Re: Why We Should Be Scared of Evangelicals
by
Anse
09/18/2007, 7:02 AM #
I come from an evangelical background. It took several years of agonizing intellectual introspection for me to break away from it, and by the time I was in my second year in college, I felt I had nothing more in common with the Southern Baptist faith that was such a massive influence over my childhood.
I am not as worried about the intrusion into private lives. That's not to say it isn't worth some concern, it's just that this sort of governance is not new, certainly not in American history, and I don't think evangelicals are particularly unique in this respect. I get as pissed as anybody when I hear evangelicals promoting a particular social regulation (making the sale of sex toys illegal, that sort of thing), but all you have to do is look at the pratfalls of hypocritical grandstanding to see that it has a limited force. Ted Haggard and Larry Craig have done more to damage this way of thinking than any progressive has probably ever done. While we're going toe-to-toe with social conservatives in Congress, we can count on the ugly secret lives of evangelical leaders to come out in this information age; they are their own worst enemies.
I'm really more concerned about the overt politicization of religious dogma. Dr. James Kennedy, the recently-deceased pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Ft. Lauderdale, was one of the more visible evangelicals in the movement. I occasionally watch his sermons on TBN, and they are little more than political speeches, full of twisted summations of liberal ideals and perversions of evolutionary theory, all exploited to fit his own disturbing view of the world. When religious leaders feel that they can't make many inroads in the political realm, they dig in their heels and turn their congregations into warriors for the movement. The real damage will be done to religion; as the great preacher (and noted Democrat) Billy Graham put it, religion will only divide a congregation; it rarely unites it.
That is what is happening in the religious community right now, I think. You have non-denominational churches, like Lakewood here in Houston, who have a watered-down, mushy, feel-good message that doesn't much resemble the disciplined faith of my upbringing. The Rev. Osteen wants to pack the pews, and he knows he can do it with Tony Robbins-style uplift. This kind of religion is more market-oriented than anything else, and those believers who can't stomach the Kennedy-style conservatism of the rightwing are flocking to it.
On the other side, you have Coral Ridge, Rod Parsley, John Hagee, Bob Jones University, and myriad other ultra-conservatives who are drawing lines in the sand. They are using their bully pulpits to promote a political agenda, and their sermons, full of fire and brimstone, are essentially challenges to their congregants: you either believe this way, and you go forth and act in this manner, or you are excluded from the promise of heaven. And when this happens, law becomes a flimsy obstacle, a minor nuisance, because God's Warriors cannot be held to the laws of man (despite many Biblical passages to the contrary). You see this happening in the Middle East: people who believe they speak for God are tearing the heck out of the social and political fabric of the region, and they feel justified in doing it. Their American counterparts may not resort to such violent tactics, but their doggedness to undermine the much-needed secularism of the American political system could put some of them over the edge.