not rhetorical but one that followers are told will ultimately involve

violence. And the enemy is clearly defined and marked for destruction.

"Secular Humanists," the popular Christian Right theologian Francis

Schaeffer wrote in one of numerous diatribes, "are the greatest threat

to Christianity the world has ever known."

One of the most enlightening books that exposes the ultimate goals of the movement is America's Providential History,

the standard textbook used in many Christian schools and a staple of

the Christian home schooling movement. It sites Genesis 26, which calls

for mankind to "have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds

of the air, over the cattle and over all the earth and over every

creeping thing that creeps on the earth" as evidence that the Bible

calls for "Bible believing Christians" to take dominion of America.

"When God brings Noah through the flood to a new earth, He

reestablished the Dominion Mandate but now delegates to man the

responsibility for governing other men." (page 19). The authors write

that God has called the United States to become "the first truly

Christian nation" (page 184) and "make disciples of all nations." The

book denounces income tax as "idolatry," property tax as "theft" and

calls for an abolish of inheritance taxes in the chapter entitled

Christian Economics. The loss of such tax revenues will bring about the

withering away of the federal government and the empowerment of the

authoritarian church, although this is not explicit in the text.

Rushdooney's son-in-law, Gary North, a popular writer and founder of the Institute for Christian Economics, laid out the aims of the Christian Right.

 

"So let's be blunt about it: We must use the doctrine of religious

liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a

generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy in constructing a Bible-based social, political and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God." (Christianity and Civilization, Spring, 1982)

 

Dominionists have to operate, for now, in the contaminated

environment of the secular, liberal state. They have learned,

therefore, to speak in code. The code they use is the key to

understanding the dichotomy of the movement, one that has a public and

a private face. In this they are no different from the vanguard, as

described by Lenin, or the Islamic terrorists who shave off their

beards, adopt western dress and watch pay-for-view pornographic movies

in their hotel rooms the night before hijacking a plane for a suicide

attack.

Joan Bokaer, the Director of Theocracy Watch, a project of

the Center for Religion, Ethics and Social Policy at Cornell University

, who runs the encyclopedic web site theocracywatch.org, was on a

speaking tour a few years ago in Iowa. She obtained a copy of a memo

Pat Robertson handed out to followers at the Iowa Republican County

Caucus. It was titled, "How to Participate in a Political Party" and

read:

 

"Rule the world for God."

"Give the impression that you are there to work for the party, not push an ideology.

"Hide your strength.

"Don't flaunt your Christianity.

"Christians need to take leadership positions. Party officers

control political parties and so it is very important that mature

Christians have a majority of leadership whenever possible, God

willing."

 

President Bush sends frequent coded messages to the faithful. In his

address to the nation on the night of September 11, for example, he

lifted a line directly from the Gospel of John when he said "And the

light shines in the darkness, and the darkness will not overcome it."

He often uses the sentence "when every child is welcomed in life and

protected in law," words taken directly from a pro-life manifesto

entitled "A Statement of Pro-Life Principle and Concern." He quotes

from hymns, prayers, tracts and Biblical passages without attribution.

These phrases reassure the elect. They are lost on the uninitiated.

CHRIST THE AVENGER

The Christian Right finds its ideological justification in a narrow

segment of the Gospel, in particular the letters of the Apostle Paul,

especially the story of Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus in

the Book of Acts. It draws heavily from the book of Revelations and the Gospel of John. These books share an apocalyptic theology. The Book of Revelations

is the only time in the Gospels where Jesus sanctions violence,

offering up a vision of Christ as the head of a great and murderous

army of heavenly avengers. Martin Luther found the God portrayed in Revelations so hateful and cruel he put the book in the appendix of his German translation of the Bible.

These books rarely speak about Christ's message of love, forgiveness

and compassion. They focus on the doom and destruction that will befall

unbelievers and the urgent need for personal salvation. The world is

divided between good and evil, between those who act as agents of God

and those who act as agents of Satan. The Jesus of the other three

Gospels, the Jesus who turned the other cheek and embraced his enemies,

an idea that was radical and startling in the ancient Roman world, is

purged in the narrative selected by the Christian Right.

The cult of masculinity pervades the ideology.

Feminism and homosexuality are social forces, believers are told, that

have rendered the American male physically and spiritually impotent.

Jesus is portrayed as a man of action, casting out demons, battling the

Anti-Christ, attacking hypocrites and castigating the corrupt. This cult of masculinity brings with it the glorification of strength, violence and vengeance.

It turns Christ into a Rambo-like figure; indeed depictions of Jesus

within the movement often show a powerfully built man wielding a huge

sword.

This image of Christ as warrior is appealing to many within

the movement. The loss of manufacturing jobs, lack of affordable health

care, negligible opportunities for education and poor job security has

left many millions of Americans locked out. This ideology is attractive

because it offers them the hope of power and revenge. It sanctifies

their rage. It stokes the paranoia about the outside world

maintained through bizarre conspiracy theories, many on display in Pat

Robertson's book The New World Order. The book is a

xenophobic rant that includes vicious attacks against the United

Nations and numerous other international organizations.

The abandonment of the working class has been crucial to the success of the movement. Only

by reintegrating the working class into society through job creation,

access to good education and health care can the Christian Right be

effectively blunted. Revolutionary movements are built on the backs of an angry, disenfranchised laboring class. This one is no exception.

The depictions of violence that will befall non-believers are

detailed, gruesome and brutal. It speaks to the rage many believers

harbor and the thirst for revenge. This, in large part, accounts for

the huge sales of the apocalyptic series by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B.

Jenkins. In their novel, Glorious Appearing, based on

LaHaye's interpretation of Biblical Prophecies about the Second Coming,

Christ eviscerates the flesh of millions of non-believers with the mere

sound of his voice. There are long descriptions of horror, of how "the

very words of the Lord had superheated their blood, causing it to burst

through their veins and skin." Eyes disintegrate. Tongues melt. Flesh

dissolves. The novel, part of The Left Behind series, are the best selling adult novels in the country. They preach holy war.

"Any teaching of peace prior to [Christ's] return is heresy." said televangelist James Robison.

Natural disasters, terrorist attacks, instability in Israel and even

the fighting of Iraq are seen as signposts. The war in Iraq was

predicted according to believers in the 9th chapter of the Book of

Revelations where four angels "which are bound in the great river

Euphrates will be released to slay the third part of men." The march towards global war, even nuclear war, is not to be feared but welcomed as the harbinger of the Second Coming.

And leading the avenging armies is an angry, violent Messiah who dooms

millions of non-believers to a horrible and painful death.

THE CORRUPTION OF SCIENCE AND LAW

The movement seeks the imprint of law and science. It must discredit

the rational disciplines that are the pillars of the Enlightenment to

abolish the liberal polity of the Enlightenment. This corruption of

science and law is vital in promoting the doctrine. Creationism,

or "intelligent design," like Eugenics for the Nazis, must be

introduced into the mainstream as a valid scientific discipline to

destroy the discipline of science itself. This is why the

Christian Right is working to bring test cases to ensure that school

textbooks include "intelligent design" and condemn gay marriage.

The drive by the Christian Right to include crackpot theories in

scientific or legal debate is part of the campaign to destroy

dispassionate and honest intellectual inquiry. Facts become interchangeable with opinions.

An understanding of reality is not to be based on the elaborate

gathering of facts and evidence. The ideology alone is true. Facts that

get in the way of the ideology can be altered. Lies, in this worldview, become true. Hannah Arendt called this effort "nihilistic relativism" although a better phrase might be collective insanity.

The Christian Right has fought successfully to have Creationist

books sold in national park bookstores in the Grand Canyon, taught as a

theory in public schools in states like Alabama and Arkansas.

"Intelligent design" is promoted in Christian textbooks. All animal

species, or at least their progenitors, students read, fit on Noah's

ark. The Grand Canyon was created a few thousand years ago by the flood

that lifted up Noah's ark, not one billion years ago, as geologists

have determined. The earth is only a few thousand years old in line

with the literal reading of Genesis. This is not some quaint,

homespun view of the world. It is an insidious attempt to undermine

rational scientific research and intellectual inquiry.

Tom Delay, following the Columbine shootings, gave voice to this

assault when he said that the killings had taken place "because our

school systems teach children that they are nothing but glorified apes

who have evolutionized out of some primordial mud." (speech Delay gave

in the House on June 16, 1999 )

"What convinces masses are not facts," Hannah Arendt wrote in

Origins of Totalitarianism, "and not even invented facts, but only the

consistency of the system which they are presumably part. Repetition,

somewhat overrated in importance because of the common belief in the

"masses" inferior capacity to grasp and remember, is important because

it convinces them of consistency in time." (p.351)

There are more than 6 million elementary and secondary school

students attending private schools and 11.5 percent of these students

attend schools run by the Christian Right. These "Christian" schools saw an increase of 46 percent in enrollment in the last decade. The 245,000 additional students accounted for 75 percent of the total rise in private school enrollment.

THE LAUNCHING OF THE WAR

Adams told us to watch closely what the Christian Right did to homosexuals.

He has seen how the Nazis had used "values" to launch state repression

of opponents. Hitler, days after he took power in 1933, imposed a ban

on all homosexual and lesbian organizations. He ordered raids on places

where homosexuals gathered culminating with the ransacking of the

Institute for Sexual Science in Berlin . Thousands of volumes from the

institute's library were tossed into a bonfire. Adams said that homosexuals would also be the first "deviants" singled out by the Christian Right. We would be the next.

The ban on same sex marriages, passed by eleven states in the

election, was part of this march towards our door. A 1996 federal law

already defines marriage as between a man and a woman. All of the

states with ballot measures, with the exception of Oregon, had outlawed

same sex marriages, as do 27 other states. The bans, however, had to be

passed, believers were told, to thwart "activist judges" who wanted to

overturn them. The Christian family, even the nation, was under threat.

The bans served to widen the splits tearing apart the country. The

attacks on homosexuals handed to the foot soldiers of the Christian

Right an easy target. It gave them a taste of victory. It made them

feel empowered. But it is ominous for gays and for us.

All debates with the Christian Right are

useless. We cannot reach this movement. It does not want a dialogue. It

cares nothing for rational thought and discussion. It is not

mollified because John Kerry prays or Jimmy Carter teaches Sunday

School. These naive attempts to reach out to a movement bent on our

destruction, to prove to them that we too have "values," would be

humorous if the stakes were not so deadly. They hate us. They hate the liberal, enlightened world formed by the Constitution. Our opinions do not count.

This movement will not stop until we are ruled by Biblical Law, an

authoritarian church intrudes in every aspect of our life, women stay

at home and rear children, gays agree to be cured, abortion is

considered murder, the press and the schools promote "positive"

Christian values, the federal government is gutted, war becomes our

primary form of communication with the rest of the world and

recalcitrant non-believers see their flesh eviscerated at the sound of

the Messiah's voice.

The spark that could set it ablaze may be lying in the hands of an

Islamic terrorist cell, in the hands of the ideological twins of the

Christian Right. Another catastrophic terrorist attack could be our

Reichstag fire, the excuse used to begin the accelerated dismantling of

our open society. The ideology of the Christian Right is not one of

love and compassion, the central theme of Christ's message, but of

violence and hatred. It has a strong appeal to many in our society, but

it is also aided by our complacency. Let us not stand at the

open city gates waiting passively and meekly for the barbarians. They

are coming. They are slouching rudely towards Bethlehem. Let us, if

nothing else, begin to call them by their name.----Feeling the hate with the National Religious Broadcasters by Chris HedgesWed, 18 May 2005http://www.harpers.org/archive/2005/05/0080541Since the reelection of George W. Bush in November, the rhetoric on

the Christian right has grown triumphal and proud; rumors of spiritual

war are abroad in the heartland, and fervent whispers of revolution

echo among the pews and folding chairs of the nation's megachurches. I

have traveled to Anaheim, California, to observe the rising power of

the evangelical political movement at first hand. Orange County, along

with Colorado Springs, is a center of the new militant Christianity,

and it is here, among friends, that the National Religious Broadcasters

association - which brings together some 1,600 Christian radio and

television broadcasters, who claim to reach up to 141 million listeners

and viewers - is holding its annual convention.

I am standing in line at the Starbucks in the Anaheim Hilton with

Dee Simmons and her friend Samantha Landy. Around her neck Simmons

wears a cross of gold studded with diamonds, and her face, which

betrays neither line nor crease, is carefully highlighted with heavy

makeup. Scores of men and women, all conservatively dressed in coats

and ties or skirts, stand expectantly, waiting for a sign to beckon

them next door to the Anaheim Convention Center, where speeches,

booths, and seminars await.

We've known each other just a few minutes, but already I can tell

you that Simmons once led a life of constant sorrow, that in 1987 she

was diagnosed with breast cancer and before long underwent a modified

radical mastectomy. That tragedy led her, she says, to turn her focus

away from the designer-clothes boutiques she owned in Dallas and New

York. "When God gave me my life back," she says, "I decided to make a

difference in people's lives." And so she embraced nutrition.

Simmons reaches into her purse and draws out several pamphlets from

her company, Ultimate Living. She tells me about her books, which

include It's a Miracle! It's a Green Miracle & It Saved My Life!, and mentions the numerous Christian talk shows she regularly appears on, including Pat Robertson's The 700 Club, Hope Today, Praise, Something Good Tonight, and The Armstrong Williams Show.

"I was saved and found Christ when I was three," she says. "I'm

sixty-four. My daughter is thirty-six." She waits for the effect of her

age, which she will repeat more than once, to sink in. I can't take my

eyes off her smooth face and sculpted cheekbones.

Landy is also active in the life of faith. She tells me that she

runs "Christian Celebrity Luncheons" in Palm Springs as part of her

"salvation outreach for snowbirds." Her ministry focuses on country

clubs and golf courses, she says, because that's where people feel

comfortable. Landy, a redhead, never stops smiling.

"I bring in celebrity speakers," she says, "like Gavin MacLeod, he was the Captain on Love Boat, and Ronda Fleming, she was in over forty films and starred with Bing Crosby."

Landy, like Simmons, appears on Christian television shows. She has published books with titles such as A Shalom Morning and God's Creatures. Her list of celebrities includes Donna Douglas from The Beverly Hillbillies, Ann B. Davis, who was Alice on The Brady Bunch, and Lauren Chapin, who played Kathy on Father Knows Best.

My new friends, evidently minor celebrities themselves in the world

of Christian broadcasting, have come to Anaheim for the yearly

convention because it is the only time they can see all the major

Christian broadcasters in one place. They are picture-perfect

members of a new Christian elite, showy, proud of how God has blessed

them with material wealth and privilege, and hooked into the culture of

celebrity and power.

* * *

I carry my coffee across the stone courtyard to the curved glass and

gleaming towers of the convention center, the largest in California.

Within the exhibition hall on the first floor, 320 display booths -

and, at the far end of the hall, the twisted remains of an Israeli bus

blown up by Palestinian suicide bombers in Jerusalem - float on an

enormous sea of soft blue carpeting. The Israeli tourism ministry has one of the largest display spaces in the hall.

People from the Christian Law Association hand out yardsticks filled

with gum. A Virginia web-design company offers "church websites the way

God intended." A bearded man dressed as a biblical prophet is pushing

tours of the Holy Land. I see anti-abortion booths and evidence of

fringe groups such as Jews for Jesus and Accuracy in Media, one of

whose representatives hands me a report with the title "American Troops

Cheer Attacks on U.S. Media."

All the seminars and workshops are taking place on the upper floors.

One seminar is entitled "Finding God in Hollywood." Another is called

"Invading Cities for Christ: The Thousand-Day Plan."

In the parking lot outside the center, I come across a pickup truck

with large hand-painted panels bearing anti-gay slogans and a round red

circle with a line through the center superimposed on the faces of two

men kissing. STOP THE INSANITY, it says across the top. I pick up one

of the pamphlets in a metal box on the side of the truck: "Protect Your

Family & Friends from the Dangers of . . . Homosexuality: The

Truth!" It lists "the facts about homosexuality they refuse to teach in

Public Schools or report on the Evening News!" including: "homosexuals

average 500 sexual partners in their short lifetime" and "because of

unsanitary sexual practices homosexuals carry the bulk of all bowel

disease in America."

* * *

The opening session is held on the third floor, in an enormous room

with a round stage surrounded on three sides by row upon row of folding

chairs. The dimly lit room holds thousands of true believers. Large

television screens hang from the ceilings; a grand piano sits unused on

the stage near the podium. Bob Lepine, the round-faced co-host of Family Life Today, a radio show broadcast from Little Rock, Arkansas, tells us that this session has been sponsored by the Family

Research Council, a Washington think tank dedicated to promoting "the

Judeo-Christian worldview as the basis for a just, free, and stable

society." We watch a video in which Lepine wanders the

godforsaken beaches near Anaheim asking surfers and other lost

Californians what the letters NRB mean to them. No one knows, but the

guesses evoke laughter from the hall.

Lepine talks about the old days, when the convention was held in

Washington, D.C., in February. He seems pleased to be in California,

where "it's warm and you can go to the beach and see weird people."

Lepine then shows us another video, this one featuring the current

president of the Family Research Council, former Louisiana state

representative Tony Perkins, a telegenic

man who authored the American History Preservation Act, a law intended

to prevent "censorship of America's Christian heritage in Louisiana

public schools," and who also wrote the first Covenant Marriage Law.

"Deep in the nation's capital," a baritone voice booms as the camera

pans across the Washington mall, "America's culture was hijacked by a

secular movement determined to redefine society from religious freedom

to the right to life. These radicals were doing their best to destroy

two centuries of traditional values, and no one seemed to be able to

stop them - until now.

"Will Congress undo 200 years of tradition?" the video asks ominously. "Not on our watch."

The mood of the convention is set. All Christians, everywhere, are

under attack. Perkins, dressed in a dark suit and white shirt, climbs

the stairs onto the stage. He promises to halt "the cultural decline"

and to end "misguided" judicial decisions. Before long, Frank Wright,

the new president of NRB, takes the stage. Wright, who has white hair

and a cold demeanor, lauds the recent transformation in Washington and

says that 130 members of the House of Representatives are now "born-again."

He tells a story about a late-night private tour of the Capitol in

which he and a group of other pastors stopped and prayed over Hillary

Clinton's Senate floor desk. The crowd roars its approval.

"Today, the calls for diversity and multiculturalism are

nothing more than thinly veiled attacks on anyone willing, desirous, or

compelled to proclaim Christian truths," he says. "Today, calls for

tolerance are often a subterfuge, because they will tolerate just about

anything except Christian truth. Today, we live in a time when the

message entrusted to you is more important than ever before to reach a

world desperate to know Christ.

"Does it strike you," he asks, "that we are the first generation in

the history of the world that might see every nation, tongue, and tribe

reached with the Gospel?"

Wright promises the audience that as the new president of NRB he

will fight to block the passage of hate-crime legislation, something

many Christian broadcasters fear might be used to halt their attacks on

gays and lesbians.

"For the first time in history, representatives and senators may

pass hate-crime legislation," he says, "which is one step to oppose

what you do as against the law.

"If we had to give equal time to every opposing viewpoint,

there would be no time to proclaim the truth that we have been

commanded to proclaim," he says. "We will fight the Fairness Doctrine,

tooth and nail. It could be the end of Christian broadcasting as we

know it if we do not."

The preachers that follow, including Illinois evangelist and radio host James MacDonald,

pound home the theme of persecution by "secular humanists" who want to

destroy the values and faith of "Bible-believing Christians." MacDonald

runs a church in Arlington Heights, Illinois, and is heard regularly on

more than 650 Christian radio outlets.

"How many of you out there think it's unpopular to preach the Word?" he asks. Hundreds of hands shoot up into the air.

MacDonald quotes liberally from the Book of Revelation, the

only place in the New Testament where Jesus (arguably) endorses

violence and calls for vengeance against nonbelievers. It is, along

with the apocalyptic visions of St. Paul, the movement's go-to text. Rarely

mentioned these days is the Jesus of the four Gospels, the Jesus who

speaks of the poor and the marginalized, who taught followers to turn

the other cheek and love their enemies, the Jesus who rejected the

mantle of secular power.

"His eyes are like a flame of fire," MacDonald tells us. "Out of his

mouth goes a sharp sword, and with it he can strike the nations. He

treads the wine press of the fierceness and wrath of the Almighty God,

and on his robe and on his thigh a name is written, King of Kings and

Lord of Lords. Jesus commands all men everywhere to come to the

knowledge of Him."

He reminds us, quoting theologian Peter Berger, that "ages of faith are not marked by dialogue but by proclamation" and that "there is power in the unapologetic proclamation of truth. There is power in it. This is a kingdom of power."

When he says the word "power," he draws it out for emphasis. He tells

the crowd to shun the "persuasive words of human wisdom." Truth, he

says, does "not rest in the wisdom of men but the power of God." Then,

in a lisping, limp-wristed imitation of liberals, he mocks, to laughter and applause, those who want to "share" and be sensitive to the needs of others.

MacDonald leaves little doubt that the convention is meant to serve

as a rallying cry for a new and particularly militant movement in

Christian politics, one that is sometimes mistaken for another outbreak

of mere revivalism. In fact, this movement is a curious hybrid of

fundamentalists, Pentecostals, Southern Baptists, conservative

Catholics, Charismatics, and other evangelicals, all of whom are at war

doctrinally but who nonetheless share a belief that America is destined

to become a Christian nation, led by Christian men who are in turn

directed by God. For someone like me, who grew up in the church and was

keenly aware of the rigid lines imposed by warring sects and

denominations, the new alliances are startling. I notice uniformed

officers from the Salvation Army at the convention, something that

would have been unthinkable in the past. Lately, the leaders of the

movement have even begun to reach out to the Mormons.

* * *

What the disparate sects of this movement, known as Dominionism, share is an obsession with political power. A decades-long refusal to engage in politics at all following the Scopes trial has been replaced by a call for Christian "dominion" over the nation and, eventually, over the earth itself.

Dominionists preach that Jesus has called them to build the kingdom

of God in the here and now, whereas previously it was thought that we

would have to wait for it. America becomes, in this militant biblicism,

an agent of God, and all political and intellectual opponents of America's Christian leaders are viewed, quite simply, as agents of Satan.

Under Christian dominion, America will no longer be a sinful and

fallen nation but one in which the Ten Commandments form the basis of

our legal system, Creationism and "Christian values" form the basis of

our educational system, and the media and the government proclaim the

Good News to one and all.

Aside from its proselytizing mandate, the federal government will be

reduced to the protection of property rights and "homeland"

security.[1] Some Dominionists (not all of whom accept the label, at

least not publicly) would further require all citizens to pay "tithes"

to church organizations empowered by the government to run our

social-welfare agencies, and a number of influential figures

advocate the death penalty for a host of "moral crimes," including

apostasy, blasphemy, sodomy, and witchcraft. The only legitimate voices in this state will be Christian. All others will be silenced.

The traditional evangelicals, those who come out of Billy Graham's

mold, are not necessarily comfortable with the direction taken by the Dominionists, who now control most of America's major evangelical organizations,

from the NRB to the Southern Baptist Convention, and may already claim

dominion over the Christian media outlets. But Christians who challenge

Dominionists, even if they are fundamentalist or conservative or

born-again, tend to be ruthlessly thrust aside.

I have lunch with Luis Palau, a well-known evangelical preacher who

is close to Billy Graham. He is an affable older man, an Argentine, who

has a worldliness refreshing after even a short time among

Dominionists. His focus is on personal salvation, not the achievement

of political power. He refused to become involved in the referendum in

Oregon, where his organization is based, to ban gay marriage. Like

Graham, Palau is no supporter of gay rights, but he bristles at the

coarseness of calls for absolute power by Christian leaders and at the

anti-intellectualism that characterizes the new movement. He avoids the

caustic humor used by many Dominionists to belittle homosexuals,

"effete" intellectuals, and all those whom they lump into the category

of "secular humanists." The use of abortion and gay marriage as

rallying points worries him.

"There are some Christians who have gone overboard," Palau says,

choosing his words carefully. "The message has become a little

distorted in states where they talk about change yet focus on only one

issue. We need a fuller transformation. The great thing Billy Graham

did was to bring intellectualism back to fundamentalism.

"I don't think it is wrong to want to see political change,

especially in places like Latin America," he says. "Something has to

happen in politics. But it has to be based on convictions. We have to

overcome the sense of despair. I worked in Latin America in the days

when almost every country had a dictator. I dreamed, especially as a

kid, of change, of freedom and justice. But I believe that change comes

from personal conviction, from leading a more biblical lifestyle, not

by Christianizing a nation. If we become called to Christ, we will

build an effective nation through personal ethics. When you lead a life

of purity, when you respect your wife and are good to your family, when

you don't waste money gambling and womanizing, you begin to work for

better schools, for more protection and safety from your community. All

change, historically, comes from the bottom up."

* * *

Early Sunday morning, in a ballroom on the second floor of the Hilton Hotel, the Israeli Ministry of Tourism

is hosting a breakfast. Several hundred people, all dressed in the

appropriate skirts and business suits of American churchgoing people,

are seated at round tables with baskets of bread, fruit plates, and

silver pitchers of coffee. Waiters serve plates of scrambled eggs and

creamed spinach. I count no more than half a dozen people who are not

white. On the platform is a huge picture of the Dome of the

Rock, the spot in Jerusalem where the third Temple will be rebuilt to

herald, at least according to the Christians in the room, the second

coming of Christ. Some 400,000 Christian tourists visit Israel

each year, and, what with the precipitous decline in Israel's tourism

industry in recent years, these people have become a valued source of

revenue.

The strange alliance in this case is premised upon the

Dominionist belief that Israel must rule the biblical land in order for

Christ to return, though when he does, all Jews who do not convert to

Christianity supposedly will be incinerated as the believers are lifted

into heaven; all this is courteously left unmentioned at the breakfast.

The featured speakers include Avraham Hirschsohn, who is the new

Israeli minister of tourism, and Michael Medved, a cultural

conservative and a nationally syndicated radio talk-show host. Medved

is also one of the most prominent Jewish defenders of Mel Gibson's

biopic The Passion of the Christ.

Hirschsohn praises the audience for standing "with us for the last

four years when nobody else would. Thank you." He then announces, to

grateful applause, that the tourism ministry plans to build a "Pilgrim

Center" near Galilee.

"A more Christian America is good for the Jews," Medved says.

"This is obvious. Take a look at this support for Israel. A more

Christian America is good for America, something Jewish people need to

be more cognizant about and acknowledge. A more Jewish

community is good for the Christians, not just because of the existence

of allies but because a more Jewish community is less seduced by

secularism."

The cast of characters that takes the stage next is illuminating. Glenn Plummer,

a black minister from Detroit who is active in the Republican Party,

assures us that he knows all about Muslims because "I come from

Detroit, where the biggest mosque in America is."

"It didn't take 9/11 to show me there is a global battle going on

for the souls of men," he says. "When Islam comes into a place, it is

intent on taking over everything, not only government but the business,

the neighborhoods, everything."

The Christian writer Kay Arthur, who

can barely contain her tears when speaking of Israel, professes that

although she loves America, if she had to choose between America and

Israel, "I would stand with Israel, stand with Israel as a daughter of

the King of Kings, stand according to the word of God." She goes on to

quote at length from Revelation, speaking of Jesus seated on a throne

floating about Jerusalem as believers are raptured up toward him in the

sky.

* * *

After breakfast I have a look at the charred remains of public bus

#19 in the convention hall. Its sides are scorched black, and the doors

in the center of the bus are twisted hideously. Within, the bus's steel

frame is bent outward and shattered. The exterior has been adorned with

banners bearing biblical quotations: "I will plant Israel in their own

land, never again to be uprooted from the land I have given them" (Amos

9:15); "And I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I

will curse" (Genesis 12:3).

The bus, owned by a Christian Zionist group calling itself The

Jerusalem Connection International, was destroyed by Palestinian

suicide bombers in January 2004, killing eleven people. According to

information from the group, its president, retired U.S. Brigadier General James Hutchens,

looks at "issues related to Israel from a Biblical perspective." The

bus has been displayed at The Hague and in numerous rallies throughout

the United States. At a table next to the bus, a Jerusalem Connection

official hands out pamphlets encouraging the reader to "Bring Bus #19

to Your Community!"

At a nearby booth that advertises Christian broadcasts to the Arab

world, an Egyptian woman, a Christian, tells me that she has been

reduced to tears on several occasions by enraged conventioneers who,

after visiting the bus, tell her that all Arabs are "terrorists." I

speak as well with an Israeli woman, who introduces herself as Marina.

She has long blonde hair and is wearing knee-high leather boots.

Marina, who emigrated to Israel from Holland and lives on a cooperative

mango farm near the Sea of Galilee, says she is "embarrassed" to be at

the convention. "These people are anti-Semitic," she says, speaking softly as conventioneers move past the large Israeli display space. The demonization of Muslims and Palestinians by the speakers makes her especially uneasy. I ask her why the tourism ministry is here in the first place. "Money," she says. "It is all about money. No one else visits Israel."

* * *

On Monday night James Dobson, the

founder and chairman of Focus on the Family, holds an informal

reception and talk with his son, Ryan. The walls are decorated with

red, white, and blue bunting, and people are eating popcorn, hot dogs,

and pizza. There are Ping-Pong tables set up in the corners, and in the

center of the room are three bar-stool chairs and another Ping-Pong

table, this one bathed in light. Several men are wearing umpire

uniforms.

Dobson is perhaps the most powerful figure in the Dominionist movement. He was instrumental three years ago in purging the moderate chairman of the NRB from his post and speaks frequently with the White House. He was a crucial player in getting out the Christian vote for George W. Bush.

Dobson says he was born again at the age of three during a church

service conducted by his father, a Nazarene minister. He attended

Pasadena College and received a Ph.D. in child development from the

University of Southern California. While teaching at USC, he wrote his

book Dare to Discipline, which encourages parents to spank

their children with "sufficient magnitude to cause the child to cry

genuinely." (The book has sold more than 3.5 million copies since its

release in 1970.)

Dobson now works out of an eighty-one-acre campus in Colorado

Springs that has its own zip code. He employs 1,300 people, sends out 4

million pieces of mail each month, and is heard on radio broadcasts in

ninety-nine countries. His estimated listening audience is

more than 200 million worldwide; in the United States alone, he appears

on 100 television stations each day. He calls for a

constitutional amendment to permit prayer in the public schools. He

sponsors a group called "Love Won Out," which holds monthly conferences

around the country for those "suffering" from same-sex attraction. He

likens the proponents of gay marriage to the Nazis, has backed

political candidates who called for the execution of abortion

providers, defines embryonic stem-cell research as "state-funded

cannibalism," and urges Christian parents to pull their children out of

public-school systems. He has issued warnings to the Bush

Administration that his extremist agenda must begin to be implemented

in Washington and by the federal courts if the Republican Party wants

his continued support. Dobson apparently believes that he is without

sin.

The evening is billed as a tournament, with competing teams of

Ping-Pong players battling their way up the ladder until the big

winners play Dobson and his son, Ryan, whom the announcer calls "the

double Ds." Before the final match, father and son take questions from

the audience. Seated near Dobson is his wife, Shirley, whose only

public role seems to be to whisper reminders in her husband's ear. All

speakers at the event make much of their marriage and fidelity. Not far

away is Ryan's fiancee and Ryan makes a point of telling the crowd that

he and Laura are "remaining pure" and will not have sex for the next

120 days until they are married. At first, the questions focus on how

Dobson has raised such an exemplary Christian family. One woman, who

says she runs a Christian home, asks Dobson the secret to getting her

own children to have the enthusiasm for Christ she sees in Ryan.

"Shirley and I began fasting and praying for the kids when they were

born," Dobson says. "We asked the Lord a number of things, but

especially that the Lord burn within them."

But this is Ryan's night. Dobson himself is often silent, allowing

his son to answer most of the questions with a rambling

self-importance. He sits slightly hunched on his stool in a dark

sweater, his reddish hair combed in long strands over his balding pate,

listening to the boy. He does, though, speak up at one point to clarify

his position on SpongeBob SquarePants, which received wide media

attention.

"I did not say SpongeBob was gay," Dobson says. "All I said was he

was part of a video produced by a group with strong linkages to the

homosexual community that's teaching things like tolerance and

diversity. And you can see where they're going with that. They're

teaching kids to think different about homosexuality."

Ryan, with closely cropped blond hair and a drooping Fu Manchu

mustache, exhorts the audience to find a cause "worth fighting for" and

"worth dying for." He says he has learned how to reach young people. He

knows their culture. He talks about his passion for surfing and

skateboarding. Then he says, "People keep saying we need to change the

discussion on abortion before we can ban it. We don't need to change

the discussion. Like, 80 percent of the country is against abortion.

What kind of a country fines people $25,000 for killing a bald eagle

but doesn't do anything when unborn babies get thrown in the trash?"

The older Dobson speaks in support of his son's talents and

commitment to Christ. Ryan worked for a year at the Family Research

Council, founded by his father, which is perhaps the most influential

radical Christian-right lobbying group in Washington. He has published

two books, Be Intolerant Because Some Things Are Just Stupid and 2Die4, and is clearly being groomed by his father to inherit the Dobson empire.

When it comes time for the Ping-Pong final, the Dobsons easily demolish their opponents.

* * *

I leave the convention early Tuesday morning on a shuttle van to

LAX. I am wondering whether I shouldn't stay in California a few more

days, in order to attend a funeral. Chris Marquis, a close friend and

colleague of mine at the New York Times, died while I was out

here from complications brought on by AIDS. I learned of his death on

the first day of the convention, and even a few days of the

Dominionists' bigotry against homosexuals has been more than I could

stomach.

I can't help but recall the words of my ethics professor at

Harvard Divinity School, Dr. James Luther Adams, who told us that when

we were his age, and he was then close to eighty, we would all be

fighting the "Christian fascists."

He gave us that warning twenty-five years ago, when Pat Robertson

and other prominent evangelists began speaking of a new political

religion that would direct its efforts at taking control of all major

American institutions, including mainstream denominations and the

government, so as to transform the United States into a global

Christian empire. At the time, it was hard to take such fantastic

rhetoric seriously. But fascism, Adams warned, would not

return wearing swastikas and brown shirts. Its ideological inheritors

would cloak themselves in the language of the Bible; they would come

carrying crosses and chanting the Pledge of Allegiance.

Adams had watched American intellectuals and industrialists flirt

with fascism in the 1930s. Mussolini's "Corporatism," which created an

unchecked industrial and business aristocracy, had appealed to many at

the time as an effective counterweight to the New Deal. In 1934, Fortune

magazine lavished praise on the Italian dictator for his defanging of

labor unions and his empowerment of industrialists at the expense of

workers. Then as now, Adams said, too many liberals failed to

understand the power and allure of evil, and when the radical

Christians came, these people would undoubtedly play by the old, polite

rules of democracy long after those in power had begun to dismantle the

democratic state. Adams had watched German academics fall

silent or conform. He knew how desperately people want to believe the

comfortable lies told by totalitarian movements, how easily those lies

lull moderates into passivity.

Adams told us to watch closely the Christian right's persecution of

homosexuals and lesbians. Hitler, he reminded us, promised to restore

moral values not long after he took power in 1933, then imposed a ban

on all homosexual and lesbian organizations and publications. Then came

raids on the places where homosexuals gathered, culminating on May 6,

1933, with the ransacking of the Institute for Sexual Science in

Berlin. Twelve thousand volumes from the institute's library were

tossed into a public bonfire. Homosexuals and lesbians, Adams said, would be the first "deviants" singled out by the Christian right. We would be the next.

Notes

1. When George W. Bush was first elected, Pat Robertson resigned as

head of the Christian Coalition, a sign to many that Bush was the first

in an expected line of regents that will herald the coming of the

Messiah.------------------------------Pretty scary...navegante

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I

live in Wasilla, Alaska.

 

Nice

stress enticer for a health and healing forum, eh?

So

I breathe slow and deep, drink some chamomile tea, use ylang ylang or lavender

as a calming scent. Always directing my energy to positive change and be that

which I desire to see, and send healing energies to the planet and its life

forms.

~Laura

 

" Life will

give you whatever experience is most helpful for the evolution of your

consciousness "

Eckhart Tolle; A

New Earth

www.myspace.com/starflower99654

 

 

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