JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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However you feel about those folks who met at the Sutton Place Hotel
in Newport Beach last weekend to “Reclaim America for Christ,” there’s
one thing we can surely agree on. They aren’t kidding anyone. What they
say is what we get.
And what they say, according to their director as quoted in the Los
Angeles Times, is that the intent of the conference was to give
grass-roots members the tools for “positively affecting the culture and
renewing the vision of the Founding Fathers.” Which is code for getting
elected or appointed, then achieving sufficient power to put in place
their agendas in any vulnerable public or political entities.
If you’re curious as to the nature of the vision and the ways in which
this group -- headed by D. James Kennedy, founder of Coral Ridge
Ministries in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. -- would like to affect our culture,
you might want to ponder the relevancy to a school board or city council
member of such conference topics as “A Plan That Could Reverse Roe vs.
Wade,” “Strategies for Stopping Partial-Birth Abortion,” “An Inside Look
at the U.N.’s Global Governance Plan” and “Ways to Turn Back the Assault
Against Christianity.”
One of their speakers was the Alabama Supreme Court justice who
refused to take down a plaque of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom
and thereby became a role model for our own Wendy Leece.
Another speaker -- in keeping with the Kennedy group’s demonization of
homosexuality -- was a young man who was allegedly converted to
heterosexuality through Reclaiming America therapy. I wish I might have
supplied a second speaker on this subject, someone very near and dear to
me who bought into the sin they laid on her and in desperation subjected
herself to this treatment with near-tragic results. Only when she finally
rejected the alleged therapy and accepted herself as both a lesbian and a
child of God did she find peace and contribute mightily to the world in
which she lives.
As for the Founding Fathers’ vision, you might want to read some
historically accredited biographies -- especially of Washington,
Jefferson, Madison and Franklin -- to determine whether their religious
and philosophical views are being accurately represented by the people
who would use them to achieve political power today.
Fred Plumer, pastor of Irvine United Church of Christ, did this
homework at considerable length and came away so concerned by both the
agenda and the growing political clout of Reclaiming America for Christ
and similar groups that he organized a conference of his own that he
called Proclaiming America for All. It met in his church Saturday, and I
went -- both because I respect Plumer and because Reclaiming America
stirred a lot of unpleasant memories for me.
Plumer set the keynote in his introduction when he said: “Too many
people see this as a conflict between Christian perspectives. It’s so
much more important than that. We’re trying to attract attention to the
real question: Should we be concerned that people highly organized and
sophisticated are talking about taking over the country while they tell
their critics that it is presumptuous of them to disagree with God. What
this is about is power, and I’m still trying to figure out how serious it
is.”
Ten speakers followed, ranging from two college professors to a pair
of Protestant pastors, with a half-dozen other speakers representing
agendas under attack by the Kennedy group in between.
Harry Schwartzbart of Americans United for Separation of Church and
State said: “We are in greater peril of a government theocracy than at
any time in our history. This is an effort to breach the wall between
church and state, and never before has such an effort achieved the
political power it has today.”
The Rev. Jerry Stinson, senior minister of the First Congregational
Church in Long Beach, said: “I’ve seen what happens when these people
dominate school boards, and I’m scared of them. It is our heritage that
no one religion will ever dominate our country, but they will do anything
they can to tear down that wall of separation.”
All of this took me back to 1959, when I moved to Orange County. An
organization called the Christian Anti-Communist Crusade was working in
lock step with the John Birch Society to gain political control over
school boards and other political bodies that seemed ripe for picking.
They used Christianity -- or rather their brand of it -- as a means to
this end.
They were successful for a time, especially in taking over school
boards. They used Anaheim’s model sex-education program as leverage to
destroy the school board there in a pogrom of lies and character
assassination that took years to mend. (If you want a more recent
example, take a look at the chaos in the current Orange Unified School
District.) This whole quasi-political movement was dragged down finally
beneath the weight of its own excesses.
But now, said the speakers at the Plumer conference, the people
attempting to use fundamentalist Christianity as a route to political
power are much smarter, much richer and much more sophisticated. This
time, they’re working from the top down as well as the bottom up, and
they have replaced communism as the devil incarnate with such issues as
homosexuality, abortion and global warming. And they aren’t making a lot
of mistakes.
Plumer concluded his conference by saying: “This isn’t about zealots
or civil war between Christians with basic differences. I’m not worried
about zealots. What really worries me is voter apathy. That’s what allows
zealots to take over school boards.”
So maybe the next time a candidate who wants to “Reclaim America for
Christ” appears on a ballot, we should find out exactly what that means.
And then vote.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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