Christian evangelicals are plotting to remake America in their own image
By BOB MOSER
It's February, and 900 of America's staunchest Christian fundamentalists have gathered in Fort Lauderdale to look back on what they accomplished in last year's election -- and to plan what's next. As they assemble in the vast sanctuary of Coral Ridge Presbyterian, with all fifty state flags dangling from the rafters, three stadium-size video screens flash the name of the conference: reclaiming america for christ. These are the evangelical activists behind the nation's most effective political machine -- one that brought more than 4 million new Christian voters to the polls last November, sending George W. Bush back to the White House and thirty-two new pro-lifers to Congress. But despite their unprecedented power, fundamentalists still see themselves as a persecuted minority, waging a holy war against the godless forces of secularism. To rouse themselves, they kick off the festivities with "Soldiers of the Cross, Arise," the bloodthirstiest tune in all of Christendom: "Seize your armor, gird it on/Now the battle will be won/Soon, your enemies all slain/Crowns of glory you shall gain."
Meet the Dominionists -- biblical literalists who believe God has called them to take over the U.S. government. As the far-right wing of the evangelical movement, Dominionists are pressing an agenda that makes Newt Gingrich's Contract With America look like the Communist Manifesto. They want to rewrite schoolbooks to reflect a Christian version of American history, pack the nation's courts with judges who follow Old Testament law, post the Ten Commandments in every courthouse and make it a felony for gay men to have sex and women to have abortions. In Florida, when the courts ordered Terri Schiavo's feeding tube removed, it was the Dominionists who organized round-the-clock protests and issued a fiery call for Gov. Jeb Bush to defy the law and take Schiavo into state custody. Their ultimate goal is to plant the seeds of a "faith-based" government that will endure far longer than Bush's presidency -- all the way until Jesus comes back.
"Most people hear them talk about a 'Christian nation' and think, 'Well, that sounds like a good, moral thing,' says the Rev. Mel White, who ghostwrote Jerry Falwell's autobiography before breaking with the evangelical movement. "What they don't know -- what even most conservative Christians who voted for Bush don't know -- is that 'Christian nation' means something else entirely to these Dominionist leaders. This movement is no more about following the example of Christ than Bush's Clean Water Act is about clean water."
The godfather of the Dominionists is D. James Kennedy, the most influential evangelical you've never heard of. A former Arthur Murray dance instructor, he launched his Florida ministry in 1959, when most evangelicals still followed Billy Graham's gospel of nonpartisan soul-saving. Kennedy built Coral Ridge Ministries into a $37-million-a-year empire, with a TV-and-radio audience of 3 million, by preaching that it was time to save America -- not soul by soul but election by election. After helping found the Moral Majority in 1979, Kennedy became a five-star general in the Christian army. Bush sought his blessing before running for president -- and continues to consult top Dominionists on matters of federal policy.
"Our job is to reclaim America for Christ, whatever the cost," Kennedy says. "As the vice regents of God, we are to exercise godly dominion and influence 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."
At Reclaiming America, most of the conference is taken up by grassroots training sessions that supply ministers, retirees and devout churchgoers with "The Facts of Stem-Cell Research" or "Practical Steps to Impact Your Community with America's Historical Judeo-Christian Heritage." "We're going to turn you into an army of one," Gary Cass, executive director of Reclaiming America, promises activists at one workshop held in Evangalism Explosion Hall. The Dominionists also attend speeches by supporters like Rep. Katherine Harris of Florida, who urges them to "win back America for God." In their spare time, conference-goers buy books about a God-devised health program called the Maker's Diet or meet with a financial adviser who offers a "biblically sound investment plan."
To implement their sweeping agenda, the Dominionists are working to remake the federal courts in God's image. In their view, the Founding Fathers never intended to erect a barrier between politics and religion. "The First Amendment does not say there should be a separation of church and state," declares Alan Sears, president and CEO of the Alliance Defense Fund, a team of 750 attorneys trained by the Dominionists to fight abortion and gay marriage. Sears argues that the constitutional guarantee against state-sponsored religion is actually designed to "shield" the church from federal interference -- allowing Christians to take their rightful place at the head of the government. "We have a right, indeed an obligation, to govern," says David Limbaugh, brother of Rush and author of Persecution: How Liberals Are Waging War Against Christianity. Nothing gets the Dominionists to their feet faster than ringing condemnations of judicial tyranny. "Activist judges have systematically deconstructed the Constitution," roars Rick Scarborough, author of Mixing Church and State. "A God-free society is their goal!"
Activist judges, of course, are precisely what the Dominionists want. Their model is Roy Moore, the former Alabama chief justice who installed a 5,300-pound granite memorial to the Ten Commandments, complete with an open Bible carved in its top, in the state judicial building. At Reclaiming America, Roy's Rock sits out front, fresh off a tour of twenty-one states, perched on the flag-festooned flatbed of a diesel truck, a potent symbol of the "faith-based" justice the Dominionists are bent on imposing. Activists at the conference pose for photographs beside the rock and have circulated a petition urging President Bush to appoint Moore -- who once penned an opinion calling for the state to execute "practicing homosexuals" -- to the U.S. Supreme Court.
"The other side knows we've got strongholds in the executive and legislative branches," Cass tells the troops. "If we start winning the judiciary, their power base is going to be eroded."
To pack the courts with fundamentalists like Moore, Dominionist leaders are planning a massive media blitz. They're also pressuring Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist -- an ally who's courting support for his presidential bid -- to halt the long-standing use of filibusters to hold up judicial nominations. An anti-filibuster petition circulating at the conference blasts Democrats for their "outrageous stonewalling of appointments" -- even though Congress has approved more nominees of Bush than of any president since Jimmy Carter.
It helps that Dominionists have a direct line to the White House: The Rev. Richard Land, top lobbyist for the 16-million-member Southern Baptist Convention, enjoys a weekly conference call with top Bush advisers including Karl Rove. "We've got the Holy Spirit's wind at our backs!" Land declares in an arm-waving, red-faced speech. He takes particular aim at the threat posed by John Lennon, denouncing "Imagine" as a "secular anthem" that envisions a future of "clone plantations, child sacrifice, legalized polygamy and hard-core porn."
The Dominionists are also stepping up efforts to turn public schools into forums for evangelism. In a landmark case, the Alliance Defense Fund is suing a California school district that threatened to dismiss a born-again teacher who was evangelizing fifth-graders. In the conference's opening ceremony, the Dominionists recite an oath they dream of hearing in every classroom: "I pledge allegiance to the Christian flag, and to the Savior for whose kingdom it stands. One Savior, crucified, risen and coming again, with life and liberty for all who believe."
Cass urges conference-goers to stack school boards with Dominionists. "The most humble Christian is more qualified for office than the best-educated pagan," says Cass, an anti-abortion activist who led a takeover of his school district's board in San Diego. "We built quite a little grass-roots machine out there. Now it's my burden to multiply that success all across America."
Cass points to the Rev. Gary Beeler, a Baptist minister from Tennessee who got permission for thousands of students to skip class and attend weeklong events that he calls "old-time revivals, with preaching and singing and soul-saving and the whole nine yards." Now, with support from Kennedy, Beeler is selling his house and buying a mobile home to spread his crusade nationwide. "It's not exactly what I planned to do with my retirement," he says. "But it's what God told me to do."
Cass also presents another small-town activist, Kevin McCoy, with a Salt and Light Award for leading a successful campaign to shut down an anti-bullying program in West Virginia schools. McCoy, a soft-spoken, prematurely gray postal worker, fought to end the program because it taught tolerance for gay people -- and thus, in his view, constituted a "thinly disguised effort to promote the homosexual agenda." "What America needs," Cass tells the faithful, "is more Kevin McCoys."
While the dominionists rely on grass-roots activists to fight their battles, they are backed by some of America's richest entrepreneurs. Amway founder Rich DeVos, a Kennedy ally who's the leading Republican contender for governor of Michigan, has tossed more than $5 million into the collection plate. Jean Case, wife of former AOL chief Steve Case -- whose fortune was made largely on sex-chat rooms -- has donated $8 million. And Tom Monaghan, founder of Domino's Pizza, is a major source of cash for Focus on the Family, a megaministry working with Kennedy to eliminate all public schools.
The one-two punch of militant activists and big money has helped make the Dominionists a force in Washington, where a growing number of congressmen owe their elections to the machine. Kennedy has also created the Center for Christian Statesmanship, which trains elected officials to "more effectively share their faith in the public arena." Speaking to the group, House Majority Whip Tom DeLay -- a winner of Kennedy's Distinguished Christian Statesman Award -- called Bush's faith-based initiatives "a great opportunity to bring God back into the public institutions of our country."
The most vivid proof of the Christianizing of Capitol Hill comes at the final session of Reclaiming America. Rep. Walter Jones, a lanky congressman from North Carolina, gives a fire-and-brimstone speech that would have gotten him laughed out of Washington thirty years ago. In today's climate, however, he's got a chance of passing his pet project, the Houses of Worship Free Speech Restoration Act, which would permit ministers to endorse political candidates from their pulpits, effectively converting their tax-exempt churches into Republican campaign headquarters.
"America is under assault!" Jones thunders as his aides dash around the sanctuary snapping PR photos. "Everyone in America has the right to speak freely, except for those standing in the pulpits of our churches!" The amen chorus reaches a fever pitch. Hands fly heavenward. It's one thing to hear such words from Dominionist leaders -- but to this crowd, there's nothing more thrilling than getting the gospel from a U.S. congressman. "You cannot have a strong nation that does not follow God," Jones preaches, working up to a climactic, passionate plea for a biblical republic. "God, please -- God, please -- God, please -- save America!"
*****
I don't post here in N&D, but I do read here and was aware of the Christian Right organizing to gain political power in this country. Maybe I am naive, but I didn't think they were getting so strong. This is truly frightening to me. I am hoping that the eyes of America will be opened to what these nutjobs are really doing and how dangerous these groups are to our freedoms (we are still valuing freedom in America, right?).
_________________ "Don't worry about life, you're not going to survive it anyway."
-Anonymous
Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2004 8:58 pm Posts: 1148 Location: Green Bay
Lets ask the founding fathers if they intended America to be a Christian nation.
John Adams wrote:
“The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion.”
Thomas Jefferson wrote:
“Christianity … (has become) the most perverted system that ever shone on man … Rogueries, absurdities and untruths were perpetrated upon the teachings of Jesus by a large band of dupes and imposters led by Paul, the first great corrupter of the teachings of Jesus.”
George Washington wrote:
“The United States of America should have a foundation free from the influence of clergy.”
James Madison wrote:
“Religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprise.”
Thomas Jefferson, defending himself against accusations that the Declaration of Independence refers to the Christian god, wrote:
“I do not find in orthodox Christianity one redeeming feature,” and “Millions of innocent men, women and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined, imprisoned: yet … What has been the effect of coercion? To make one-half the world fools, and the other half hypocrites. To support roguery and error all over the earth.”
_________________ When the last living thing Has died on account of us, How poetical it would be If Earth could say, In a voice floating up Perhaps From the floor Of the Grand Canyon, "It is done. People did not like it here.''
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 7:19 pm Posts: 39068 Location: Chapel Hill, NC, USA Gender: Male
Christ was one cool cat, but his friends are dicks.
_________________ "Though some may think there should be a separation between art/music and politics, it should be reinforced that art can be a form of nonviolent protest." - e.v.
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 6:36 pm Posts: 513 Location: Mountaineer country
Great quotes, energystar.
I was reading something a while back that the founding fathers (Jefferson and Washington at least) weren't even Christians themselves. They were deists, meaning that they believed in creation, but that god had left what he created. Abandoned ship, so to speak.
America just can't be this stupid. But I worry that it is going to take something very big and shocking to wake up the sleeping sheep.
_________________ "Don't worry about life, you're not going to survive it anyway."
-Anonymous
Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2004 8:58 pm Posts: 1148 Location: Green Bay
Action, Jack wrote:
I was reading something a while back that the founding fathers (Jefferson and Washington at least) weren't even Christians themselves. They were deists, meaning that they believed in creation, but that god had left what he created. Abandoned ship, so to speak.
I couldn't help but make sure this quote got posted:
Thomas Paine, answering to friends regarding The Age of Reason on Mqy 12, 1797, wrote:
"As I have now given you my reasons for believing that the Bible is not the Word of God, that it is a falsehood, I have a right to ask you your reasons for believing the contrary; but I know you can give me none, except that you were educated to believe the Bible; and as the Turks give the same reason for believing the Koran, it is evident that education makes all the difference, and that reason and truth have nothing to do in the case. You believe in the Bible from the accident of birth, and the Turks believe in the Koran from the same accident, and each calls the other infidel. But leaving the prejudice of education out of the case, the unprejudiced truth is, that all are infidels who believe falsely of God, whether they draw their creed from the Bible, or from the Koran, from the Old Testament, or from the New."
Rock on, Thomas Paine.
_________________ When the last living thing Has died on account of us, How poetical it would be If Earth could say, In a voice floating up Perhaps From the floor Of the Grand Canyon, "It is done. People did not like it here.''
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 2:58 pm Posts: 3567 Location: west side of washington state
this is the scariest trend I've ever seen, and I've seen a few... to me, religious freedom is one of the greatest things this country has going for it. I give thanks for it all the time (being of a non-mainstream path) and realize that in another country I might be jailed or executed for my beliefs.
reading this, maybe in this country too in a few years.
now the question remains: what can we as individuals do about this?
I read something recently, written by a Christian pastor who is also a "liberal" Democrat, that said the non-right-wing Christians need to take back the Christian religion from the fundamentalists. There is that happening too; a good friend of mine (a Unitarian Universalist) is very active both in his church & the Democratic party.
what can the rest of us do, besides vote & demonstrate & send money to the DNC? it just doesn't seem like enough.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 2:36 am Posts: 2303 Location: Ontario, Canada Gender: Female
JamElizabeth wrote:
I read something recently, written by a Christian pastor who is also a "liberal" Democrat, that said the non-right-wing Christians need to take back the Christian religion from the fundamentalists.
I was just thinking this when I first read that article. It reminded me that the bible explains that there will be 'wolves in sheep's clothing'. It's pretty clear who these people are. And yeah Christian's do need to stand up to these idiots completely twisting the bible's teachings to fit their prejudices and hateful hearts.
_________________ "Every closet should open to a giant man with a bucket on his head going insane on a flying v." - some dude on youtube
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 11:04 pm Posts: 39920 Gender: Male
The homosexual agenda? how about we stop the Christian agenda first, after we get the crazies off the streets screaming at me to accept Jesus we can worry about who Joe-perfectly-normal-person-contributer-to-society is fucking in his spare time.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 1:04 am Posts: 2728 Location: Sterling, IL Gender: Male
godeatgod wrote:
The homosexual agenda? how about we stop the Christian agenda first, after we get the crazies off the streets screaming at me to accept Jesus we can worry about who Joe-perfectly-normal-person-contributer-to-society is fucking in his spare time.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 2:36 am Posts: 2303 Location: Ontario, Canada Gender: Female
Action, Jack wrote:
I agree littlesadie.
We need to organize. Posting on message boards does nothing. What do we do to stop this nonsense?
Well just following Christ's message of love- love without attachments. All you can do is not be like them and know that your example will make a difference even if its a modest one. Revelations shows us that the world will be full of this insanity.
_________________ "Every closet should open to a giant man with a bucket on his head going insane on a flying v." - some dude on youtube
eh... don't worry about this shit. this is a huge part of the reason President Bush's poll numbers are dropping. the non-zombified faction of the Republican Party is splitting away from these Christian lunatics.
what we should be worried about is the economic and environmental bubble that is going to burst... and neither the Democrats nor Republicans have any plans to deal with that.
Last edited by Kenny on Sat Apr 09, 2005 3:01 am, edited 1 time in total.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
I have a hard time believing why anybody would take these people seriously from hardcore liberals to typical bible-belt voters. These guys are a joke.
_________________
LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 6:36 pm Posts: 513 Location: Mountaineer country
Kenny wrote:
eh... don't worry about this shit. this is a huge part of the reason President Bush's poll numbers are dropping. the non-zombified faction of the Republican Party is splitting away from these Christian lunatics.
what we should be worried about is the economic and environmental bubble that is going to burst... and neither the Democrats nor Republicans have any plans to deal with that.
I hope so.
Nice avatar!
_________________ "Don't worry about life, you're not going to survive it anyway."
-Anonymous
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 10:50 am Posts: 138 Location: Hazel Park, MI
Pat H wrote:
godeatgod wrote:
The homosexual agenda? how about we stop the Christian agenda first, after we get the crazies off the streets screaming at me to accept Jesus we can worry about who Joe-perfectly-normal-person-contributer-to-society is fucking in his spare time.
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 4:32 pm Posts: 766 Location: Grayson County, Virginia
Land declares in an arm-waving, red-faced speech. He takes particular aim at the threat posed by John Lennon, denouncing "Imagine" as a "secular anthem" that envisions a future of "clone plantations, child sacrifice, legalized polygamy and hard-core porn."
_________________ "I came here as a child when it first opened," said Tarsley. "Now that I have kids, where are they supposed to go for Whoppers or Chicken Tenders? We need to ask ourselves, as a culture, 'Where are our priorities?'"
i tend to see stories such as this the same way you folks see the draft and other things convincing you that bush and co. are totally evil.
theres a hint of truth, that is then blown up out of proportion, meant to rally the troops so to say, against the administration
I'm not totally on the democrats side, but they need all the rallying they can get.
Do you think this article is an exaggeration?
Yes, in a manner of speaking. This is a fringe group of whackos. I can hear the hard core atheists saying the same kinds of things, but on the other side of the fence. I know many people that consider themselves conservative who happen to be Christian, and not one thinks like this - not one. This is not mainstream conservatism
Also, I think everyone needs to be reminded that rolling stone gives money to the democratic party, so maybe this article is a little bias, and maybe they printed it to scare the shit out of normal folks.
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