Monday, April 30, 2007

McChurch - Religion Gone Bad: The Hidden Dangers of the Christian Right


Religion Gone Bad: The Hidden Dangers of the Christian Right
The bestselling author of Stranger at the Gate provides an inside exposé of the Christian Right's agenda-and a playbook in how to resist it.

This Fall's midterm elections will see much discussion about the enhanced power of the Christian fundamentalist Right, leaving many people to wonder: just who are these people and what exactly do they want? What are their ultimate goals? The Reverend Mel White, a deeply religious man who sees fundamentalism as "evangelical Christian orthodoxy gone cultic," believes that it is not a stretch to say that the true goal of today's fundamentalists is to break down the wall that separates church and state, superimpose their "moral values" on the U.S. Constitution, replace democracy with theocratic rule, and ultimately create a new "Christian America" in their image. White's new book, Religion Gone Bad, is a wake-up call to all of us to take heed.

White is singularly qualified to write this exposé of the Christian Right because he himself was a true believer who served the evangelical movement as pastor, professor, filmmaker, television producer, author, and ghostwriter for such fundamentalist leaders as Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, and Billy Graham, all of whom he got to know well. As he writes, "These are not just Neocons dressed in religious drag. These men see themselves as gurus called by God to rescue America from unrighteousness. They believe this is a Christian nation that must be returned forcibly to its Christian roots."

He is also a gay man, who made news when he came out more than twelve years ago. White has gained a unique understanding of the fundamentalist agenda because, since the fall of "godless Communism," homosexuality and abortion have become the primary targets through which fundamentalists have created fear, raised money, and mobilized recruits. Religion Gone Bad documents the thirty-year war that fundamentalist Christians have waged against homosexuality and gays and lesbians and offers dramatic, heartbreaking evidence that fundamentalist leaders-Protestant and Catholic alike-are waging nothing less than a "holy war" (jihad) against sexual minorities. By focusing on the current plight of gay people in this country, White addresses the wider issue that fundamentalist Christianity-like fundamentalist Islam-has become a threat not just to gays, but to all Americans who disagree with fundamentalist Christian "values."

Customer Review: These People Know They are Correct

To me the biggest single point in this book is that the leaders, and the main followers of the Christian Right are indeed true believers. This is not some kind of political gambit on their part, God honestly talks to them and they know, positively know that they are right -- that's lower case right, as in correct.



Also sincere, I believe, are the leaders of the Muslim fundamentalists. They truly believe their view of the world. What's strange is how the fundamental bases of the religions are so different, yet how similar these beliefs are when it comes to issues like homosexuals, abortion, and the desire to control the political process. When you know you are right, of course other people will agree with you and you can create a perfect political system.



In this country, if you want to see a theocracy, go to Salt Lake City. In elections, the church lets you know who to vote for, and they get elected. The United Way supports the Boy Scouts, but not the Girl Scouts, the Girl Scout equivalents are through the church.



This book concentrates on the Christian Right's attitudes towards gay and lesbian issues. Un-Intelligent Design for instance where 150 years of the best science the world has been able to find is thrown over for what was written down in the Middle East a couple of thousand years ago. I guess it is biology's turn. Physics and Astronomy had their turn when Galileo was given a life sentence of house arrest for saying the earth went around the sun.

Customer Review: White over-stretches his case

While I completely support the political objectives of the author, Mel White, regarding liberty and equal protection for all Americans; this book is a partially flawed effort in terms of its warnings of doom regarding the Christian Right's political objectives. Not because White didn't convince me of their leaders' willingness to destroy American values; White was unable to convince me they are able to destroy those ideals. So while I can't unequivocally recommend purchasing this book, I do recommend purchasing under certain conditions I'll describe below.



Mr. White's main thesis is to correlate the Nazis' treatment of Jews to the American Christian Right's treatment of gays. White warns us that the trail the Nazi's led Germany down is a possibility for America if the Christian Right maintained and enhanced its control of our government.



I don't believe Mr. White is able to convincingly make his case that gays are at the same threat level of risk that Jews were in Germany in the early 1930s; however he does make the case the leaders of the Christian Right are theocratic fascists that are directly opposed to our founding American ideals (while disingenuously claiming those ideals for themselves). White provides strong corroborative evidence justifying the use of terms such as theocracy, dominionism, and fascism in terms of their political objectives though this book is not designed to be a good source to analyze the Christian Right's ideals vs. the founding ideals of the framers (see Randy Barnett's "Lost Constitution" for an indirect, but devastating take-down of authoritarian ideologies like the Christian Right's).



Mr. White begins by describing his ideological enemies, from Francis Schaffer and Billy Graham to Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, James Dobson and D. James Kennedy. Mr. White describes these men as true believers who are not hypocritically in the game for money and power but instead because they actually believe in the hatred and bigotry they propagate.



White's past provides a unique and valuable perspective, having served as a ghost writer for Billy Graham (whom White holds out as example of a good evangelical though still a man of his time), as well as ghost writing for Pat Robertson, and also having worked with Jerry Falwell and Kennedy on a variety of media events published by these people. In terms of "know thy enemy", the book fails due to White's obsessive focus on their hatred of gays at the cost of a broader analysis of these men and their objectives given his exposure to them.



Are the Christian Right political leaders and nationally known figures proto-fascists setting the table for future fascists, or are they fascists themselves willing to destroy our Constitution and implement a Christian Dominionist government? I would have liked to have reviewed some differentiation in White's analysis between the leaders and their objectives and the willingness of their followers to support these efforts if they gained enough power to implement their policy objectives.



While I understand and agree to a point that White's position is that the fundamentalist perspective and policy positions on gay people is a key to understanding their bigger objectives regarding the control of our government; I would have preferred White dedicate more time on other issues as well, especially the Christian Right's leaders' perspective on how they plan to maintain their numbers of adherents in this country given their future inability to keep their followers ignorant of the corruption of early dogma as the Internet provides access to all people on the actual history of the corruption of the Canons as they developed along with Science continuing to destroy Christian myths prevalent in the Bible as we learn more about our Universe and its laws (the retreat since Galileo is actually accelerating which may be why these men have a sense of desperation to their rhetoric).



I would have also liked a better discussion of how they control the media in terms of continuing to be allowed the moral equivalence of their opposing positions (e.g., "right to die", stem cell research, their attacks on Science) relative to overwhelming opposition along with reason and evidence directly contradicting their claims. Just recently the far right lost its ability to frame the ID v. Evolution debate as competing theories as the media wised up on the actual controversy that there is no scientific controversy but instead this an attack on science by religious ideologues. How will they continue to threaten our country and make things worse if they lose their moral authority in the media as they have been recently as their ideals are scrutinized and found morally repugnant and/or easily disproved? White doesn't elaborate and yet we're supposed to worry they are the next coming of Hitler, sorry but I can't make that leap based on White's book, I need more evidence, especially given the explosion of information becoming available that will make it easier to discredit their propaganda efforts along with young people in general, even young Evangelicals, rejecting their parent's hatred of homosexuals, intellectualism, and the scientific method.



White provides a section of the book to show how the Christian Right's leaders fight and have won some of their wars, especially by hiring discredited "scientists" to create "research" that allows them to communicate "facts" to support their conclusions. While the Christian Right argues that their policy positions are supported with sound data, the media has caught on that wackos like Paul Cameron, David Barton and William Dembski are illegitimate conveyers of "truth" and instead incompetent hacks paid to create propaganda for people like James Dobson and D. James Kennedy. So the question again is raised, why should I continue to be concerned about these nut cases, won't they die out just like the people that stopped people of color from having equal rights and marrying between the races died out? Nowadays Christian Right zealots like Sen. Brownback hypocritically claim the civil rights movement as their legacy, why won't the Brownbacks in two generations claim the fight for gay rights as their heritage as well? White provides no preemptive argument for these obvious challenges to his premise. A great book on this topic is Mooney's "The Republican War on Science".



The next two sections of the book are like a complete reversal and highly enjoyable reading and why I conditionally promote purchasing this book. White defines 14 aspects of fascism and does a convincing job of showing that at the least, the Christian Right leaders possess fascist tendencies by showing examples, sometimes multiple anecdotes, to corroborate an aspect of fascism with a policy position supported by the Christian Right. Once again though, White fails to convince this reader that these leaders would have the ability to enjoin their followers to actually make the leap to theocratic fascism if provided the opportunity - its one thing for a populist Christian to rail against the peccadilloes of Pres. Clinton's sexual scandals or an atheist trying to get "under God" out of the Pledge, its quite another to vote to amend the U.S. Constitution to prevent judges from protecting the rights of Americans from its government when your side is in power. President Bush learned this lesson in 2006 when 1/3 of evangelicals rejected his party and voted for Democrats, i.e., that ideology at the extreme end is shared by an insufficient number for an automatic quorum; a lesson Liberals learned in the 80s.



I also like Whites' thesis that people who truly aspire to live up to the principles of the two greatest commandments and aspire to live a life where grace is superior to justice is contained within the founding American civil ideals espoused historically by freethinkers and liberal Christians, a concept currently demonized by Fox News (as secular progressivism). White, like Jim Wallis, has the moral high ground but hasn't figured out how to get their message out into the media effectively; the knee-jerk reaction by the mainstream media is that the Dobson's speak for Christians when in fact, millions of Christians reject his message of dominionism and hatred. White's movements' effectiveness will be measured in getting media access like Dobson, Falwell, and Robertson, an effort in which he's currently failing.



I had one inspiration reading Mr. White's book, the gay rights movement needs a Martin Luther King. It needs a person who is charismatic enough while possessing the humble dignity and obvious wisdom, like Dr. King, to immediately remove the Christian Right from its unearned moral high ground. Mr. White, after having seen him speak at a book review broadcast on CSPAN II, is not that person nor does he seem to aspire to that position. I hope and pray Mr. White's movement finds its Dr. King; Mr. White will be a very able disciple to such a person and movement.


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Natural adversaries or possible allies?: American Jews and the New Christian right (Jewish political studies)

Sunday, April 29, 2007

McChurch - Lift High the Cross: Where White Supremacy and the Christian Right Converge


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.


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From Intimidation to Victory: Regaining the Christian Right to Speak

Saturday, April 28, 2007

McChurch - Spiritual Warfare: The Politics of the Christian Right


Spiritual Warfare: The Politics of the Christian Right
Customer Review: good book. a little dated. but good

This pioneering book of investigative reporting and political analysis sits on the shelves of everyone who aspires to a baseline knowledge of the Christian Right and its history.

More contemporary books by Rob Boston, Jean Hardisty and certainly Frederick Clarkson's Eternal Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy and Democracy will get you into the subject in a more digestable form. Once having aquired a grasp of the subject, Spiritual Warfare will make alot more sense.

Customer Review: Factual and Frightening

Diamond traces the history of the extreme Religious Right and its forays into international military actions and domestic suppression. The documentation in this book is thorough and reputable. Make no mistake, this book is not for everyone: she's writing for academians and is not aiming for entertainment. However, the book, at times, is riveting in its portrayal of how extreme Right Wing organizations (CBN, Moral Majority, Christian Coalition being examples) are set up with a facade of humanitarian aid while behind the exterior, they funnel massive amounts of money to foces not entirely aligned with Christianity (like the Contras). Admittedly, there are a few times when her opinion squeaks through the content but for the most part, the facts speak for themselves. I found it a great read.


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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

Thursday, April 26, 2007

McChurch - The New Christian Right


The New Christian Right


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Readers object to Coren's Christian Right.(letters)(Letter to the Editor): An article from: Presbyterian Record This digital document is an article from Presbyterian Record, published by Presbyterian Record on March 1, 2005. The length of the article is 424 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: Readers object to Coren's Christian Right.(letters)(Letter to the Editor)
Author: Ann Rogers
Publication: Presbyterian Record (Magazine/Journal)
Date: March 1, 2005
Publisher: Presbyterian Record
Volume: 129 Issue: 3 Page: 5(1)

Article Type: Letter to the Editor

Distributed by Thomson Gale

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

McChurch - God, land, and politics: The Wise Use and Christian Right connection in 1992 Oregon politics


God, land, and politics: The Wise Use and Christian Right connection in 1992 Oregon politics


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The Transformation of the Christian Right Customer Review: Finally, something on the Christian Right!
This book was very informative. At last I can have a good book to read about the Christian Right (my favorite subject). This is not something you should defenestrate.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

McChurch - Standing on the Premises of God: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools


Standing on the Premises of God: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools

The Christian Right is arguably the most significant social movement in the United States today. In recent years, these religious conservatives have loudly protested a public education system they believe no longer represents their interests or values.

Educators often dismiss critiques based on religious values as irrational or flimsy, failing to appreciate the coherence of these criticisms from the Christian Right's own perspective. While the Christian Right has become ever more sophisticated in its lobbying and powerful in its influence, educators and parents find themselves lacking the background knowledge necessary to respond effectively to its efforts.

Standing on the Premises of God speaks directly to this dilemma, explaining current incarnations of the Christian Right, its leadership, its intellectual and theological foundations, and its tactics, so that those interested in the debates over education will be better prepared to engage them constructively.Taking the novel approach of framing the Christian Right as a revitalization movement, Detwiler shows how it seeks to effect cultural transformation in order to bring public education-and our society more generally-in line with its worldview. His theoretical model provides insights into why education is so pivotal to the Christian Right and also assesses the religious viability of the Christian Right as a social movement.


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The New Christian Right, 1981-1988: Prospects for the Post-Reagan Decade (Studies in American Religion, Vol 25)

Saturday, April 21, 2007

McChurch - The Christian right and support for Israel. (Christianity and the Middle East).: An article from: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs


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.


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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.

Friday, April 20, 2007

McChurch - Standing on the Premises of God: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools


Standing on the Premises of God: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools: The Christian Right's Fight to Redefine America's Public Schools

The Christian Right is arguably the most significant social movement in the United States today. In recent years, these religious conservatives have loudly protested a public education system they believe no longer represents their interests or values.

Educators often dismiss critiques based on religious values as irrational or flimsy, failing to appreciate the coherence of these criticisms from the Christian Right's own perspective. While the Christian Right has become ever more sophisticated in its lobbying and powerful in its influence, educators and parents find themselves lacking the background knowledge necessary to respond effectively to its efforts.

Standing on the Premises of God speaks directly to this dilemma, explaining current incarnations of the Christian Right, its leadership, its intellectual and theological foundations, and its tactics, so that those interested in the debates over education will be better prepared to engage them constructively.Taking the novel approach of framing the Christian Right as a revitalization movement, Detwiler shows how it seeks to effect cultural transformation in order to bring public education-and our society more generally-in line with its worldview. His theoretical model provides insights into why education is so pivotal to the Christian Right and also assesses the religious viability of the Christian Right as a social movement.


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Born-again politics: The new Christian right in America

Thursday, April 19, 2007

McChurch - "Don't Disturb Me With the Facts!"

(This is an interesting take on racism of the Christian Right - "The only good Arab is a dead Arab." As Christian tourists walk hand-in-hand, singing, "I Walked Today Where Jesus Walked," they are missing the opportunity to walk where Jesus is...

Avoid the tourist traps and get real, folks!

Stan Moody, author of "Crisis in Evangelical Scholarship" and "McChurched: 300 Million Served and Still Hungry.")

Does Anybody Care About the Christian Arabs?

by Bill Barnwell


In the bloody and hate-fueled battles throughout the Middle East there is a forgotten group of people. This forgotten group of people is ignored even by many of their own brethren across the world. I’m referring, of course, to Arab Christians.

This unfortunate group of people is caught in the middle of tensions between Jews and Muslims. While many Christian Arabs sympathize politically and culturally with their fellow Arabs over the Jewish people, they nonetheless are often targets of scorn from Arab Muslims. What is most shocking, however, is that Christians of Arab descent are non-issues in the minds of most Western Christians. Arab believers are most notably ignored by many Christians in America who believe fervently in the dispensational, pre-tribulational, premillennial view of Bible prophecy.

Considering that dispensationalist Christians are so focused on events in the Middle East, why then would they have a lack of interest in Arab believers? Because in their prophetic paradigm, it all boils down to the secular nation of Israel. Dispensationalists believe that God made promises in the Old Testament to the nation of Israel that have not been completely fulfilled. This is one of the main reasons why dispensationalist Christians are such strong supporters of Israel and why they do not believe any part of ancient Israel should be in the hands of Arabs. To have anyone other than Jewish people in possession of the disputed territories would constitute rebellion against God. The reasoning also goes that God made a promise to ancient Israel, and God never breaks a promise. Since He still hasn’t fulfilled all the land promises to Israel, it must then be forthcoming.

The problem with this is that it ignores some key passages which indicate that God did in fact already honor His land promises to ancient Israel. The book of Joshua details Israel’s possession of the Promised Land. From Joshua 13:8–21:42 there is a very long and seemingly dull section for modern readers about the ancient tribes of Israel receiving their sections of the Promised Land. After this section there is a summary in the next verses which reads:

So the Lord gave Israel all the land he had sworn to give their forefathers, and they took possession of it and settled there. The Lord gave them rest on every side just as he had sworn to their forefathers. Not one of their enemies withstood them; the Lord handed all their enemies over to them. Not one of all the Lord’s good promises to the house of Israel failed, every one was fulfilled (Joshua 21:43–45 emphasis mine).

Some dispensationalists have tried to evade the force of these verses and claim that the land promises really weren’t fulfilled completely, but their objections fall short of the kind of "literal interpretation" they claim to champion and consistently apply.

The New Testament does not focus on race, gender, or class distinctions. In fact, it says such distinctions are done away with in Christ. The "seed of Abraham" is not determined by race, but by faith (Galatians 3:28–29). Likewise, the New Testament says nothing about "rebuilding the Temple." Where the Old Testament talks about rebuilding the Temple it is referring to the Second Jewish Temple that already was rebuilt and was subsequently destroyed by the Romans in 70AD. In the New Testament, the Temple is oftentimes refigured to mean either Christ Himself, the Church, or the body of a believer (John 2:19; 1 Corinthians 3:16, 6:19; 2 Corinthians 6:16). The focus is no longer on a specific area of land, but a faith that was to spread throughout the whole world (Matt. 28:16–20; Acts 1:8). Where the New Testament does refer to a plan for ethnic Israelites it is only in the context of them being grafted into faith in Christ (Romans 9–11).

What then does all this have to do with Christian Arabs? A great deal. Because of the many theological misperceptions Christians have regarding the "end-times" and "Bible prophecy," such as the ones described above, Christian Arabs just don’t fit the bill for being prophetically important people.

Thus, last summer when Israel was bombing Lebanon, most Christians didn’t even think how it might affect Lebanon’s fairly significant Christian population. The focus was only on Israel and how this might relate to the "rapture" or other end-times events.

To the dispensationalist Christian, Christian Arabs who don’t enthusiastically support Israel and Israeli foreign policy are actually thumbing their nose at God. Such Western Christians think that it’s great that there are Christian Arabs in the Middle East, but only to the extent that such believers support Israel. Rather than showing concern or compassion for suffering Arabs Christians who are caught in the crossfire between Jews and Muslims, the majority of dispensationalist Christians instead show them indifference at best or contempt at worst.

It does not particularly bother Western dispensationalists that the population of Christians in Israel and the disputed territories over the years has dwindled to a great extent. It also apparently doesn’t bother them that Christians are not free to evangelize in Israel. The main issues that matter to such believers are issues that concern secular Israel and their role in the "end-times." It’s quite a shame, however, if these beliefs about modern Israel and the end-times actually are Biblically inaccurate. It’s an even bigger shame if Christian Arabs are getting ignored because of them.

Of course, there will be some who will cry "anti-Semitism." But anti-Semitism is not the same thing as rejecting the sloppy interpretations of Christian dispensationalists. It also not anti-Semitic to sympathize with suffering Arab Christians whose plight is often ignored. Yes, there is a real and very pervasive anti-Semitism out there and it is ugly.

Neither racism nor bad Biblical theology should drive our foreign policy. Some of the same Christians who talk a good deal about spreading the faith are indifferent to the faith’s disappearance in the birthplace of Christianity and its surrounding regions. Many Western Christians get excited about sending money to organizations that bring ethnic Jews from Russia into Israel because they think in doing so they will speed up the "rapture" or Second Coming. "You can become a part of prophecy!" is the sales pitch. You won’t find many of these same Christians, however, sending money to suffering Christian Arabs in Israel, Lebanon or anywhere else in the Middle East. Doing so wouldn’t fit their prophetic system.

Thankfully the message of the Bible is that God does not show partiality based on race or ethnicity (Galatians 3:28–29). Nor is it suggested anywhere in the New Testament that God has "two separate prophetic plans for Israel and the Church." The reality, however, is that many Christians will not talk about Arab believers because they fear being labeled anti-Semitic, fear incurring a curse from God, or they just plain don’t care.

People’s beliefs about the future impact the way they think or live in the present. We all would be better off if we could correct misperceptions about what the Bible says regarding the future. Just ask the struggling Christians in the Middle East who are ignored by their fellow believers in the Church.

April 17, 2007

Copyright © 2007 LewRockwell.com

McChurch - Is Abortion a "Woman's Health Issue?"


You have to help me here. I am wallowing in a certain miasma of contradiction and ignorance – my own, of course, inasmuch as I shall never be faced with the choice of whether or not to carry a fetus to term.

A dear, dear friend who is on the cutting edge of social activism in my home state sent an email soliciting my support with something called “An Act to Provide Equity in Funding for Women’s Health.

It seems that women on low-income health care plans are being shortchanged on access to the full range of coverage. If pregnant, prenatal care and delivery are offered “with no questions asked.” But if a woman decides that ending her pregnancy is her best choice, abortion will not be provided except in cases of rape, incest or where the safety of the mother is at stake.

Apparently, seventeen other states have ended what is referred to in the email as a discriminatory policy. My dear friend sees this as a social and economic justice issue.

Four descriptive words and phrases stand out – equity, social justice, economic justice and choice.

As for equity, it seems illogical to me to plead equity unless there is discrimination – that others are unfairly receiving abortion coverage. If that is so (and I have no idea one way or another), this has to be under private plans that are costing the insured or her employer hundreds of dollars a month. In contrast, government plans are supported with taxpayer funds and are necessarily limited in what they can offer, as they are funded by the very people who have or offer the commercial health care plans.

The equity argument, it seems to me, has limited appeal, as it is comparing apples to oranges. Private health plans run the gamut from Volkswagens to Cadillacs, and the costs are commensurate, extending the equity argument to all those who do not have Cadillac plans.

The social justice argument is equally puzzling. Social injustice occurs when a class of people is prohibited from access to certain benefits or services. Abortion services are available to everyone; no social group is denied abortion services. The cost of those services does not cut to the issue of social justice.

The economic justice argument is even more puzzling. To suggest that everyone ought to have equal access to all benefits and services regardless of ability to pay is not an economic justice argument but a form-of-government argument that might play better in Sweden than it would in America. Once we start down that slippery slope, there are hundreds of benefits and services that are beyond the financial reach of 95% of Americans.

The Democratic Party doesn’t seem to get it sometimes. It has been marginalized by the Christian Right on matters of faith. Abortion has played a key role in painting the Democratic Party into the “evil and faithless” corner. Yet, here we go again advocating for the extremes.

What happened to the mantra, “Abortion ought to be safe, legal and rare”? Government does not make abortion rare by expanding funding to cover abortions. It makes them rare by, among other things, refusing to fund them.

As for a woman’s right to choose, it seems to me that the right to choose, having been extended to the act of conception, ought to carry with it some degree of restraint when it comes to the likely impact of that choice. The rule of cause and effect would insist that choices made require of us certain obligations and responsibilities, regardless of what kind of health care plan you have. The cost of an abortion offers such a restraint on choice.

It is one thing to view the act of sex as an unencumbered choice. It is quite another to view as a health issue the likely outcome of that choice, except in extreme circumstances.

I recall a bill that was before our legislature that made it a crime to kill a fetus in an assault against a pregnant woman. Those on the right focused on the fetus. Those on the left focused on the woman. As a legislator, I wondered why we all didn’t focus on the larger social context – the health not only of the woman and fetus but of the community of citizens and the balance of nature.

A pro-life position that protects a fertilized egg in a Petri dish while advocating for the bombing of pregnant women in far-off places like Iraq is bogus.

On the other hand, a pro-choice position that treats a fully-formed, about-to-become citizen of the United States as a women’s health issue in other than extreme circumstances is morally and ethically repugnant, however legal it may be.

Are we never going to get beyond this hypocrisy?

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


Monday, April 16, 2007

McChurch - The Takeover of the Republican Party

(This article is an excellent history and present status of the “merger” of the Christian Right with the Republican Party…

Fitzgerald makes a clear case for the takeover of the GOP by the Christian Right, rather than the other way around…The GOP can no longer win national elections without evangelical support...

The proverbial fly in the ointment, however, is that Evangelicals are just going along with the Christian Right noise in the public square…Slowly but hopefully, the 2/3 of moderate Evangelicals are waking up…

The path to a more honest distinction between politics and religion is not the Democratic Party insisting on its own faithfulness but evangelical scholars and leaders marginalizing the radical right, which accounts for about 1/3 of their numbers…

One of the most dangerous features of this influence over a weakened Republican Party is the Armageddon focus that replaces the Constitution with the Old Testament and moves foreign policy toward Zionism…

Stan Moody, author of “Crisis in Evangelical Scholarship” and “McChurched: 300 Million Served and Still Hungry.”)

The New York Review of BooksVolume 54, Number 7 · April 26, 2007

The Evangelical Surprise

By Frances FitzGerald

Last year the Fairfield Christian Church in Lancaster, Ohio, became a regular stop for journalists covering trends in Christian right politics. In 2004 its pastor, Russell Johnson, helped organize a campaign for a state constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage and succeeded in having it put on the ballot for the November elections. It passed with 63 percent of the vote, and many believed that it gave George W. Bush his narrow margin of victory in the state and returned him to the White House. The following year, Johnson launched the Ohio Restoration Project with the goal of recruiting two thousand "patriot pastors" to register three hundred new voters each and bring them to the polls for "values candidates" in 2006 and beyond.

Johnson's meetings and rallies began with a chorus singing hymns while images of the American flag, the Statue of Liberty, and American troops in combat moved across huge video screens overhead. Johnson would then speak of "the secular jihad against people of faith" and warn Christians against standing by, as Neville Chamberlain did, while the Jews died in Europe. Talking with visitors to his nondenominational evangelical church, Johnson, energetic and a skillful debater, spoke forcefully on "the bigotry against the teaching of Creationism," the war against Christmas, and Roe v. Wade, which, he said, had led to the crisis in Social Security by killing millions of American taxpayers. He also described how he worked with other state activists, some with ties to national organizations, to create computerized lists of sympathizers in conservative churches throughout Ohio, and to follow up with the distribution of voting guides and the recruitment of volunteers to bring church members to the polls.

In the quarter of a century that Christian right activists such as Johnson have been mobilizing voters to oppose abortion and gay rights, and support prayer in the schools among other causes, conservative white Christians have moved gradually into the Republican camp. In the past two presidential elections, how often a person attended church was a better indicator of how he or she would vote than any other demographic characteristic—income, age, gender—except for race. Blacks voted strongly for Democrats. But those white voters who went to church once a week or more voted heavily for George Bush; those who went seldom or never voted in large measure for Gore, then Kerry, while those who went to church once a month split down the middle, just as voters in general did. The Republicans had, in other words, apparently become a quasi-religious party, and the Democrats the party of less religiously observant people and secularists.[1]

Johnson and his fellow Christian right activists speak of "values voters," but most of these voters are evangelical Protestants. Evangelicals have a disproportionate part in what pollsters call the "God gap" between the two parties. They make up a quarter of the population—around 75 million people —and a far higher percentage of them are frequent churchgoers than are mainline Protestants and Catholics. Furthermore, the group as a whole has for a decade voted Republican in much greater proportion than the other two groups. In 2000, 68 percent of evangelicals voted for George Bush; in 2004, 78 percent of them did. Last summer, polls showed that the war in Iraq, corruption, and the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina had brought the evangelicals' approval ratings for Bush and the GOP down by twenty points in just two years. But on the last Election Day they turned out in their usual numbers, and over 70 percent of them voted for Republican congressional candidates. White evangelicals have, in other words, become the GOP's most reliable constituency, and they normally provide about a third of the Republican votes.

Christian right activists, most of whom are themselves evangelicals, claim credit for these votes. Further, the activists tend to speak as if they represent the evangelical community as a whole, and because they have made their voices heard, many nonevangelicals believe that they do. For many Americans, the very word "evangelical" conjures up a vision of people railing against liberals, secularists, homosexuals, and the teaching of evolution in the public schools. But such a view is inaccurate. Evangelicals are hardly identical with the Christian right, and moderate evangelical leaders have recently been making the distinction clear by publicly airing their differences with the right and challenging its positions on political issues.


Pollsters and political scientists— who create the statistics we rely upon —define evangelicals as those Protestants who emphasize the authority of the Bible, salvation through a personal relationship with Jesus, and the need to share their faith with others. The definition is a vague one, and necessarily so, for there is no bright doctrinal line separating evangelicals from other Protestants, and the group is theologically diverse. For example, evangelicals include Pentecostals, who believe that the Holy Spirit continues to work miracles among us, as well as members of the Christian Reformed Church (which holds that "the biblical teachings of predestination and election give us comfort because they assure us that no one and nothing, not even our own bad choices, can snatch us out of God's hand"). The denominations include the sixteen-million-member Southern Baptist Convention, as well as numerous smaller groups such as the Mennonite Brethren, who are committed to nonviolence. But many evangelicals belong to nondenominational churches, and these range from fundamentalist groups with high doctrinal walls to "seeker" churches, which aim to attract people with little religious background and have low doctrinal requirements. Pollsters in fact differ in their classification of some churches, and they put African-American evangelicals in a separate category not only because they vote differently but because their religious traditions are different.

Mark A. Noll, a distinguished evangelical scholar, writes of evangelicalism as a set of impulses: "Biblicism," "conversionism" (the emphasis on "new birth" as a life-changing religious experience), "activism" (concern for sharing the faith), and "crucicentrism" (a focus on Christ's having redeemed mankind on the cross). "But these evangelical impulses," he writes, "have never by themselves yielded cohesive, institutionally compact, easily definable, well-coordinated, or clearly demarcated groups of Christians."[2] Further, evangelicals express these impulses in different ways. According to polls, some 60 percent are biblical literalists, who believe, for example, that God created the universe in exactly six days a few thousand years ago, and who insist that their interpretation of the Bible is the eternal and only true reading of it.[3]

The others believe, as most mainline Protestants do, that the Bible should be read in light of the rest of human knowledge and that its interpretation is not a simple matter. Evangelicals tend to be more active than mainline Protestants in their efforts to propagate their faith, and most of their churches support missions abroad. But many evangelicals are content with "lifestyle evangelism"—that is, setting an example of Christian behavior to others. If there is a single characteristic that sets pious evangelicals off from most mainline Protestants, it is surely the depth of their involvement with the supernatural: the sense they have that God is at work in the world all around them and speaking to them personally. "God wants me to do this," evangelicals say. "God told me."

Many mainline Protestants find much about evangelicals exotic—not least their tendency to speak as if only they were Christians. But then, evangelicals are closer to the historical roots of Protestantism in this country. Evangelicalism dates from the revivals of the mid-eighteenth century led by men such as Jonathan Edwards and John Wesley, and its key ingredients have not changed since then. For most of the nineteenth century, almost all American Protestants were evangelical Protestants, and their religion the dominant cultural force in the country.

Evangelicalism inspired all the reform movements of the day, such as abolitionism and feminism, but for progressives and conservatives alike, America was a Christian (read Protestant) nation guided by Providence and a model for mankind. A person was responsible for his or her own fate, the Bible was central to intellectual life, and plain common sense the intellectual standard. Around the turn of the century, new currents of thought, among them Darwinian evolution, the higher biblical criticism, which analyzed the origins of biblical texts, and the Social Gospel—which traditionalists accused of putting social reform before conversion and salvation— coursed through the churches in New England and elsewhere in the north. The conservatives waged a bitter struggle against them, but the new thinking gradually took hold in the major denominations. From that time on, many evangelicals have seen themselves as an outcast minority and as the saving remnant keeping Christianity and the American tradition alive.


Evangelical churches are hardly museums. To the contrary, it's the mainline churches with their stained glass windows, their clergy in vestments, and their organists playing Bach that may seem like museums next to the evangelical megachurches, with their video screens and their rock 'n' roll music. Evangelical pastors and revivalists have always adopted popular styles in the attempt to save the largest number of souls, but since the Sixties their embrace of many elements of the popular culture has been in some tension with the nineteenth-century ideas the traditionalists sought to conserve.

That the traditionalists have been as successful as they have over the long term is owing in some measure to the fact that until the Sixties the great majority of evangelicals lived in the South, where modern progressive ideas about science and society did not much penetrate, and where social conservatism reigned. Then, too, evangelicals were the poorest and least educated of the religious groups. Since the Sixties, however, white evangelicals have made the greatest gains of any religious group in income and education; they are now more evenly distributed across the country, and many more now live in cities, towns, and suburbs than in rural areas.

All this has increased their power and visibility—while at the same time diluting the fundamentalist strain in their beliefs and attitudes. Even conservative pastors now preach that Christians should embrace their prosperity and enjoy themselves in Christian settings. In a few evangelical colleges and seminaries, scholars such as Mark Noll, who formerly taught at the evangelical Wheaton College and is now a professor at Notre Dame, seek to disentangle what they see as the pure, bright elements of the faith from the baggage of populist anti-intellectualism that has accompanied it. In many others, students debate the politics of the Christian right.

Right-wing evangelicals have long been involved in politics—notably in the anti-Communist crusades of the Fifties and Sixties—but the Christian right, as we know it today, began as a reaction against the social upheavals of the Sixties and Seventies, among them the civil rights movement, the anti–Vietnam War protests, the sexual revolution, feminism, and gay rights. The movement at first lacked organization, but that changed in 1979, when Paul Weyrich, a conservative Catholic and a post-Goldwater New Right activist, convinced Jerry Falwell to create the Moral Majority, to bring conservative Christians into the Republican Party.

Since then, Christian right organizers have been increasingly influential in shaping the issues and mobilizing voters for Republican "values" candidates. In twenty-eight years, they have built a formidable alliance of grassroots organizations, Washington-based political action groups, legal defense funds, think tanks, and political training institutes. Even more important, they have enlisted evangelical televangelists and radio broadcasters and built networks of tens of thousands of pastors to get out the vote on Election Day. At state and local levels, Christian right activists have run for office and otherwise integrated themselves into Republican Party organizations with the help of GOP strategists. A 2002 study showed that the Christian right had strong influence in eighteen state Republican Parties and a moderate influence in twenty-six others.[4]

Christian right leaders and their organizations have come and gone. Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition, which in the mid-1990s claimed a thousand chapters in all fifty states, went into debt and lost most of its members after problems with the IRS and the departure of its president, Ralph Reed, in 1997. At present Dr. James Dobson is by far the most powerful figure in the movement. An evangelical child psychologist who dispenses advice on marriage and child-rearing, he is the host of a daily radio program that reaches five million listeners in the US and has built a multimedia ministry, Focus on the Family, which brings in over $130 million a year from donations and sales of books, DVDs, and other items. Long involved with Christian right causes, Dobson has created a number of advocacy organizations that are independent of Focus but closely allied with it. One of them, the Family Research Council, under the leadership of Tony Perkins, is now the most powerful Christian right lobby group in Washington. In addition Dobson chairs the Arlington Group, a forum where the leaders of more than seventy "pro-family" organizations meet to discuss strategies. In fact, much of the coordination that exists among Christian right activists is done through the organizations Dobson has built or supported.[5]

Talking with such activists across the country I have heard about a great variety of issues from euthanasia to pornography. Russell Johnson calls for a voucher program that would allow children to attend Christian schools at taxpayers' expense. Rod Parsley, a nationally known televangelist, denounces Islam and writes that "America was founded, in part, with the intention of seeing this false religion destroyed."[6] Many leaders, including Parsley and Dobson, argue that the Founding Fathers had a Christian vision for the nation and that the separation between church and state is no more than a myth invented by "activist judges" in the past half-century. At a rally two years ago Dobson said that "for forty-four years the Supreme Court has been on a campaign to limit religious freedom. It goes back to 1962 with Bible reading and 1963 with prayer in the schools, both prohibited." The leaders of the movement often categorize their concerns as "life, family, and faith." Still, some of their organizations have opposed gun control legislation; and many, if not most, activists support aggressive, unilateralist foreign policies and favor a free market unfettered by government restrictions.

David Barton, who has served as vice-chair of the Texas Republican Party and written extensively on "the myth of separation," went so far as to tell a gathering of pastors in 2005 that the Bible takes a clear position against the capital gains tax, the estate tax, the progressive income tax, and the minimum wage. At election times, however, Christian right leaders concentrate their public campaigns on the few issues, such as abortion and gay marriage, that have broad resonance among evangelicals and other conservative Christians.

For many years now, Republican political strategists have counted on religious right activists to bring evangelicals to the polls for them. The Bush White House has assiduously courted their leaders,[7] and Republican contenders for the 2008 presidential election, among them former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, are now trying to do the same. In his last run for the presidency in 2000, John McCain called Falwell and Robertson "agents of intolerance"; last June he gave the commencement address at Falwell's Liberty University. "The Republican Party does not have the head count...to elect a president without the support of the religious right," Falwell said in 2004. McCain, among others, has clearly come around to this view.[8]

Republican politicians, in other words, have come to believe that the religious right speaks for most evangelicals—or, more precisely, that religious right activists will continue to bring the great majority of white evangelicals to the polls. If one message of last year's election was that moderate voters rejected Republicans in part because they adopted the extreme positions of the religious right, Republican strategists face something of a quandary. But are they correct in assuming that the religious right now represents evangelicals generally? Much about the political future turns on the answer to this question.

Surveys taken since the Eighties show that evangelicals are more conservative than the population as a whole on economic as well as social issues. They are on average less affluent than white voters generally, but they are more in favor of large tax cuts and less supportive of affirmative action and poverty relief programs. Their views baffle economic determinists, who argue that they betray their own interests; but then evangelicals have historically preached that society can be reformed only through the salvation of individuals, not through social action or government intervention. In regard to foreign policy, they tend on the whole to be more unilateralist than others and less in favor of government efforts to fight global hunger and disease. However, the polls that distinguish "traditionalist" evangelicals— defined as committed churchgoers who hold conservative religious beliefs—from their less observant and less theologically conservative brethren reveal significant ideological differences between the two groups. According to these surveys, traditionalists, who make up half of the evangelical population and represent the core constituency of the religious right, have far more conservative views on all issues than the rest.

Statistically, the extreme conservatism of the traditionalists skews the picture of the community as a whole. In fact, "modernist" evangelicals—defined as those who go to church infrequently and don't hold to a literal interpretation of the Bible—have more liberal views on all issues, including abortion and gay rights, than the American population as a whole, but there are relatively very few of them. "Centrists," or those who fall somewhere in the theological middle and make up almost half of all evangelicals, are no more conservative than Americans generally except on abortion and gay rights, and even on these issues they are far more moderate than the traditionalists.[9] In other words, half of the evangelical population doesn't see eye to eye with the other half. In the future the division may become more acute because while the Christian right leaders have become more ambitious and more aggressive as a result of their victories, centrist leaders have, for the first time, begun to assert themselves.

During the past two years, a half-dozen prominent evangelicals have published books denouncing the religious right for what they said was its equation of morality with sexual morality, its aggressive intolerance, its confusion of church and state, and its unholy quest for political power. Some of the authors, like former president Jimmy Carter and Jim Wallis of Sojourners magazine, had already been dismissed by religious right leaders as liberals or "pseudo-evangelicals." But two of them, Reverend Gregory Boyd and Dr. Joel Hunter, were pastors of very large conservative churches, Boyd's in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Hunter's in Orlando, Florida.[10]

In his book, a collection of the sermons that he gave the year before— sermons that caused a fifth of his congregation to leave the church—Boyd challenges the idea that the United States was, and should be, a Christian nation. Taking his text from the gospels, he reminds evangelicals that Christ's kingdom was "not of this world" and that Jesus rejected Satan's offer to make him ruler of all the principalities and powers of the earth. There can be no such thing as a Christian nation, he argues, because worldly kingdoms are the domain of fallen man, and they are by their nature coercive. What do evangelicals mean, he asks, when they say they want to "take America back"? The Constitution says nothing about a Christian nation, and the United States never was one—certainly not in the days of slavery or in those of segregation and Jim Crow laws. Many evangelicals, he charges, confuse the power of the cross and the power of the sword, and many in the name of fulfilling biblical prophecy are "actively supporting stances that directly or indirectly countenance violence, possibly on a global scale." In Boyd's view, Christians should bear witness to injustice, as Jesus did, but they should not try to enforce "their righteous will on others."

Such polemics surprised many observers because in the past a sense of communal solidarity, or a fear of ostracism, had made public criticism of the right all but taboo among evangelicals. Yet for some years a number of centrist leaders have been expressing discontent with the right, some directly, but most by departing more or less radically from the right-wing agenda. Rich Nathan, for example, the senior pastor of the Vineyard Church of Columbus, Ohio—a megachurch not many miles from Russell Johnson's—preaches that the Christian message cannot be reduced to issues of sex or private morality, and that the emphasis should be on Jesus' teachings about the poor and about peace-making. "Our focus in this church is on racial reconciliation and issues of poverty," he told me. "The Vineyard association has 650 churches in this country, and you won't find any one of them that's not involved with the poor." Nathan believes that churches should stay out of politics—that they shouldn't campaign for candidates or lobby for legislation—but he speaks his mind on what he considers the moral issues. After the revelations of Abu Ghraib, he preached against torture, and last fall he called the Iraq war "a senseless slaughter" and asked how Christians can claim to follow the Prince of Peace and yet "be led so easily into war."[11]

Traditionalist evangelicals, with their focus on individual salvation, see charity and evangelization as the way to change the lives of the poor. But centrist pastors, such as Rich Nathan and Joel Hunter, preach the need for social justice and have enlisted their huge congregations in anti-poverty programs for those of all faiths in cooperation with local governments. "It's not about charity," Nathan said. "It's about getting to the root causes of poverty and correcting injustices, such as racial and gender discrimination." His church, for example, supports "fair-trade coffee"—an international program that seeks to ensure that living wages are paid to coffee growers around the world—and has a free legal clinic for those needing help with their immigrant status, domestic violence, or tenant-landlord disputes.

In October 2004, the National Association of Evangelicals, an umbrella organization of denominations and churches that claims thirty million members, issued a position paper laying out ten principles for Christian political engagement. The document, "For the Health of the Nation," called upon evangelicals to seek justice for the poor, to protect human rights, to seek peace, and to protect God's creation—as well as to protect the sanctity of human life and nurture families. Carefully drawn up so as not to provoke right-wing opposition, the document gave official sanction to the efforts of the more progressive leaders to move, at a national level, beyond both the religious right agenda and the traditional evangelical approach to good works.

In Washington, Richard Cizik, the NAE's vice-president for governmental relations, has supported the experienced evangelical aid organizations World Relief and World Vision in lobbying for a major increase in US aid for development, debt relief for the poorest countries, cuts in domestic agricultural subsidies, and the inclusion of labor standards and human rights conditions in trade agreements. (Two years ago World Vision campaigned against the Central American Free Trade Agreement because it lacked such protections.) Centrist leaders have also lobbied the administration for more money to fund the global campaign against AIDS, and for a variety of human rights causes, including the deployment of a strong United Nations peacekeeping force in Darfur.[12]


Of all the new initiatives by cen-trist evangelical leaders, the most controversial concerns global warming. Richard Cizik had what he said was "a conversion" on the subject in 2002 after Reverend Jim Ball, the head of a small group, the Evangelical Environmental Network, took him to a scientific conference at Oxford. After the NAE made "creation care" one of its priorities, Cizik spoke out passionately on the subject of climate change and helped Ball with his efforts to recruit others to the cause. In February 2006, eighty-six evangelical leaders signed a statement expressing alarm about man-made global warming and calling for a mandatory curb on carbon emissions. The signers included Todd Bassett, the chief of the Salvation Army, thirty-nine evangelical college presidents, and several megachurch pastors, among them Joel Hunter. "Millions of people could die in this century because of climate change, most of them our poorest global neighbors," they wrote.[13]

The statement, with its implied criticism of the Bush administration and of free market economics, provoked an angry response from the right. Even before it was released, James Dobson, Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention, and others wrote the NAE that global warming was not a consensus issue and raised enough opposition on the board to prevent Cizik and the president of the NAE from signing it. Dobson, for his part, argued that a campaign against global warming would distract evangelicals from their mission to oppose abortion and support family values. When Cizik, among others, continued to speak out on the issue, Dobson and his allies mounted a public campaign to get him fired. But in its meeting this March, the NAE board not only stood by Cizik on the issue of global warming, but endorsed a strong statement drawn up by a committee—of which Cizik was a member—condemning US policies that permit torture and the indefinite detention of prisoners without trial.[14]

Important support for these centrist initiatives has come from Rick Warren, the author of The Purpose Driven Life, the pastor of a huge church in Orange County, California, and, next to Billy Graham, by far the best known of all evangelical preachers. Just before the 2004 election, Warren sent out a letter to his network of 150,000 fellow pastors telling them that pro-life and pro-family issues should determine how evangelicals voted. But he sent the same network a letter urging them to put pressure on Bush to increase foreign aid, provide debt relief, and eliminate trade barriers that hurt the poor. The following year he called upon his own 22,000-member congregation to support an effort in Rwanda, backed by its government, to alleviate hunger, teach literacy, and slow the spread of AIDS.

His ultimate goal, Warren announced, was to enlist millions of Christians worldwide in the struggle against poverty, illiteracy, and disease. Like Cizik, he had gone through a form of conversion. "I have been so busy building my church that I have not cared about the poor," he told pastors in Kigali. "I have sinned, and I am sorry."[15] Warren doesn't criticize Christian right leaders, but in the past year he has scandalized them by signing the February 2006 global warming statement, by publicly condemning Bush administration policies that permit torture, by making a trip to Syria, and—worst of all—by inviting Barack Obama to speak at his second global AIDS conference. What will come of his international project is not yet clear, but simply in espousing such causes, Warren influences many evangelicals in this country.

The defection of the centrist leaders from the religious right's agenda has thus far had no obvious effect on the evangelical vote. Still, religious right leaders worry that it will. John Giles, the president of Christian Action Alabama, a powerful conservative evangelical state organization, told the Financial Times that he saw the broadening of the centrist concerns to such issues as the environment and poverty as an effort to divide evangelicals and weaken the religious right. "We can all unite around a few core issues, such as abortion, pornography and gambling," he said. "But when you start talking about global warming, the minimum wage or the death penalty, the consensus breaks down."[16] Dobson and Perkins have said much the same thing.

What Cizik calls "below the belt issues"—plus a lot of talk about faith and values—have brought many centrist evangelicals into the Republican camp; but they have other concerns, including economic security, peace, and a clean environment, that the Republican Party, under the influence of the religious right, has not served well. Persuaded to consider these as moral issues on a par with, say, opposition to gay rights, centrists might make new demands on the Republi-can Party—or question their allgiance to it. Global warming may well be an important issue in the 2008 elec-tion campaign. Immigration policies—about which the evangelical right and center are completely divided—will surely be an issue, too. In any case, if centrist leaders continue to challenge the religious right's agenda in public, they will eventually convince politicians—Democrats as well as Republicans—that the religious right does not speak for all evangelicals and by doing so diffuse "the culture war." This is in essence what the religious right fears.

—March 28, 2007

Notes

[1] Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, "A Faith-Based Partisan Divide," January 2005.

[2] Mark A. Noll, The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind (Eerdmans, 1994), p. 8

[3] See Andrew Kohut, John C. Green, Scott Keeter, and Robert C. Toth, The Diminishing Divide: Religion's Changing Role in American Politics (Brookings Institution Press, 2000), p. 32. In 1965, 70 percent of evangelicals believed the Bible to be literally true; in 1996, 62 percent did. According to the Pew Research Center's "American Views on Religion, Politics, and Public Policy" (July 2005), 60 percent of evangelicals want creationism to replace the teaching of evolution in the schools.

[4] Kimberly H. Conger and John C. Green, "Spreading Out and Digging In: Christian Conservatives and State Republican Parties," Campaigns and Elections, February 2002.

[5] Daniel Gilgoff, The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family and Evangelical America Are Winning the Culture War (St. Martin's, 2007).

[6] Rod Parsley, Silent No More (Charisma House, 2005), p. 90.

[7] See Garry Wills, "A Country Ruled by Faith," The New York Review, November 16, 2006.

[8] See Esther Kaplan, With God on Their Side: George W. Bush and the Christian Right (New Press, 2005), p. 291. McCain has also made overtures to Dobson, but without success.

[9] See John C. Green's Pew Forum Survey "The American Religious Landscape and Politics, 2004." See also "Baylor Religion Survey Latest Findings: The Liberal Politics of Evangelicals; the Conservative Politics of Nonevangelicals" (October 25, 2006), which says 40 percent of evangelical voters for Bush could be characterized as "liberal" on economic issues, meaning that the government should do more to redistribute the wealth and seek economic justice.

[10] See Gregory A. Boyd, The Myth of a Christian Nation: How the Quest for Political Power Is Destroying the Church (Zondervan, 2006); and Dr. Joel C. Hunter, Right Wing, Wrong Bird: Why the Tactics of the Religious Right Won't Fly with Most Conservative Christians (Distributed Church Press, 2006). On Boyd and his church, see also Laurie Goodstein, "Disowning Conservative Politics, Evangelical Pastor Rattles Flock," The New York Times, July 30, 2006.

[11] See Tim Jones, "Evangelicals No Longer Lock for the GOP," The Chicago Tribune, November 6, 2006.

[12] See John Cochran, "New Heaven, New Earth," CQ Weekly, October 17, 2005. See also the "Evangelicals for Darfur" ad in The New York Times, October 18, 2006.

[13] See "Climate Change: An Evangelical Call to Action," Evangelical Climate Initiative, February 6, 2006.

[14] This January, Cizik, Hunter, and several other evangelicals joined with prominent scientists, among them James Hansen and E.O. Wilson, to issue an "urgent call to action" on global warming. Last year Dobson had privately asked the NAE to fire Cizik; this time he and twenty-four other right-wingers wrote the NAE condemning Cizik's activities and released the letter to the press. At its meeting on March 9–10 the NAE board supported Cizik.

[15] See Michael Gerson, "A New Social Gospel," Newsweek, November 13, 2006; Marc Gunther, "Will Success Spoil Rick Warren?," Fortune, October 31, 2005.

[16] Andrew Ward. "Evangelicals' Faith in Republicans Wavers Ahead of Mid-Terms," Financial Times, November 3, 2006.

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