Monday, June 25, 2007

McChurch - The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Far Right from the Great Depression to the Cold War


The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Far Right from the Great Depression to the Cold War


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The Christian right and support for Israel. (Christianity and the Middle East).: An article from: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs This digital document is an article from Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, published by American Educational Trust on September 1, 2002. The length of the article is 2604 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: The Christian right and support for Israel. (Christianity and the Middle East).
Author: Fred Strickert
Publication: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (Refereed)
Date: September 1, 2002
Publisher: American Educational Trust
Volume: 21 Issue: 7 Page: 80(2)

Distributed by Thomson Gale
Customer Review: Unconvincing
Fred Strickert explains to us in this article that "for decades, the Christian right has offered one-sided support for Israel." And he quotes a Christian to indicate the reason for this is that those on the Christian right, based upon their "readings of the Scripture," believe that "God has promised that land to the Jewish people."

That may sound pretty obvious, but I am not entirely sure I'll stipulate to it. It just could be that many of those on the Christian right sincerely wish to support the Jews of Israel against the aggressors and bullies who attack them. It could even be that their interpretation of Scripture is influenced by this desire to support the victims of aggression.

Is there a difference between support for Israel under the George W. Bush administration and that during the administration of Bush's father? I think there is indeed more support for Israel under the present administration and so does the author. Strickert attributes this to George W. Bush being more receptive to the "influence of the Christian right." That could be true, but it could also be that the Christian right espouses a position that the younger Bush happened to favor in the first place.

Strickert does mention that George W. Bush has been fond of saying "Either they're for us or they're against us." And he jumps from this to say that the Christian right has "pushed the president" into seeing the Arab war against Israel "in similarly simplistic terms."

Um, wait a second. I'm all in favor of seeing the complexities and details of situations. But I think Strickert is wrong to imply that one ought to overlook the fundamentals! And it is fundamental that the Arab goal in its war against Israel is to get rid of human rights for Jews in the region by getting rid of Israel. And that the Israeli goal is to survive and prosper. That is pretty simplistic. But those who look only at the complexities and ignore this fundamental point are not going to contribute much to help resolve the situation.

This article includes a letter by some Christians who argue against supporting Israel. And they say that the war is having "disastrous effects on the Israeli soul."

Well, yes, if one's people are threatened with annihilation, I'm sure it isn't much fun to save one's life by killing one's attacker. And yes, saving one's life in that manner makes one a killer, even though it's self-defense. But I think the Israelis have learned that it is even worse to let oneself be killed. By dying, one enables one's killers and one deprives one's family, friends, and community of the beneficial contributions one would make if one were still alive.

I do not recommend this article.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

McChurch - The new Christian right and North American education (Wetenskaplike bydraes of the PU for CHE. Series F, Institute for Reformational Studies. Series F1, IRS-study pamphlets)


The new Christian right and North American education (Wetenskaplike bydraes of the PU for CHE. Series F, Institute for Reformational Studies. Series F1, IRS-study pamphlets)


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The Christian right and support for Israel. (Christianity and the Middle East).: An article from: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs This digital document is an article from Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, published by American Educational Trust on September 1, 2002. The length of the article is 2604 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: The Christian right and support for Israel. (Christianity and the Middle East).
Author: Fred Strickert
Publication: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (Refereed)
Date: September 1, 2002
Publisher: American Educational Trust
Volume: 21 Issue: 7 Page: 80(2)

Distributed by Thomson Gale
Customer Review: Unconvincing
Fred Strickert explains to us in this article that "for decades, the Christian right has offered one-sided support for Israel." And he quotes a Christian to indicate the reason for this is that those on the Christian right, based upon their "readings of the Scripture," believe that "God has promised that land to the Jewish people."

That may sound pretty obvious, but I am not entirely sure I'll stipulate to it. It just could be that many of those on the Christian right sincerely wish to support the Jews of Israel against the aggressors and bullies who attack them. It could even be that their interpretation of Scripture is influenced by this desire to support the victims of aggression.

Is there a difference between support for Israel under the George W. Bush administration and that during the administration of Bush's father? I think there is indeed more support for Israel under the present administration and so does the author. Strickert attributes this to George W. Bush being more receptive to the "influence of the Christian right." That could be true, but it could also be that the Christian right espouses a position that the younger Bush happened to favor in the first place.

Strickert does mention that George W. Bush has been fond of saying "Either they're for us or they're against us." And he jumps from this to say that the Christian right has "pushed the president" into seeing the Arab war against Israel "in similarly simplistic terms."

Um, wait a second. I'm all in favor of seeing the complexities and details of situations. But I think Strickert is wrong to imply that one ought to overlook the fundamentals! And it is fundamental that the Arab goal in its war against Israel is to get rid of human rights for Jews in the region by getting rid of Israel. And that the Israeli goal is to survive and prosper. That is pretty simplistic. But those who look only at the complexities and ignore this fundamental point are not going to contribute much to help resolve the situation.

This article includes a letter by some Christians who argue against supporting Israel. And they say that the war is having "disastrous effects on the Israeli soul."

Well, yes, if one's people are threatened with annihilation, I'm sure it isn't much fun to save one's life by killing one's attacker. And yes, saving one's life in that manner makes one a killer, even though it's self-defense. But I think the Israelis have learned that it is even worse to let oneself be killed. By dying, one enables one's killers and one deprives one's family, friends, and community of the beneficial contributions one would make if one were still alive.

I do not recommend this article.

Friday, June 22, 2007

McChurch - Journalist aims to expose 'facism' of Christian right.(Nation): An article from: National Catholic Reporter


Journalist aims to expose 'facism' of Christian right.(Nation): An article from: National Catholic Reporter
This digital document is an article from National Catholic Reporter, published by National Catholic Reporter on April 1, 2005. The length of the article is 687 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Journalist aims to expose 'facism' of Christian right.(Nation)
Author: Rebecca Beyer
Publication: National Catholic Reporter (Magazine/Journal)
Date: April 1, 2005
Publisher: National Catholic Reporter
Volume: 41 Issue: 22 Page: 8(1)

Distributed by Thomson Gale


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Bibliography on the new Christian right

McChurch - The Christian Rights and Congress


The Christian Rights and Congress


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Religion, Politics, and the Christian Right: Post-9/11 Powers in American Empire (Facets) Princeton theologian Mark Taylor analyzes right-wing Christian movements in the United States amid the powers of religion, politics, empire, and corporate classes in post-9/11 USA.

The real gift of Taylor's book is his argument that this militant Christian faith must be viewed against a backdrop of the American political romanticism and corporatist liberalism of U.S. past and present. Taylor uses the best of cultural and historical studies, while deftly drawing lessons for American readers from theologian Paul Tillich's analysis of power and religion during the rise of fascism and nationalism in Germany of the 1930s.

The result is an innovative framework for interpreting how Christian nationalists, Pentagon war planners and corporate institutions today are forging alliances in the U.S. that have dramatic and destructive global impact. Moving beyond lament, Taylor also leaves readers with a new romance of revolutionary traditions and a new more radical liberalism, revitalizing American visions of spirit that are both prophetic and public for U.S. residents today.
Customer Review: Recommend To Those Who Want To Resurrect Democracy
Prof. Taylor, a Christian Professor of Theology & Culture at the Princeton Theological Seminary, provides a scholarly analysis of the forces eroding our democracy both before and after 9/11. He provides a lot of insight into the dangerous and formidable combined alliance of neoconservatives, Christian right, and the corporate elite. These forces are tearing our democracy to shreds and forming a plutocracy in its place, perhaps even a theocratic plutocracy. The horrible events of 9/11 and the fear reaction that it has caused created fertile ground for their policies to be implemented. The recent eye opener for me is that those policies were in the wings before 9/11 ever happened. Thus, 9/11 is merely the enabling event. The news is not good for minorities, middle and lower classes, or those who treasure their religious and personal freedoms.

I think this book might resonate particularly with Christians who value religious freedoms for all peoples and democracy. This is not to say non-Christians and secular readers should shy away. The book was directed to a general audience and does so admirably. In fact, one of the things I liked about the book was the way Prof. Taylor's faith was there in the background but the message was always for everyone. This problem affects us all and part of the problem has been the sense of polarization occurring in our country. There is a brief epilogue directed specifically to Christian practice in countering Imperialism.

While the author does give the reader some direction for keeping democracy alive, I'm afraid the book didn't leave me with great hope or optimism for turning things around any time soon. I don't pose this as a criticism though as you can hardly blame the author for the mess we are in. Citizens becoming informed is part of the remedy and this book will definitely assist in that cause. Prof. Taylor does offer people cultivating "prophetic spirit" as part of the solution. This will entail people becoming impassioned enough over issues to bond together, to become activists, and take a stand. I think this will need to happen on large scales though to make a difference. Although Prof. Taylor mentions some encouraging actions and groups, I afraid that the large majority of citizens still have their heads in the sand. Corporate media and propaganda don't help either. People have to be motivated to really seek information from outside sources in order to understand what is happening.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

McChurch - Romance between Christian right, Jewish establishment seems to be cooling off.(Israel andJudaism): An article from: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs


Romance between Christian right, Jewish establishment seems to be cooling off.(Israel andJudaism): An article from: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
This digital document is an article from Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, published by Thomson Gale on March 1, 2006. The length of the article is 1563 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Romance between Christian right, Jewish establishment seems to be cooling off.(Israel andJudaism)
Author: Allan C. Brownfeld
Publication: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (Magazine/Journal)
Date: March 1, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 25 Issue: 2 Page: 60(2)

Distributed by Thomson Gale


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Why the Christian Right Is Wrong: A Minister's Manifesto for Taking Back Your Faith, Your Flag, Your Future "I join the ranks of those who are angry, because I have watched as the faith I love has been taken over by fundamentalists who claim to speak for Jesus but whose actions are anything but Christian."
- Robin Meyers, from his "Speech Heard Round the World"

Millions of Americans are outraged at the Bush administration's domestic and foreign policies and even angrier that the nation's religious conservatives have touted these policies as representative of moral values. Why the Christian Right Is Wrong is a rousing manifesto that will ignite the collective conscience of all whose faith and values have been misrepresented by the Christian Right.

Praise for Why the Christian Right Is Wrong:

"In the pulpit, Robin Meyers is the new generation's Harry Emerson Fosdick, George Buttrick, and Martin Luther King. In these pages, you will find a stirring message for our times, from a man who believes that God's love is universal, that the great Jewish prophets are as relevant now as in ancient times, and that the Jesus who drove the money changers from the Temple may yet inspire us to embrace justice and compassion as the soul of democracy. This is not a book for narrow sectarian minds; read it, and you will want to change the world."
-Bill Moyers

"In this book, a powerful and authentic religious voice from America's heartland holds up a mirror to the Bush administration and its religious allies. The result is a vision of Orwellian proportions in which values are inverted and violence, hatred, and bigotry are blessed by one known as 'The Prince of Peace,' who called us to love our enemies. If you treasure this country and tremble over its present direction, this book is a must-read!"
-John Shelby Spong author, The Sins of Scripture: Exposing the Bible's Texts of Hate to Reveal the God of Love

"This is a timely warning and a clarion call to the church to recover the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to a great nation to resist the encroachment of the Christian Right and of Christian fascism. Many of us in other parts of the world are praying fervently that these calls will be heeded."
-Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Customer Review: Great Insight
This author expresses eloquently and with rational clarity why we "leftward" leaning Christians are so uncomfortable with the unrighteous dealings from the religious right. Well spoken, no minced words, forthright, and full of truth. A worthwhile read for thinking Christians and those who are not Christians and have been hurt by the actions of the religious right.
Customer Review: A Book Not To Be Missed
After the 2004 election, "when half the country felt clinically depressed about the reelection of George W. Bush," Robin Meyers, pastor of Mayflower Congregational UCC Church in Oklahoma City, at the behest of students at the University of Oklahoma, gave a speech to protest the war in Iraq. While his speech reads extremely well, it must have so much better heard live. It is broken up essentially into sentences that begin with "when you," and ends with "you are doing something immoral." Here is one example:

"When you cause most of the rest of the world to hate a country that
was once the most loved country in the world and act as if it doesn't
matter what others think of us, only what God thinks of you, you have
done something immoral."

Reverend Meyers then takes his speech, sentence by sentence, and expounds further on it. With clear, thoughtful rhetoric, he makes his case that the Christian Right is in bed with (my image, not his) the Republican Party, "God's Own Party." He discusses what is wrong with Bush and the GOP's position on religion, the environment, the war in Iraq, civil rights, gay rights, tax breaks for the very rich, the death penalty, etc.

Meyers reminds the reader that this administration is the first "ever not to voluntarily add a single species to the endangered species list," and that the U. S. supplied Saddam Hussein with "poison gas, military advisors, and arms. . . in the 1980s" and that Rumsfeld shook his hand in 1983. Reverend Meyers' discussion on what has been done to language in this country (for example, the term "collateral damage") is frightening beyond words; and again he reminds us that George Orwell's 1984 may be the most prophetic book written in the twentieth century.

Meyers in the final pages of this book exhorts the reader to take back this country and tells us what we must do. He urges us to join nonviolent resistance groups, vote out warmongering politicians, get concerned about the environment, and stop spending on "stuff" we do not need. (After all, when Bush sends volunteer soldiers to fight, he urges the rest of us to go shopping.) Finally, he reminds us that the Religious Right does not have a monopoly on Jesus and that we should judge churches by the Sermon on the Mount, rather than their size and location.

Both Bill Moyers and John Selby Spong, two men whose credentials on morality and values are (in my opinion) impeccable, have endorsed this really fine book; they are certainly right about both this most decent man and his book.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

McChurch - Doris Buss and Didi Herman Globalizing Family Values: the Christian Right in International Politics.(Book Review): An article from: Population and Development Review


Doris Buss and Didi Herman Globalizing Family Values: the Christian Right in International Politics.(Book Review): An article from: Population and Development Review
This digital document is an article from Population and Development Review, published by The Population Council, Inc. on March 1, 2004. The length of the article is 1052 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Doris Buss and Didi Herman Globalizing Family Values: the Christian Right in International Politics.(Book Review)
Author: Dennis Hodgson
Publication: Population and Development Review (Refereed)
Date: March 1, 2004
Publisher: The Population Council, Inc.
Volume: 30 Issue: 1 Page: 166(2)

Article Type: Book Review

Distributed by Thomson Gale


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Bibliography on the new Christian right

Saturday, June 16, 2007

McChurch - Citizen Christians (The Rights and Responsibilities of Dual Citizenship)


Citizen Christians (The Rights and Responsibilities of Dual Citizenship)


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Lift High the Cross: Where White Supremacy and the Christian Right Converge Both the Christian right and right-wing white supremacist groups aspire to overcome a culture they perceive as hostile to the white middle class, families, and heterosexuality. The family is threatened, they claim, by a secular humanist conspiracy that seeks to erase all memory of the nation's Christian heritage by brainwashing its children through sex education, multiculturalism, and pop culture. In Lift High the Cross Ann Burlein looks at two groups that represent, in one case, the �hard� right, and in the other, the �soft� right�Pete Peters's �Scriptures for America� and James Dobson's �Focus on the Family��in order to investigate the specific methods these groups rely on to appeal to their followers.

Arguing that today's right engenders its popularity not by overt bigotry or hatred but by focusing on people's hopes for their children, Burlein finds a politics of grief at the heart of such rhetoric. While demonstrating how religious symbols, rituals, texts, and practices shape people's memories and their investment in society, she shows how Peters and Dobson each construct countermemories for their followers that reframe their histories and identities�as well as their worlds�by reversing mainstream perspectives in ways that counter existing power relations. By employing the techniques of niche marketing, the politics of scandal, and the transformation of political issues into �gut issues� and by remasculinizing the body politic, Burlein shows, such groups are able to move people into their realm of influence without requiring them to agree with all their philosophical, doctrinal, or political positions.

Lift High the Cross will appeal to students and scholars of religion, American cultural studies, women's studies, sociology, and gay and lesbian studies, as well as to non-specialists interested in American politics and, specifically, the right.
Customer Review: An Interesting Look at the Right
I expected to take issue with Ms. Burlein's thesis but could not. In a time in which left-of-center politics dominates academic debate and ideology, I expected to read a knee-jerk review and condemnation of conservative values. I was pleasantly surprised.There was no brow-beating of those who value heterosexulaity over its counterpart nor was there any denigrating discussion of the traditional values of the "white right."

"Lift High the Cross" is an excellent academic discussion of a widely-held worldview. Whether to believe the proposition that Christian Right is an extension of the klan is left up to the reader to decide. Though I did not grow up in Ms. Burlein's region of the U.S. I now live and teach there, I can appreciate her desire to discuss in neutral language a very pressing issue facing our nation today.

After reading her book, I have a better understanding of many of the issues concerning white supremacy, some of which I had never considered until I read her book. In conclusion, I must say that although my political beliefs incline toward the right, at no time did her thesis make me feel "wrong" because of my personal politics. I recommend this book highly.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

McChurch - Second Coming: The New Christian Right in Virginia Politics


Second Coming: The New Christian Right in Virginia Politics

By the early 1990s, the Christian Right was a force to be reckoned with in Virginia politics. In 1993, former Moral Majority leader Michael Farris won the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor. The following year, Oliver North became the party's candidate for U.S. senator. Both nominations were seen as undisputed evidence of the Christian Right's power in the state's Republican party. Yet, in those years of massive GOP landslides, both candidates lost their elections. These well-publicized campaigns set off bitter tensions between moderate Republicans and Christian social conservatives in Virginia and beyond--and raised new questions about the electability of candidates put forward by the Christian Right.

In Second Coming, Mark Rozell and Clyde Wilcox examine the role of the Christian Right in Virginia Republican politics. After the failures of the national organizations and campaigns of the Christian Right in the 1980s, the movement began focusing its attention on state and local politics. As the home state of the now-defunct Moral Majority and headquarters of the Christian Coalition, Virginia has one of the most visible and best organized Christian Right groups active today.

Building on a history of the Christian Right in Virginia from 1978 through 1992, Second Coming gives a detailed analysis of the 1993 statewide elections and the 1994 senatorial race, all of which attracted national attention. The authors draw on a wealth of sources--mail surveys from delegates to Republican state and national conventions, members of the Fairfax County Republican committee, and members of the Republican central committee; numerous in-person interviews of delegates at the 1993 and 1994 state conventions; and more than 100 in-depth interviews with Virginia Republicans and Christian Right leaders and activists.

Second Coming places Virginia politics in a national context and offers a revealing look at the struggles between Republican party centrists and Christian Right activists. With the struggle for the 1996 Republican presidential nomination well under way, Rozell and Wilcox offer an invaluable primer on the workings of the Christian Right--how its members make their voices heard at party conventions, get out the conservative vote, and make their presence felt in elections with strength far beyond their numbers."

Second Coming provides a superb treatment of the Religious Right in its homeland, Virginia. Treating a single state in which it has had success, the authors explore the Religious Right in all its roles--as political movement, party faction, and interest group--and they focus on tensions within the movement between the more pragmatic and the more purist factions. This book is an essential work for anyone who wants to understand not just the Religious Right, but politics in the United States in the 1990's and beyond. I highly recommend it."--Ron Rapoport, College of William & Mary

"The Christian Right is a potent force in American politics, but nowhere more so than in the State of Virginia. Rozell and Wilcox have done an outstanding job in explaining the Christian Right: who they are; what they want; and why they'll be around for a long, long time."--Richard N. Bond, former chairman, Republican National Committee

"The 'Old Dominion' is the cradle of the Christian Right, being the home state of both Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. Rozell and Wilcox have provided a fascinating and highly readable case study of the movement on its own turf that reveals its origins, present power, and future prospects. The authors answer a pressing question: will the 'second coming' of the Christian Right be a brief visit or a longer stay?"--John C. Green, University of Akron



Customer Review: Picks up where THE DYNAMIC DOMINION leaves off.

PICKS UP WHERE THE DYNAMIC DOMINION LEAVES OFF - in that it was written later. I still, however found it to be an another excellent accounting of the history of Republican politics in the Commonwealth of Virginia. SECOND COMING goes into great detail about the nomination and candidacy of Lieutenant Gubernatorial hopeful Michael Farris in 1993 and US Senate hopeful Col. Oliver L. North in 1994 through the use of hands on research and interviews with many party activists. Though I liked the book very much, I feel that too much emphasis was placed on the oppinions and feelings of people from Northern Virginia and not enough was said about the oppinions and feelings of people from Richmond and Hampton Roads. The basic feeling that I got from the book is that, although Farris and North ultimately lost their elections, their races were relatively close, proving to me that the Religious Right will be a force to reckoned with in Virginia Politics for many years to come.


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The Christian Right . . . or Wrong?: Exposing the Corrupt Teachings of Corporate Christianity and Its Leading Media Evangelists The Christian Right ... or Wrong? examines public messages delivered by Christian leaders--messages that reach millions of people worldwide every week.

John Cord lays bare the false teachings of forty Christian leaders on such controversial topics as abortion, homosexuality, tithing, salvation, idolatry, and religious terrorism. These influential leaders, mostly American televangelists, include Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Billy Graham, Robert Schuller, and Jimmy Swaggart. Cord studied over 700 hours of television ministries and talk shows, and provides verbatim excerpts of false religion, featuring interview segments conducted by Bill O'Reilly, Larry King, Geraldo Rivera, and Hannity & Colmes.

The Christian Right ... or Wrong? presents a robust sampling of the selfishness at the heart of corporate Christianity, whose age-old, "traditional" lies about God's Message shall, per Christ, be taught to the end.
Customer Review: Highly recommended.
Written by a committed Christian, for committed Christians and those of all faiths who are committed to selfless good works in the name of the divine, The Christian Right... or Wrong? Of Corporate Christianity and its Leading Media Evangelists is a scathing dissection of the self-serving hypocrisy, idolatry, and divisive claims of forty influential, modern-day American Christian leaders, including Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Billy Graham, Robert Schuller, and Jimmy Swaggart. Winner of the 2005 Ethos Award, The Christian Right... or Wrong? denounces the greed of corprotized church tithing (especially in terrorizing one's flock with accusations of thievery from God if they do not relinquish 10% of their income), the Catholic Church's idolatry of its system of concentrated power that does not hold child-molesting priests accountable for their crimes (though it is a myth that child molestation happens only in Catholic churches - it occurs in Protestant and other churches as well), the harm in exhorting that man is saved through faith alone, neglecting the importance of good works in bringing one's spirit closer to the divine, and much more. Author John Cord does not shy from such thorny topics as homosexuality, abortion, and reincarnation. Cord refutes self-serving scriptural arguments from corrupt religious leaders with an honest and refreshing "common sense" look at scripture that emphasizes the importance of bringing one's soul closer to God through one's noble and charitable deeds. Highly recommended.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

McChurch - Religion, Politics, and the Christian Right: Post-9/11 Powers and American Empire.(Book review): An article from: Journal of Church and State


Religion, Politics, and the Christian Right: Post-9/11 Powers and American Empire.(Book review): An article from: Journal of Church and State
This digital document is an article from Journal of Church and State, published by Thomson Gale on January 1, 2006. The length of the article is 543 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Religion, Politics, and the Christian Right: Post-9/11 Powers and American Empire.(Book review)
Author: Fritz Detwiler
Publication: Journal of Church and State (Magazine/Journal)
Date: January 1, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 48 Issue: 1 Page: 231(2)

Article Type: Book review

Distributed by Thomson Gale


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Strange bedfellows: the Jewish establishment and the Christian right. (Israel and Judaism).: An article from: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs This digital document is an article from Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, published by American Educational Trust on August 1, 2002. The length of the article is 2537 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Strange bedfellows: the Jewish establishment and the Christian right. (Israel and Judaism).
Author: Allan C. Brownfeld
Publication: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (Refereed)
Date: August 1, 2002
Publisher: American Educational Trust
Volume: 21 Issue: 6 Page: 71(2)

Distributed by Thomson Gale

Saturday, June 9, 2007

McChurch - "Celebrating Lesbian Sex"

Dobson endorsed sermon blaming "lesbian sex" for God's "abandonment" of America, justifying destruction of a U.S. city by God

Who in the world is celebrating lesbian sex? Certainly not our culture… Certainly not those who, for whatever reasons, find themselves to be homosexuals…Certainly not the church…There is a vast difference between celebrating lesbian sex and refusing to discriminate against homosexuals…

Then, there is that matter of God abandoning America…God did not destroy Sodom and Gomorrah until there were less than 10 righteous people left…For the sake of one righteous man, Lot, He stayed His judgment…God has not abandoned America…

God may, however, have abandoned the Church of Jesus Christ that stands today as a power-hungry, publicity-hungry, self-righteous microcosm of the American Dream ethic of prosperity and success…God abandons churches, not nations – “I will spew you out of my mouth.”

In the person and work of Jesus Christ, God’s Kingdom is His focus…This is one of the most heretical statements I have heard in years from a Gospel preacher…The celebration of sin is what distinguishes the non-believer from the believer…America is not an Old Testament theocracy that is depended upon by God to bring good things to His people…It is a clear teaching of the Bible that the Kingdom will be triumphant over every nation in the world…

John MacArthur and James Dobson need to focus on calling the church to repentance…There is every bit as much sin in the church today as there is in America…The way out of the swamp is for the church to repent and renew, bringing a life-giving message to the outside world…The cost, however, is too high…It will require of us that we turn off our TV’s and use the Internet sporadically…But who will then listen to John MacArthur and James Dobson…

The church needs to repent!!!

As for calamities, what God could and should do to His people who are living the American Dream life of prosperity and success while claiming the cross of Jesus Christ ought to shake these Tele-Zionists in their boots…It is only by the merciful grace of God that He is patient with His apostate church…

Stan Moody is the author of "Crisis in Evangelical Scholarship" and "McChurched: 300 Million Served and Still Hungry

On the June 4 edition of his Focus on the Family radio show, Focus on the Family founder and chairman James C. Dobson broadcast a sermon by John MacArthur, pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, titled "A Nation Abandoned by God." In the sermon, MacArthur said America had forsaken God and engendered the "wrath of abandonment" as a result. MacArthur declared: "You know a society has been abandoned by God when it celebrates lesbian sex." MacArthur further argued that as a result of America's abandonment, the destruction of a major U.S. city "could happen" and that "God would be just in any calamity he brought upon us."

According to Dobson's co-host, John Fuller, MacArthur's sermon was originally delivered on the National Day of Prayer, an observance established by Congress to encourage ecumenical prayer. The National Day of Prayer Task Force operates out of the offices of Focus on the Family in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and is chaired by Dobson's wife, Shirley Dobson.

Dobson endorsed the content of MacArthur's sermon in his introduction of the broadcast. Dobson stated:

DOBSON: Some of our listeners are not going to agree with what he [MacArthur] has to say, but it's going to make you think, and it's also going to be somewhat disturbing. And I happen to agree with what John MacArthur was saying on this day, and I want to thank him and his team and Woodman Valley Chapel for allowing us to share this message. It needs to be heard, especially at this time in our nation.

In his sermon, MacArthur cataloged the symptoms of what he called America's "abandonment" by God and warned of dire consequences:

MacARTHUR: I don't believe we're waiting for God's wrath in this society. We haven't had a massive calamity such as the destruction of an entire city. We certainly don't want that to happen -- pray that does not happen -- but it could happen. And God would be just in any calamity that he brought upon us. We have not entered into eschatological wrath; that comes in the end times. We are experiencing -- all of us do -- consequential wrath of sin. But this massive concept of the wrath of abandonment, I'm convinced, is now at work in our society. We like to talk about the fact that America was founded on Christian principles, God was at the center of it, and all of that -- whatever it might have been in our founding, it's no longer the way it is, and I want to show you how you know that has happened.

[...]

MacARTHUR: The first thing that happens in a nation when it has been abandoned by God is a sexual revolution. Moral sexual perversion, pornographic desire describes the general character of the culture. You can't even count how many million pornographic websites there are. When a society is abandoned by God, it operates out of its own perverse sexual passion without restraint. You can go back to the '60s and the sexual revolution of the flower children, or Hugh Hefner and the Playboy world, and it has gone like a flood since then.

[...]

MacARTHUR: So the first thing that you look for in a society if you're trying to discern whether God has abandoned that society is whether or not that society has gone through a sexual revolution so that illicit sex, adultery, every form of immorality is accepted as normal in that society. And we're there. The second step in the progression, [Romans, chapter 1] verse 26: "God gave them over not just to passions that are explicable," because they're men and women, "but to inexplicable, degrading passions. For their women exchange the natural function for that which is unnatural." You know a society has been abandoned by God when it celebrates lesbian sex. God has given them over -- gross affections, unnatural, unthinkable. So you follow a sexual revolution with a homosexual revolution. And homosexuality becomes normalized.

[...]

MacARTHUR: The amazing thing of it is this, verse 27: "The men abandoning the natural function of the women, burning in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts, and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error." Right into this wrath of abandonment comes the wrath -- the consequential wrath. And even though it generates venereal disease and AIDS, they keep doing it.

MacArthur and his Grace Community Church were sued for clergy malpractice in 1985 by Walter and Maria Nally after their son, a church member, killed himself. Kenneth Nally was 24 when he committed suicide in 1979. According to the Nallys' lawsuit, MacArthur discouraged their son from seeking outside help and worsened his suicidal tendencies by telling him his depression was the product of sinful behavior. Though the lawsuit was ultimately thrown out of court, MacArthur pledged to reform his counselor training programs.

—M.B.

McChurch - The Christian Right, the Far Right and the Boundaries of American Conservatism


The Christian Right, the Far Right and the Boundaries of American Conservatism

This is a broad-based study of all aspects of right-wing politics in the US, with a particular focus on two overlapping groups--the Christian Right and the Radical Right. The American Right has attracted a remarkable amount of attention in recent years. The Christian Right has become a major part of the Republican Party, conservative Pat Buchanan has launched three bids for the party's presidential nomination, and the militias have drawn thousands of Americans into a movement which believes the country is threatened by an international conspiracy. This study challenges the ways in which these developments have been seen and argues for a fresh look at the movements to the right of the mainstream conservatism.


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Lift High the Cross: Where White Supremacy and the Christian Right Converge.(Book Review): An article from: Journal of Church and State This digital document is an article from Journal of Church and State, published by J.M. Dawson Studies in Church and State on September 22, 2002. The length of the article is 587 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Lift High the Cross: Where White Supremacy and the Christian Right Converge.(Book Review)
Author: Finbarr Curtis
Publication: Journal of Church and State (Refereed)
Date: September 22, 2002
Publisher: J.M. Dawson Studies in Church and State
Volume: 44 Issue: 4 Page: 839(2)

Article Type: Book Review

Distributed by Thomson Gale

Thursday, June 7, 2007

McChurch - Born Again: The Christian Right Globalized


Born Again: The Christian Right Globalized
-- A gripping investigation of the power of Christian Right worldwide --

The Christian Right wields massive political power in the United States and beyond. This is the first book to reveal the growing influence of the Christian Right within the United Nations.

Jennifer Butler -- who worked as Presbyterian Representative at the U.N. for nine years -- shows how Christian conservative groups are able to shape policy in every corner of the world.

Drawing on interviews with Christian Right leaders, she reveals how today's most powerful Christian Right organizations are building interfaith coalitions. At the United Nations, groups like Focus on the Family and Concerned Women for America work with Catholic, Mormon and Muslim allies to advance a conservative agenda. The United States has recently joined this alliance. President George W. Bush has given them a significant voice in shaping U.S. positions on issues including women's rights, reproductive health, human cloning, children's rights and AIDS.

In short, the Christian Right is globalizing -- a phenomenon that promises to challenge progressive social policy on a worldwide scale -- as well as transform the Christian Right itself.

'Jennifer Butler's sharp eye for critique and smooth handling of complexity makes her the ideal analyst [of] the U.S. Christian Right. Butler pulls aside the veils of religiosity to show the mean-spirited and elitist ideologies, and yet she never stoops to caricature theology nor bash sincere religious belief.' Chip Berlet, Senior Analyst, Political Research Associates and co-author of Right-Wing Populism in America.


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Has the Christian Right taken over the Republican Party? (religion in US politics) (Cover Story): An article from: Campaigns & Elections This digital document is an article from Campaigns & Elections, published by Campaigns & Elections, Inc. on September 1, 1994. The length of the article is 2455 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

From the supplier: The Christian Right's influence over the Republican Party is greater than ever, especially in local and state elections where conservative Christians have adopted effective grass roots strategies. The media's interest in the religious right as a political force has been welcomed by the right, but there is danger of a backlash if the media chooses to portray them as overzealous. Better organized and funded than ever before, the religious right's major worry is a media that presents them as being out of touch with the mainstream voter.

Citation Details
Title: Has the Christian Right taken over the Republican Party? (religion in US politics) (Cover Story)
Author: John F. Persinos
Publication: Campaigns & Elections (Refereed)
Date: September 1, 1994
Publisher: Campaigns & Elections, Inc.
Volume: v15 Issue: n9 Page: p20(5)

Article Type: Cover Story

Distributed by Thomson Gale

Sunday, June 3, 2007

McChurch - The influence of the Christian Right in U.S. Middle East Policy.: An article from: Middle East Policy


The influence of the Christian Right in U.S. Middle East Policy.: An article from: Middle East Policy
This digital document is an article from Middle East Policy, published by Middle East Policy Council on June 22, 2005. The length of the article is 3042 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: The influence of the Christian Right in U.S. Middle East Policy.
Author: Stephen Zunes
Publication: Middle East Policy (Refereed)
Date: June 22, 2005
Publisher: Middle East Policy Council
Volume: 12 Issue: 2 Page: 73(6)

Distributed by Thomson Gale

Customer Review: Vastly underestimates the power of truth when confronting lies and oppression

Stephen Zunes begins this article with some comments about the political role of Christian fundamentalists. He says that once the Republican Party began to seriously court Christian fundamentalists, it won more elections. It did so by adopting conservative positions on social issues such as Women's rights.



That may be true, but I have to admit that I've always thought of the Republican Party as the natural home of those with conservative positions on social issues. In any case, it could well be that many of those who for economic reasons might vote Democratic vote Republican because they have conservative positions on social issues.



Now, where have Americans stood on the subject of human rights for Jews in Israel? Well, as Zunes admits, Americans typically have liked the fact that Israel has provided Jews with a refuge (and realized that such a refuge was badly needed). In addition, Americans have liked Israeli democracy (although Zunes somewhat dubiously implies that only the Israeli Jews actually experience it).



Have Christian fundamentalists tended to support Israel? Yes. They've done so for decades or more. And Zunes says that this has made a difference in Republican politics. In the past, Republican ties to the oil industry made some Republicans unwilling to attack Arab opposition to the human rights of Israelis. I think that is still the case, but I agree that there may well be a countering influence by the Christian fundamentalists.



I think, however, that Zunes may be mixing up cause and effect. I think there is an overall cause of the power of Zionist arguments, namely intense intransigence by some Arabs, coupled with some outrageous untruths by those who support Arab terrorism. This Arab refusal to abide human rights for Jews has made Israel a bigger issue for the Christians. It has also made Christian pro-Israel arguments dwell on anti-Zionist and anti-Western lies. This in turn has made such arguments more convincing to Republicans and Democrats in general, as well as to Jews, of course.



Zunes sees very little of all this. Instead, he feels that Zionist arguments are inherently meritless, so he starts looking for lying lobbyists that he can blame! And he wonders who is at fault, Jews or Christians! He concludes that Christian Zionists, who probably well outnumber Jewish Zionists, have a bigger impact. Besides, he's afraid that to accuse the Jewish lobby of supporting Israel might put one at risk of some ugly name-calling.



It's an interesting essay. But it is only worth one star at most. After all, there is not even the slightest admission that one could support human rights for Israelis just because one supports human rights. Instead, Zunes implies that everyone agrees that support for Israel is support for repression and opposition to peace, justice, and the rule of law! I strongly feel that Zunes himself is opposing truth, peace, justice, human rights, and the rule of law in this article.


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Mobilizing the Christian right. (interview with Christian Coalition's Ralph E. Reed): An article from: Campaigns & Elections This digital document is an article from Campaigns & Elections, published by Campaigns & Elections, Inc. on October 1, 1993. The length of the article is 3454 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

From the supplier: Christian Coalition Exec Dir Ralph E. Reed believes that the future of conservative candidates lies on the political preference of minorities and new voters. He opines that conservatives should try to reach out to minority voters and those that they traditionally ignore to improve their chances at the polls. Reed also stated that the Christian Coalition is taking a more active role in politics by engaging in different political and economic issues such as free trade and education.

Citation Details
Title: Mobilizing the Christian right. (interview with Christian Coalition's Ralph E. Reed)
Author: Andrea Spring
Publication: Campaigns & Elections (Refereed)
Date: October 1, 1993
Publisher: Campaigns & Elections, Inc.
Volume: v14 Issue: n5 Page: p33(5)

Distributed by Thomson Gale

Saturday, June 2, 2007

McChurch - Why the Christian Right Is Wrong: A Minister's Manifesto for Taking Back Your Faith, Your Flag, Your Future


Why the Christian Right Is Wrong: A Minister's Manifesto for Taking Back Your Faith, Your Flag, Your Future
"I join the ranks of those who are angry, because I have watched as the faith I love has been taken over by fundamentalists who claim to speak for Jesus but whose actions are anything but Christian."
- Robin Meyers, from his "Speech Heard Round the World"

Millions of Americans are outraged at the Bush administration's domestic and foreign policies and even angrier that the nation's religious conservatives have touted these policies as representative of moral values. Why the Christian Right Is Wrong is a rousing manifesto that will ignite the collective conscience of all whose faith and values have been misrepresented by the Christian Right.

Praise for Why the Christian Right Is Wrong:

"In the pulpit, Robin Meyers is the new generation's Harry Emerson Fosdick, George Buttrick, and Martin Luther King. In these pages, you will find a stirring message for our times, from a man who believes that God's love is universal, that the great Jewish prophets are as relevant now as in ancient times, and that the Jesus who drove the money changers from the Temple may yet inspire us to embrace justice and compassion as the soul of democracy. This is not a book for narrow sectarian minds; read it, and you will want to change the world."
-Bill Moyers

"In this book, a powerful and authentic religious voice from America's heartland holds up a mirror to the Bush administration and its religious allies. The result is a vision of Orwellian proportions in which values are inverted and violence, hatred, and bigotry are blessed by one known as 'The Prince of Peace,' who called us to love our enemies. If you treasure this country and tremble over its present direction, this book is a must-read!"
-John Shelby Spong author, The Sins of Scripture: Exposing the Bible's Texts of Hate to Reveal the God of Love

"This is a timely warning and a clarion call to the church to recover the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to a great nation to resist the encroachment of the Christian Right and of Christian fascism. Many of us in other parts of the world are praying fervently that these calls will be heeded."
-Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Customer Review: Great Insight

This author expresses eloquently and with rational clarity why we "leftward" leaning Christians are so uncomfortable with the unrighteous dealings from the religious right. Well spoken, no minced words, forthright, and full of truth. A worthwhile read for thinking Christians and those who are not Christians and have been hurt by the actions of the religious right.

Customer Review: A Book Not To Be Missed

After the 2004 election, "when half the country felt clinically depressed about the reelection of George W. Bush," Robin Meyers, pastor of Mayflower Congregational UCC Church in Oklahoma City, at the behest of students at the University of Oklahoma, gave a speech to protest the war in Iraq. While his speech reads extremely well, it must have so much better heard live. It is broken up essentially into sentences that begin with "when you," and ends with "you are doing something immoral." Here is one example:



"When you cause most of the rest of the world to hate a country that

was once the most loved country in the world and act as if it doesn't

matter what others think of us, only what God thinks of you, you have

done something immoral."



Reverend Meyers then takes his speech, sentence by sentence, and expounds further on it. With clear, thoughtful rhetoric, he makes his case that the Christian Right is in bed with (my image, not his) the Republican Party, "God's Own Party." He discusses what is wrong with Bush and the GOP's position on religion, the environment, the war in Iraq, civil rights, gay rights, tax breaks for the very rich, the death penalty, etc.



Meyers reminds the reader that this administration is the first "ever not to voluntarily add a single species to the endangered species list," and that the U. S. supplied Saddam Hussein with "poison gas, military advisors, and arms. . . in the 1980s" and that Rumsfeld shook his hand in 1983. Reverend Meyers' discussion on what has been done to language in this country (for example, the term "collateral damage") is frightening beyond words; and again he reminds us that George Orwell's 1984 may be the most prophetic book written in the twentieth century.



Meyers in the final pages of this book exhorts the reader to take back this country and tells us what we must do. He urges us to join nonviolent resistance groups, vote out warmongering politicians, get concerned about the environment, and stop spending on "stuff" we do not need. (After all, when Bush sends volunteer soldiers to fight, he urges the rest of us to go shopping.) Finally, he reminds us that the Religious Right does not have a monopoly on Jesus and that we should judge churches by the Sermon on the Mount, rather than their size and location.



Both Bill Moyers and John Selby Spong, two men whose credentials on morality and values are (in my opinion) impeccable, have endorsed this really fine book; they are certainly right about both this most decent man and his book.




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Second Coming: The New Christian Right in Virginia Politics

By the early 1990s, the Christian Right was a force to be reckoned with in Virginia politics. In 1993, former Moral Majority leader Michael Farris won the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor. The following year, Oliver North became the party's candidate for U.S. senator. Both nominations were seen as undisputed evidence of the Christian Right's power in the state's Republican party. Yet, in those years of massive GOP landslides, both candidates lost their elections. These well-publicized campaigns set off bitter tensions between moderate Republicans and Christian social conservatives in Virginia and beyond--and raised new questions about the electability of candidates put forward by the Christian Right.

In Second Coming, Mark Rozell and Clyde Wilcox examine the role of the Christian Right in Virginia Republican politics. After the failures of the national organizations and campaigns of the Christian Right in the 1980s, the movement began focusing its attention on state and local politics. As the home state of the now-defunct Moral Majority and headquarters of the Christian Coalition, Virginia has one of the most visible and best organized Christian Right groups active today.

Building on a history of the Christian Right in Virginia from 1978 through 1992, Second Coming gives a detailed analysis of the 1993 statewide elections and the 1994 senatorial race, all of which attracted national attention. The authors draw on a wealth of sources--mail surveys from delegates to Republican state and national conventions, members of the Fairfax County Republican committee, and members of the Republican central committee; numerous in-person interviews of delegates at the 1993 and 1994 state conventions; and more than 100 in-depth interviews with Virginia Republicans and Christian Right leaders and activists.

Second Coming places Virginia politics in a national context and offers a revealing look at the struggles between Republican party centrists and Christian Right activists. With the struggle for the 1996 Republican presidential nomination well under way, Rozell and Wilcox offer an invaluable primer on the workings of the Christian Right--how its members make their voices heard at party conventions, get out the conservative vote, and make their presence felt in elections with strength far beyond their numbers."

Second Coming provides a superb treatment of the Religious Right in its homeland, Virginia. Treating a single state in which it has had success, the authors explore the Religious Right in all its roles--as political movement, party faction, and interest group--and they focus on tensions within the movement between the more pragmatic and the more purist factions. This book is an essential work for anyone who wants to understand not just the Religious Right, but politics in the United States in the 1990's and beyond. I highly recommend it."--Ron Rapoport, College of William & Mary

"The Christian Right is a potent force in American politics, but nowhere more so than in the State of Virginia. Rozell and Wilcox have done an outstanding job in explaining the Christian Right: who they are; what they want; and why they'll be around for a long, long time."--Richard N. Bond, former chairman, Republican National Committee

"The 'Old Dominion' is the cradle of the Christian Right, being the home state of both Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. Rozell and Wilcox have provided a fascinating and highly readable case study of the movement on its own turf that reveals its origins, present power, and future prospects. The authors answer a pressing question: will the 'second coming' of the Christian Right be a brief visit or a longer stay?"--John C. Green, University of Akron


Customer Review: Picks up where THE DYNAMIC DOMINION leaves off.
PICKS UP WHERE THE DYNAMIC DOMINION LEAVES OFF - in that it was written later. I still, however found it to be an another excellent accounting of the history of Republican politics in the Commonwealth of Virginia. SECOND COMING goes into great detail about the nomination and candidacy of Lieutenant Gubernatorial hopeful Michael Farris in 1993 and US Senate hopeful Col. Oliver L. North in 1994 through the use of hands on research and interviews with many party activists. Though I liked the book very much, I feel that too much emphasis was placed on the oppinions and feelings of people from Northern Virginia and not enough was said about the oppinions and feelings of people from Richmond and Hampton Roads. The basic feeling that I got from the book is that, although Farris and North ultimately lost their elections, their races were relatively close, proving to me that the Religious Right will be a force to reckoned with in Virginia Politics for many years to come.