John Sugg: 'Armageddon for the Religious Right?'
They've climbed to the top of Mount Power. But from here on out, it may be
all downhill for America's ayatollahs.
John Sugg, Creative Loafing Atlanta
On Feb. 22, inside a Clark Atlanta University auditorium, Christianity
girded its loins with faith, anointed itself with righteousness and went
forth to do battle with, well, Christianity.
It wasn't quite a Tim LaHaye vision of the final conflict at Mount Megiddo.
There was no thunderbolt-wielding Christ bloodily massacring gays, Jews,
Muslims and billions of others who failed to meet Pat Robertson's criteria
for salvation. But the scene wasn't pretty.
Sadie Fields, the brittle vicar of Georgia's Christian Coalition, told a
town hall forum on immigration reform what her brand of Christianity taught
about undocumented immigrants. Invoking Old Testament Scripture, Fields
intoned, "We uphold the rule of law. God would never condone chaos and
lawlessness for he is a God of order, justice and righteousness."
For the crowd, largely black and Hispanic, that was enough. From the back of
the auditorium, Aquiles Martinez jumped to his feet, marched forward and
addressed Fields in a voice that trembled with anger.
"Jesus was an exile himself," Martinez fumed. "He lived an uprooted life. He
opposed unjust laws. He opposed the religious and political establishment of
his day."
Martinez paused and gathered himself, knowing he was on the verge of
challenging an authority as stern and unforgiving as the Pharisees. Then the
Methodist minister from Reinhardt College in Waleska, Ga., thundered, "How
dare you support legislation that victimizes the poor!"
He didn't add, "... and call yourself Christian," but his meaning was
unmistakable.
The jeremiad was greeted with a few seconds of silence, then hearty
applause. Fields glared at Martinez. But state Sen. Chip Rogers of
Woodstock, the Republican who authored Georgia's new anti-illegal
immigration law, rode to her defense. How, he wondered, could anyone
question someone else's religious beliefs?
"That," he said, "is between the person and his God."
More than a few in the crowd of about 300 snickered at the irony in that
remark coming from a member of the GOP -- an acronym that in recent years
has come to stand for "God's Own Party." One young woman waved a finger at
the stage. "Isn't that how Republicans win elections?" she asked. "Don't
they claim they own Jesus?"
Well, yes, many Republicans do just that. But more than a few Democrats are
getting the message that faith counts.
There's a new social gospel being heard in churches and -- more to the
point -- in political strategy sessions. The self-recruited warriors for
Christ who formed the vanguard in GOP takeovers of the White House, Congress
and statehouses across the South suddenly are no longer unopposed in the
battle over faith in American politics.
Chapter 1 of the new social gospel is a rebuke of the moral meltdown among
purportedly God-fearing politicians -- people like Ralph Reed, Tom DeLay and
even George Bush. They're enveloped in controversies involving deception,
hypocrisy and other less-than-holy behaviors.
Chapter 2 of the new gospel records the discomfort among some believers that
the narrow interests of politically motivated preachers -- primarily
opposing abortion and gay rights -- aren't all there is to religion. Why,
the gospel asks, aren't more evangelical leaders sermonizing on the core of
Jesus' teachings: peace, compassion and poverty?
Chapter 3 introduces new religious leaders and a growing number of
rigorously religious folks who are bucking the Republican agenda. Many of
them hold "conservative" religious social values. Others form smaller but
recently energized contingents of moderate and liberal religious Americans.
Their leaders are often evangelical preachers, such as the Rev. Jim Wallis
of the Sojourners movement. Some, including Rabbi Michael Lerner of the
liberal Tikkun movement, hail from other religious backgrounds.
It remains to be seen whether the forces arrayed against the religious right
will amount to much. Will they cause a substantial number of evangelicals to
consider issues other than the short litmus test positions that
fundamentalists such as Sadie Fields and Jerry Falwell have told them are
important? Will they energize people of faith from other religious
traditions to become more engaged in the political process? And, most of
all, will they fracture the coalition that has given the Republican Party
control of the White House, Congress and state governments across the South?
"The Republicans can hold together only if the Democrats help them," says
Allan Carlson, who runs the Howard Center, a Christian issues research
center in Illinois. "The interests of corporations and banks, the real power
in the Republican Party, aren't the same as the interests of families. More
and more Christians are becoming aware of that."
Carlson adds, "But the good news for Republicans is that the Democrats can't
shake loose with their attachment to the 1960s' sexual revolution on issues
such as same-sex marriage. The Democrats refuse to adopt pro-family
measures, and for social conservatives, that means there's no place to go
except the Republican Party."
Some 48 million Americans are white evangelical Christians, according to the
Pew Research Center. And about 30 million of them form the bedrock of the
religious right wing that's led by political preachers. But fault lines of
doubt are spreading, even within that religious community.
In Cobb County, for example, religion is decidedly skewed to the right. This
is where evolution is vigorously challenged in the schools, where county
government passes resolutions condemning gays. It goes without saying that
Democrats are endangered.
"A year ago, I was a Republican. I can no longer stomach what's going on,"
said Angela Dotson, a member of the 8,000-member Mount Bethel Methodist
Church.
Dotson's pastor is the Rev. Randy Mickler, who most recently made headlines
when he led a movement in the denomination to oppose the ordination of gays.
Still, Mickler is hard to categorize. He won't, for example, let the
Christian Coalition proselytize at his church.
"Yes, when you go to the voting booth, you should vote your values," he
says. "My discomfort with the religious right is their balance. They tilt
far more towards politics than towards faith. They don't tolerate other
opinions. As Christians, we should keep in mind that one of the things that
got Jesus crucified was Phariseeism."
Church member Dotson says flash point issues -- war, taxes, corruption --
have propelled her away from the Republican Party. "What [the GOP] is doing
doesn't fit with my religion," she says.
At Bell Shoals Baptist Church near Tampa, you'll find far fewer signs of
such leftward backsliding. The church is bedrock religious fundamentalism,
and Leon and Darlene Pondo are the vanguard slugging it out with liberals
and secularists. On a recent Sunday, the couple sported motorcycle leathers
for the church's Faithriders bikers club.
"I started out as a hippie," says the ponytailed Leon, only to be
elbow-jabbed and interrupted by his wife, who laughs, "You've never been a
liberal." With a lopsided grin, he concedes, "True."
Among the church's recent victories was delaying for a year the opening of a
nearby "bikini bar."
The duo, who teach a church class on getting involved in politics, rapidly
fires out a liturgy of religion and politics. "The conservative agenda wins
in the arena of ideas. ... Liberal arguments are emotional. ... Separation
of church and state? Where does that come from? It's not in the
Constitution. ... Global warming? It's just a theory, but liberals accept it
as gospel fact just like Darwinism. ... The ACLU is the most evil
organization on Earth."
Bruce Porter, an affable mail carrier attired in choir robes, joins the
Pondos and adds this wisdom: "If a politician is pro-abortion and against
the war, well, he won't protect America, and he won't get elected."
About 70 miles to the east of Bell Shoals Baptist, in the Orlando suburb of
Longwood, the straight-and-narrow path of the religious right hits a few
curves.
Northlands Church's pastor, the Rev. Joel Hunter, was one of 86 evangelical
leaders who signed a declaration earlier this year, professing a position on
an issue long ignored by political preachers: "Our commitment to Jesus
Christ compels us to solve the global warming crisis."
On a recent Saturday evening, in the parking lot of Northlands, Tim Wise is
looking lost. The retiree from the Central Florida coast had driven an hour,
and passed scores of churches, just to get to Hunter's congregation.
"My first time here," he says apologetically. "I'd read about Dr. Hunter.
Finally, a preacher who got it right about the environment."
Eight other Northlands congregants voiced similar opinions. None disagreed
with Hunter's pro-environment epiphany, although a half-dozen said the issue
had nothing to do with their faith. "I came here because of a crisis in my
life," says Laurie Huntington, a church greeter. "I'm not political. Dr.
Hunter is amazing, and I'm proud of what he's doing" with global warming.
"But he'd never tell us how to vote."
Hunter is by no means a leftist Christian. "I'm pro-life and against gay
marriage," he says. "We're not leaving traditional causes."
But if you catch the evangelicals' global warming commercials, it's Hunter's
face you'll see. "The most affected by global warming are the poor," he says
in an interview. "We must do anything we can to minimize the impact on them.
That is what Jesus taught us."
Northlands "leans Republican," Hunter smiles. "Some devotees of Rush
[Limbaugh] e-mailed me that they were alarmed we were going to sell out
capitalism."
Church newcomer Wise described himself as "pretty conventional. I was in the
Army during Vietnam, went to college, got a job, raised a family. My three
kids are scattered, and my wife died last year. Somewhere along the way, I
knew I needed Jesus."
A lifelong Baptist who annually does the snowbird jaunt between New York and
Florida, Wise says he was "front and center" when it came to opposing
abortion. "I don't believe the Bible approves of homosexuality, but on the
other hand, I figure that's between [gays] and God. I could never get too
excited about opposing marriage [for gays]."
On politics, Wise says he's voted for one Democrat for president -- Jimmy
Carter -- but otherwise was a devout Republican. "Well, on some local races,
I've fallen off the [GOP] wagon."
Wise says he'd never much liked the right-wing preachers' politicization of
the pulpit, but that he disliked the Democrats' positions on moral and
social issues even more. "Why do we have to strike God from everything to do
with government? The fellows who started this country didn't do that."
But now, he's wondering. "I'll never vote for a candidate who supports
abortion on demand. But I understand that there are times when it may be
necessary. I'm sure not for those tax breaks [for the wealthy], and I'm
pretty sure we got it wrong in Iraq. I voted for George Bush two times. I
wouldn't again, but I'd hope for a guy like [Al] Gore rather than [John]
Kerry."
Most important to Wise: "The environment. I came here because I think this
minister is sane. I'm not sure about all of those preachers who say global
warming is a myth."
Global warming and other issues that relate to our stewardship of the planet
seem finally to have struck a chord among evangelical Christians.
The ministers, academics and lay activists who, along with Hunter, signed
the global warming statement encompassed a wide range of beliefs, including
39 evangelical colleges, the Salvation Army and a cross-section of major
denominations and churches. As innocuous and as Christian as such a
statement sounds, it was a pointed rebuke of the leadership of the religious
right and the Republican Party. Up until the declaration, political
preachers had dismissed environmental concerns. In many cases, after all,
their power relies heavily on claiming the Second Coming is coming soon: Why
worry about Mother Earth when you, Tim LaHaye, Ralph Reed and a few others
are about to be raptured up to heaven? Such blitheness fits well with the
corporate wing of the GOP, which places profits above prophesies of peak oil
and environmental disaster from global warming.
A religious schism among evangelicals began. Those who refused to sign the
global warming statement included America's foremost ayatollahs: Jerry
Falwell; the Rev. D. James Kennedy of the mammoth Coral Ridge Presbyterian
Church in South Florida; James Dobson, chairman of Focus on the Family; the
Rev. Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention; Richard Roberts,
president of Oral Roberts University; Donald Wildmon, chairman of the
American Family Association; and the Rev. Louis P. Sheldon, chairman of the
Traditional Values Coalition.
"There's no surprise at who didn't sign," said Jim Jewel of Atlanta,
spokesman for the evangelical environmentalists. "What we did was signal
that the evangelical movement has a new cause, beyond just abortion and gay
marriage, to human rights. Evangelicals had been depicted as one voice. This
let people know we have more than one voice."
In today's religious terms, that's almost heretical. But it's a heresy that
hit home with people such as Tim Wise.
The environment isn't the only wedge issue that is chipping at the GOP
religious base. Although Republicans and the religious right have stridently
opposed stem-cell research -- asserting that using the cells equates with
murder -- three of four Americans support lifting bans on the procedure that
could find a cure to Alzheimer's and other illnesses. More significantly, 62
percent of fundamentalists and almost 80 percent of moderate and liberal
Christians favor stem-cell research, according to a poll by the Civil
Society Institute.
Similarly, Americans (by an overwhelming 82 percent in one poll) disapprove
of the political and religious right's frenzied attempt to capitalize off of
Terry Schiavo's death last year in Pinellas Park, Fla. Polls show even a
majority of evangelicals opposed the Schiavo antics of George and Jeb Bush,
Senate Majority leader Bill Frist and then-leader of the House Republicans,
Tom DeLay.
Abortion, the most consistently potent weapon of the fundamentalists, may
even cause blowback. Two-thirds of Americans oppose overturning Roe vs.
Wade.
Mainstream leaders of mega-churches, such as Northlands' Hunter, and Rick
Warren, author of The Purpose Driven Life and pastor of California's giant
Saddleback Church, have declared their emphasis is on ending poverty --
rather than on divisive issues like abortion and gay marriage.
Books challenging the right's religious orthodoxy are hitting the best
seller lists -- from Jimmy Carter's Our Endangered Values to Rabbi Michael
Lerner's The Left Hand of God to the hottest of them all, God's Politics by
the Sojourners' Jim Wallis.
Groups with names such as CrossLeft and SoulForce are springing up, holding
well-attended meetings and spreading via the Internet their gospel of aiding
the poor, saving the Earth and tolerance.
"We must aggressively put forth our own moral agenda and challenge the
religious right's misuse of the religious tradition," Lerner says. "We must
also challenge the hostility towards religion and spirituality in the
liberal and progressive world."
Learning from the right's militancy in, say, demonstrating against abortion,
the religious left is also turning out on the streets. A crowd of
self-professed Christians gathered in front of the First Baptist Church of
Jacksonville last August -- not to cheer its then-pastor, the Rev. Jerry
Vines, famed for vitriolic broadsides against gays and Muslims, but to
chastise him for his un-Christian-like rhetoric.
Even some early disciples of Bush's faith-based initiatives are turning
apostate. The Rev. Jim Dickerson, pastor of a large interracial church in
the nation's capital, at first lined up for Bush's faith-based cash, but
later told the press, "This was just a smokescreen to recruit blacks and
minorities into the Republican Party by bribing them with money and access
to power -- even while covering up cuts in vital social programs and giving
big tax cuts to the wealthy."
Worse, the foot soldiers are questioning the self-appointed generals. "Just
how far are evangelicals willing to go?" muses the Rev. Chuck Baldwin,
pastor of Pensacola's Crossroad Baptist Church and a frequent orator on the
dangers of the religious right. "Would they be willing to support the
imprisonment of fellow Christians who don't support Bush? I believe many
would. And if so, how is that different from the attitudes of Christians in
Nazi Germany?"
The Rev. Gary Vance, founder of the multidenominational, Internet-based
CrossLeft movement, parted ways with the Southern Baptists as it moved away
from its apolitical tradition and into the Republican orbit.
"It was the only faith I knew growing up in Texas," he says. Vance formed
the charismatic Word of Life Ministries in Lawrenceburg, Tenn. He said, "The
religious right doesn't really speak for most Christians. There are signs
people are beginning to understand that."
All of that doesn't yet equate to a widespread insurrection among
church-goers. The religious right is still immensely large and its power
remains intact.
Evidence of that is on U.S. 1 north of Fort Lauderdale. You can't miss the
large and angular church, resembling utilitarian Wal-Mart construction more
than that of a grand cathedral.
The Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church is one of several mega-churches vying to
be the Vatican of the religious right. Its pastor, the Rev. D. James
Kennedy, has been called the "Godfather of Dominionism," but that slight
emanated from the wholly heathen Rolling Stone magazine. Dominionists
believe Christian (as they define it) crusaders should conquer America's
secular institutions, and then the world.
The mighty pay heed.
AOL's Steve Case gave Kennedy's church academy $8.35 million. Other moneyed
notables who've embraced the preacher include Amway's Richard DeVos and Tom
Monaghan of Domino's Pizza.
Kennedy claims he and the church he founded -- which has grown from 45
members to 10,000 in its 47 years -- are "middle of the road." He told me he
wasn't a theocrat: "That's ridiculous."
Yet he wrote in his 1999 book, Led by the Carpenter: "We are to exercise
godly dominion ... over our neighborhoods, our schools, our government, our
literature and arts, our sports arenas, our entertainment media, our news
media, our scientific endeavors -- in short, over every aspect and
institution of human society."
A greeter at the church, Sheila Burnside, said she left Catholicism because
it is "too liberal." She happily noted that Kennedy "has a ministry in
Washington, just for the purpose of getting involved in politics. He says it
like it is, and isn't afraid to be political."
Illustrating that, at his March "Reclaim America" confab, the handouts
included guidelines on how churches and pastors can circumvent laws that
prohibit tax-exempt institutions from electioneering.
And, Kennedy said he wants even greater church involvement in politics.
Along with other superstar televangelists such as Falwell and Robertson,
Kennedy is pushing legislation by U.S. Rep. Walter B. Jones, R-N.C., that
would allow partisan election campaigning by preachers and churches without
endangering their tax-exempt status.
To get the significance of that, consider: Falwell's Thomas Road Baptist
Church in Lynchburg, Va., has 24,000 members and generates more than $200
million a year. Kennedy's Coral Ridge Ministries is in the $50 million a
year class. Add to those numbers the thousands of other mega-churches, a
high percentage of which trend to conservative politics, plus the money and
influence machines of the Christian Coalition, Beverly LaHaye's Concerned
Women for America, Dobson's Focus on the Family and similar outfits, and the
result is raw power.
In the shadow of those controversies, the religious right has amassed a
string of recent victories, from prodding South Dakota to enact the nation's
most restrictive abortion laws to claiming that its pressure successfully
derailed the annual gay pride festival in Charlotte.
No Republican can take lightly the rightist reverends. U.S. Sen. John McCain
of Arizona, long a critic of Falwell and champion of what's left of the GOP
moderate wing, has bent the knee. This month, he delivered the commencement
address at Falwell's Liberty University in Virginia.
And, of course, the Republican Party has said thanks with more than prayers.
Through George Bush's faith-based initiative -- and state programs like Jeb
Bush's, which opened Florida prisons to proselytizing -- church offering
plates are overflowing with taxpayer cash. President Bush's tithes include
nearly $1.9 billion in faith-based grants.
It's worth remembering that the religious right chorus has been practicing
its hymn for decades. Falwell declared in 1965, "Preachers are not called
upon to be politicians but to be soul-winners." Fourteen years later, he
founded the Moral Majority and began reaping votes, not souls, for the
Republican Party.
By the dawning of the 21st century, political preachers were playing a major
role in partisan politics -- and were about to claim a president as their
own.
According to Rosa Brooks, a University of Virginia law professor who has
analyzed the convergence of politics and religion, "Conservative evangelical
churches were able to deliver voters for Bush in much the same way, and for
much the same reasons, that labor unions and political machines like New
York's Tammany Hall were once able to deliver votes for the Democrats: They
offer material benefits to people with nowhere else to turn, and that is
easily parlayed into votes at election time. ... Because mega-churches today
are disproportionately conservative, Democrats ignore the phenomenon at
their peril."
Illustrating that peril, Kennedy's sermons frequently include invectives
against Democrats and liberals who, he said in an interview, "are against
the Bible and Christianity" and "oppose anyone with Christian views.
Democrats in large measure have driven Christians out of the party."
Even the preacher's fiercest critics grudgingly agree. Democrats "are backed
into a corner," said the Sojourners' Wallis. "They're perceived as secular,
hostile to faith. Some of that is untrue, but there's enough evidence that
we have to pay attention."
The midterm elections loom just six months away. The Bush administration is
in tatters. Two of the highest-profile Republicans in the South -- Georgia
lieutenant governor aspirant (and former Christian Coalition potentate)
Ralph Reed and Florida U.S. Senate candidate Katherine Harris (whose
campaign is blessed by the Rev. Kennedy) -- are being battered by major
ethical storms. In Alabama, former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy
Moore -- who gained the ardor of Christian conservatives for his efforts to
place the Ten Commandments in state buildings -- has plunged from the top of
the polls in that state's gubernatorial contest, falling far behind a
moderate GOP incumbent, Bob Riley.
Poll after poll foreshadows trouble for the GOP, at least in Congress.
Bush's approval rating has nosedived to around 30 percent. Sixty percent of
Americans anguish that the country is in trouble. And, most worrisome for
Republican field marshals, polls reveal that Americans favor Democrats for
Congress by anywhere from 9 to 17 points.
A shift in 15 seats in the U.S. House would give the Democrats control. A
six-seat change from R to D would end Republican control of the Senate.
One big unknown is whether the combination of Republican tribulations and
the epiphany among Democrats that they've found religion, hallelujah, will
shake loose enough evangelicals to reshape the political firmament. The core
question is whether Democrats, who have been born again in realizing that
faith is really important to Americans, will be able to pull some of the
evangelical ranks away from unquestioning supporters of the GOP.
Will they vote in the same numbers as before, or as consistently for
Republicans?
"I'd like to say 'no,'" said the Sojourners' Wallis. "But the truth is no
one knows and no poll can predict precisely what will happen in November.
But have we seen the first voices of discontent [among evangelicals]? Yes,
absolutely."
At the same time, Republicans know how to punch the religious buttons.
Evangelical support for the Republican agenda still appears to be deeply
felt. Despite the shellacking the administration is taking, 59 percent of
the GOP's evangelical contingent still gives the party high marks, compared
to 47 percent of all Republicans, according to a recent Pew Research poll.
And the GOP strategy for employing religion in the next election is already
clear. Consider the martyrdom of Tom DeLay, whose holiness turned Congress
into a brothel for big business lobbyists. The Rev. Rick Scarborough, an
influential Texas Baptist preacher and founder of the pro-war, pro-GOP
Patriot Pastors, declared in March that the deposed House majority leader
"was a target for all those who despise the cause of Christ."
Embedded in his statement is a kernel of the Republican game plan: Assert
that the party is God's holy tool, and depict Christianity as under attack.
In other words, break with the Republican Party, and you'll become the tool
of the Antichrist or, even worse, the ACLU.
"I believe we've seen the birth of the first religious party in the United
States," says Kevin Phillips, a former strategist for Richard Nixon and
author of the just-released American Theocracy. "It should scare every
American who values his liberties."
Will the political preachers who've helped to redefine the Republican Party
continue to keep the grassroots army that has given them so much power
marching in lockstep? November's election will tell. Whatever the outcome,
both the left and the right acknowledge that morals and faith will be
pivotal in American politics for the foreseeable future.
"Progressives were wrong to think they could have politics devoid of faith
and values," says Lerner. "They are central to the issues facing America."
©2006 Creative Loafing Media
Source: Creative Loafing Atlanta
http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A78934
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"A little patience and we shall see the reign of witches pass over, their
spells dissolve, and the people recovering their true sight, restore their
government to its true principles. It is true that in the meantime we are
suffering deeply in spirit,
and incurring the horrors of a war and long oppressions of enormous public
debt. But if the game runs sometimes against us at home we must have
patience till luck turns, and then we shall have an opportunity of winning
back the principles we have lost, for this is a game where principles are at
stake."
-Thomas Jefferson
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