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      <P><B><FONT COLOR="#808080" FACE="Arial">News Intelligence Analysis</FONT></B></P></BLOCKQUOTE>
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  <P>From <A HREF="http://www.au.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5849&news_iv_ctrl=0&abbr=cs_&JServSessionIdr005=eewg2f6yz1.app5b">Americans
  United for Separation of Church and State</A></P>
  <P>&nbsp;</P>
  <P>April 2000</P>
  <P><B><FONT SIZE="+1" FACE="Arial">God's Air Force <BR>
  How The National Religious Broadcasters Provide<BR>
  Troops And Ammo For the Religious Right's<BR>
  Christian Nation Crusade</FONT></B></P>
  <P>by Joseph L. Conn</P>
  <P>Last December the Federal Communications Commission issued
  new rules governing noncommercial educational television stations.
  In the future, the agency said, worship services and other forms
  of &quot;religious exhortation&quot; would not be considered
  educational programming.</P>
  <P>The regulation might seem like common sense to most Americans.
  Preaching, after all, is quite a bit different from the educational
  programming most viewers would expect on educational TV. But
  to the nation's powerful religious broadcasting lobby, the FCC
  action was a red flag.</P>
  <P>The National Religious Broadcasters and their influential
  members and allies quickly declared war. James Dobson, Jerry
  Falwell and other religious broadcasters castigated the FCC and
  called on their followers to bombard the agency with protests.
  Sympathetic representatives in Congress denounced the new rule,
  and 70 House members cosponsored legislation to reverse it.</P>
  <P>In a matter of weeks, the FCC backed down. By a 4-1 vote Jan.
  28, the commissioners decided to drop the new language. &quot;Regrettably,&quot;
  said a statement, &quot;it has become clear that our actions
  have created less certainty rather than more, contrary to our
  intent.&quot;</P>
  <P>The religious broadcasters were jubilant. &quot;This is a
  total victory,&quot; exulted NRB President Brandt Gustavson.
  &quot;Today's decision is a beautiful demonstration of democracy
  in action.&quot;</P>
  <P>Other observers saw it differently.  Dissenting FCC member
  Gloria Tristani called the retreat a &quot;sad and shameful day
  for the FCC.&quot; She particularly blasted charges that the
  FCC is anti-religion as &quot;reminiscent of a witch hunt.&quot;</P>
  <P>&quot;In a religiously diverse society,&quot; Tristani said,
  &quot;sectarian religious programming, by its very nature, does
  not serve the 'entire community' and is not 'educational' to
  non-adherents.&quot;</P>
  <P>However you look at it, the episode shows the remarkable political
  power of the religious broadcasting industry, a segment of the
  communications world that continues to grow in wealth and influence.</P>
  <P>While the nation's news media has focused sporadic attention
  on Religious Right groups such as the Christian Coalition, little
  notice has been given to the multi-million dollar fundamentalist
  Christian ministries that dominate the nation's airwaves and
  serve as the foundation of the sectarian political lobbies. Although
  many of these tax-exempt ministries preach a controversial and
  often partisan gospel, their activities remain virtually unknown
  to the general public.</P>
  <P>To shed some light on this aspect of our national life, Church
  &amp; State sent a representative to the National Religious Broadcasters
  57th Annual Convention in Anaheim, Calif. The Feb. 5-8 event
  drew an estimated 5,000 attendees to dinners, workshops and briefings.
  Some 250 business and advocacy booths occupied the 155,000-square
  foot exhibit hall at the Anaheim Convention Center.</P>
  <P>Authors hawked their latest books. Christian radio talk shows
  broadcast from onsite. Hucksters ranged from high-tech communications
  firms and direct mail fund-raising outfits to colorful smaller
  operations. (Cowboy Stuff Ministries was right down the way from
  Jumbo Jack's Cookbooks.) Promise Keepers tried to sell Coach
  Bill McCartney's new radio spot to station owners.</P>
  <P>Political operatives ranged from the merely right-wing to
  the lunatic fringe. Powerful Dobson spin-off group the Family
  Research Council was a few steps away from the Rev. Lou Sheldon's
  family-run Traditional Values Coalition. Sophisticated anti-evolution
  strategist Phillip Johnson touted his books and held a workshop,
  while across the hall, Hearthstone Books hawked conspiracy author
  Dennis Cuddy's NEA Grab for Power. A promotional flier for the
  forthcoming book says the National Education Association &quot;has
  copied the model of Russian and Chinese communist educational
  systems&quot; and is brainwashing children to &quot;accept a
  universal dictatorial government.&quot;</P>
  <P>The clash of symbols was sometimes jarring. Red-and-white
  &quot;Jews for Jesus&quot; shopping bags were carried by many
  conventioneers as they wandered the exhibit hall floor. But most
  also carried the official conference tote, a bag with the NRB
  2000 logo on one side and an &quot;Israel: The Official Destination
  of the Millenium&quot; slogan on the other. The Israel Ministry
  of Tourism runs one of the largest exhibits at the convention,
  where staffers encourage evangelical pilgrimages to the Holy
  Land. (Those who couldn't go to the Middle East in person could
  always stop at the &quot;Virtual Holyland&quot; booth, which
  touted an Internet site with live views of the Western Wall and
  the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem.)</P>
  <P>All in all, the exhibit hall was a veritable Christian amusement
  park and business extravaganza that rivaled Disneyland, the television-spawned
  entertainment mecca just across the street from the NRB event.</P>
  <P>Representing some 1,250 religious broadcasters and their associates,
  the NRB's big tent encompasses some of the best known names in
  the field. Pat Robertson, D. James Kennedy, Tim and Beverly LaHaye,
  Marlin Maddoux, Dobson and Falwell all hold memberships. Adrian
  Rogers, Charles Stanley, Paul Pressler, Richard Land and other
  leaders of the fundamentalist takeover of the Southern Baptist
  Convention, the nation's largest Protestant denomination, also
  gather there. Hundreds of less well known radio and television
  personalities round out the list.</P>
  <P>As the recent FCC flap shows, the NRB serves as a potent lobbying
  force in Washington, D.C. And it's no wonder. Religious broadcasters
  control extraordinary wealth. According to figures announced
  in the convention issue of the NRB magazine, Robertson's Christian
  Broadcasting Network (CBN) took in $203 million in the most recent
  year for which figures were available. Dobson's Focus on the
  Family (FOF) netted $109 million, while Kennedy's Coral Ridge
  Ministries received $41 million. Paul and Jan Crouch's Trinity
  Broadcasting Network which is unveiling a new &quot;Church Channel&quot;
  collected $98 million, Oral Roberts Ministries pocketed $68 million
  and Stanley's In Touch Ministries totaled $33 million.</P>
  <P>In addition to these tax-exempt mega-ministries, the number
  of Chris&SHY;tian radio and TV stations, some of them tax-exempt
  as well, also continues to grow. According to the NRB, 1,731
  stations dotted the national landscape in 1999, up from 1,616
  in 1998. One survey claims 80 million Americans tune in to Christian
  radio weekly.</P>
  <P>Although America is a remarkably diverse country with a wide
  range of denominations and faith groups, religious broadcasting
  is heavily dominated by fundamentalist preachers. The message
  on most religious programs seen across the country emphasizes
  conversion to their kind of Christianity with a frequent side
  message of right-wing politics.</P>
  <P>When most religious broadcasters talk about Christianity,
  they mean only their fundamentalist variety. Other religious
  viewpoints are often disparaged. On the first day of the NRB
  convention, TV evangelist John Ankerberg signed copies of his
  Encyclopedia of Cults and New Religions, a tome that details
  the biblical shortcomings of groups ranging from Buddhists, Bahais
  and Christian Scientists to Mormons, Masons and even Unitarians.
  Later that afternoon, radio preacher Ron Rhodes was on the schedule
  to autograph his Reasoning from the Scriptures with Catholics,
  a guide to &quot;sharing the Gospel with your Catholic friends.&quot;
             </P>
  <P>One of the few breaks from conservative Christianity came
  when Dr. Laura Schlessinger radio's bombastic &quot;Dr. Laura&quot;
  was given the NRB Chairman's Award for &quot;serving the Christian
  community in an exemplary manner.&quot; Schlessinger, who is
  Jewish, apparently made the cut because of her abrasively moralistic
  posturing.</P>
  <P>Although not all religious broadcasters get involved with
  politics, it is a major theme with the NRB's heavy hitters. Scholar
  John Stackhouse told one convention workshop that the big evangelical
  ministries spent about $160 million on politics, a small percentage
  of their overall budgets, but not an insignificant sum.</P>
  <P>It's certainly no coincidence that all the most influential
  Religious Right groups are affiliated in some way with religious
  broadcasting. These airwaves ministries provide access to millions
  of Americans who can be recruited as grassroots activists and
  tapped for donations, the lifeblood of political movements.</P>
  <P>Examples are plentiful. Robertson's CBN has helped nurture
  both the Christian Coalition, which does partisan politicking,
  and the Ameri&SHY;can Center for Law and Justice, which does
  ultraconservative legal work. Dobson's FOF does some political
  work on its own. Its ally, the Family Research Council, lobbies
  regularly in Washington, while FOF-aligned groups work in over
  half the states. The NRB itself has spawned the Alliance Defense
  Fund, a funding pool that finances Religious Right legal work
  against church-state separation, abortion rights and legal protections
  for gay people.</P>
  <P>The goal of these ministries and their allied advocacy groups
  is simple: an America where most Americans are fundamentalist
  Christians and where that outlook pervades both the government
  and the culture.</P>
  <P><U><FONT COLOR="#000000">Robertson's top lawyer, Jay Sekulow,
  sounded a militant note at the NRB convention. Speaking to the
  public policy breakfast Feb. 7, the American Center for Law and
  Justice counsel said Christians are compelled by Scripture to
  get involved with politics.</FONT></U></P>
  <P><U><FONT COLOR="#000000">Quoting Dutch theologian Abraham
  Kuyper, Sekulow said, &quot;There is not one square inch of the
  entire creation about which Jesus Christ does not say, 'This
  is mine; this belongs to me.' We have a cultural mandate.&quot;</FONT></U></P>
  <P><U><FONT COLOR="#000000">Continued Sekulow, &quot;Jesus demands
  every aspect of our creation, every aspect of our culture. None
  of it is without his control and authority.&quot;</FONT></U></P>
  <P><U><FONT COLOR="#000000">Sekulow's call to action was countered
  at the breakfast by conservative columnist Cal Thomas. In a rare
  NRB acknowledgment of dissent among Christians about the relationship
  between politics and faith, Thomas was allowed to defend his
  view that overemphasis on political activity by evangelicals
  has hurt the spread of the Gospel. Thomas and Michigan pastor
  Ed Dobson (no relation to James Dobson) last year wrote a controversial
  book, Blinded by Might, that made the same point.</FONT></U></P>
  <P><U><FONT COLOR="#000000">&quot;When the church aligns itself
  with a political party,&quot; Thomas told the NRB, &quot;it isn't
  the state that's corrupted, it's the church.&quot;</FONT></U></P>
  <P><U><FONT COLOR="#000000">Charging that conservative churches
  have become &quot;an appendage of the Republican Party,&quot;
  Thomas warned, &quot;Too many of us give lip service to the Gospel
  while spending most of our energies on politics.&quot;</FONT></U></P>
  <P>The columnist said voting Republican is no assurance of conservative
  policies or morality, noting that Earl Warren and other liberal
  Supreme Court justices were appointed by GOP presidents. He reminded
  the crowd that former House Speaker Newt Gingrich &quot;kept
  the Contract with America, but sadly violated contracts with
  two wives and now consorts openly with a woman to whom he is
  not married.&quot;</P>
  <P>Thomas even challenged the widely held Religious Right view
  that America was founded as a Christian nation. &quot;What does
  history really say about our roots?&quot; he asked. &quot;Were
  our founders mostly saved men who were followers of Jesus Christ?
  A few were. But many were deists, free thinkers and quite a few,
  including George Washington, were Masons. Only 10 percent of
  the populace attended church at the time of the American Revolution.&quot;</P>
  <P>Concluded Thomas, &quot;Let's not be under any illusion that
  anything short of the regeneration of Americans will produce
  a change in America.&quot;</P>
  <P>Thomas' passionate remarks received a surprisingly warm reaction
  from the crowd, although Sekulow drew strong applause as well.
  In the long run, however, Thomas is a voice crying in the NRB
  wilderness. There is little chance that the power players in
  the NRB will drop their partisan politicking.</P>
  <P>Thomas was originally scheduled to debate Robertson himself,
  but the Virginia Beach faith healer was ill with the flu and
  unable to attend. Robertson has roundly rejected Thomas' call
  for less politics. During the recent presidential primary, Robertson
  dropped all pretense of nonpartisanship and unleashed some of
  his most heavy-handed politicking on behalf of favored GOP candidate
  George Bush and against rival John McCain.</P>
  <P>Now Robertson has vowed to wage war on likely Democratic candidate
  Al Gore. On CNN's &quot;Late Edition&quot; March 12, Robertson
  said the Christian Coalition will work &quot;enthusiastically&quot;
  for Bush in the fall. &quot;The first thing is the party's got
  to understand that we're not supposed to be fighting each other,&quot;
  he said. &quot;Our common enemy, if I may use that term, is the
  Democrat.&quot;</P>
  <P>Other NRB heavy hitters such as Dobson and Kennedy also have
  rejected the Thomas entreaty and insisted that politics remains
  a top priority.</P>
  <P>Evangelist Bill Bright, an NRB board member, even used the
  occasion of the public policy breakfast to throw support to a
  Republican candidate for Congress. Bright introduced William
  Federer, who is running against U.S. Rep. Richard Gephardt for
  a U.S. House seat from Missouri, and asked him to stand. Bright
  noted that Federer, author of a Christian nation book called
  America's God and Country, shares their views on social issues.</P>
  <P>Federer, Bright asserted, is &quot;up against a candidate
  who denies everything that you and I stand for. He promotes abortion
  and homosexuality and everything that is contrary to what we
  stand for. And William Federer, by God's grace, can take his
  place.&quot;</P>
  <P>Where does all of this leave the NRB? The group has come a
  long way from the heady days of the 1980s when then-President
  Ronald Reagan made regular appearances at the group's star-studded
  conventions, then always held in Washington, D.C. Reagan remains
  personally popular with the broadcasters but his administration
  proved to be a disappointment. Many NRB activists had hoped control
  of the White House (and its Supreme Court appointments) would
  lead to official religious worship in public schools, a ban on
  abortion, tax aid to religious schools, repudiation of gay rights
  and other steps on the road to a more Christian America as they
  define it.</P>
  <P>That disappointment was followed by the TV preacher scandals
  of the mid '80s when Jim Bakker, Jimmy Swaggart and others made
  religious broadcasting something of a national laughing stock.
  (Bakker, who served time in prison for financial shenanigans
  at his PTL Network, is apparently trying for a comeback, prowling
  the NRB exhibit hall this year with his new wife Lori he and
  Tammy Faye Bakker divorced long ago.)</P>
  <P>The potential for abuse of assets remains a concern. At a
  &quot;God, Mammon and Evangelicals&quot; workshop at this year's
  NRB, one presenter talked about ministry financial scandal and
  asked if anyone in the room suspects that improprieties are going
  on that aren't being talked about. After an uncomfortable silence,
  one participant replied, &quot;Probably 100 percent of us.&quot;</P>
  <P>The NRB reached perhaps its lowest point of self-confidence
  in 1992 when pro-choice, pro-gay Bill Clinton was elected to
  the White House. Although Clinton is a church-going Baptist,
  his stands on social issues made him anathema with the NRB even
  before the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal broke.</P>
  <P>In 1994 NRB executive committee members took the unprecedented
  step of voting not to invite Clinton to address their Washington
  gathering. &quot;[W]e cannot give a platform,&quot; they said,
  &quot;to a leader who so aggressively supports and puts forth
  policies and positions which are blatantly contrary to scriptural
  views.&quot;</P>
  <P>The NRB then went into a sort of self-imposed exile, moving
  its conventions from Washington to various cities around the
  country. Although individual members remain extremely influential
  with Congress and the FCC, the group itself has been relatively
  low profile these days.</P>
  <P>However, Robertson and other politically minded NRB leaders
  are plotting their return to the halls of power. They seem to
  think their best shot is the election of George W. Bush. Although
  the Religious Right's relationship with Bush's father was sometimes
  chilly, the Texas governor's ardent profession of Christian faith
  and his embrace of Religious Right leaders have made him the
  pragmatic choice of most in the movement. The big question remains
  whether American voters, evangelical and otherwise, will go along.</P>
  <P>One thing is certain: NRB leaders have big long-term goals.
  As TV preacher Kennedy told NRB's magazine in December, &quot;In
  15 or 20 years, Americans will wake up to a startling revelation:
  Christians in America will be in the majority and our nation
  will begin to be governed by the righteous once more.&quot;<BR>
  Register for E-mail Updates</P>
  <P><BR>
  &COPY; Americans United for Separation of Church and State, 518
  C Street NE, Washington, DC 20002<BR>
  Telephone (202) 466-3234; Facsimile (202) 466-2587; E-mail: americansunited@au.org</P>
  <P>&nbsp;</P>
  <P><HR ALIGN=LEFT></P>
  <P>&nbsp;</P>
  <P><B><FONT FACE="Arial">EverLastingGodStopperOctober 28, 2004,
  09:27 PM</FONT></B></P>
  <P><BR>
  From the Express-Times (PA) (http://www.pennlive.com/letters/expresstimes/index.ssf?/base/news-2/1098781511139130.xml)
  </P>
  <P><BR>
  <B><FONT FACE="Arial">Dominion theology totalitarian scheme</FONT></B></P>
  <P>Earlier this week Pat Robertson's legal mouthpiece Jay Sekulow
  explained the animus behind Christian conservatives' political
  antics. According to Sekulow, Christians have a &quot;cultural
  mandate&quot; to control society. This mandate supposedly dates
  back to the Book of Genesis when God issued the command to take
  dominion over the earth; hence the name dominion theology. It
  was obvious that Sekulow wasn't too versed on the details of
  this idiotic doctrine (he admitted he's no theologian) so I'll
  fill in gaps.</P>
  <P>Dominion theologians trace their movement to Cornelius Van
  Til, who came up with an unorthodox method of Christian apologetics.
  Using a Calvinist premise, Van Til taught that there is no moral
  common ground between Christians and nonbelievers. Another theologian,
  Rousas Rushdoony, later took Van Til's premise to its logical
  conclusion -- that because of this infinite moral divide the
  Christian inherits a divine right to rule over everyone else.
  The fact that the command to take dominion over the earth (Genesis
  1:28-29) was given to Adam four millennia before the Church even
  existed doesn't stop God's bullies from using it as a ready-made
  excuse to ram a theocratic nightmare down our throats. Two weeks
  earlier dominion preacher Rod Parsley said it all when he said:
  &quot;It's not our job to fit in, it's our job to take over.&quot;</P>
  <P>Anyone who believes that he or she has a divine right to rule
  over even one other human being is a raving psychotic who can
  justify any atrocity in God's name. Since divine lordship is
  the systematic theology behind the Christian dominion movement,
  there is no moral or intellectual dishonesty in treating it as
  a Nazi-style totalitarian scheme in political discourse.</P>
  <P>&lt;Author's Name Edited&gt;&quot;JVG&quot;<BR>
  Darby's meme is spreading. The &quot;Dominionist&quot; label
  is being used by others.</P>
  <P>&nbsp;</P>
  <P>This comment is at: <A HREF="http://www.iidb.org/vbb/archive/index.php/t-100896.html">http://www.iidb.org/vbb/archive/index.php/t-100896.html</A></P>
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