Showing posts sorted by relevance for query PAT ROBERTSON. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query PAT ROBERTSON. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, June 15, 2023


Dabbling in antisemitism, Pat Robertson portrayed himself as a friend to certain kinds of Jews

The televangelist, who has died at 93, once likened non-Christians to ‘termites’

Pat Robertson, the televangelist who died June 8 at age 93, could at times appear to cherish Jewish traditions. His 700 Club program, a chat show expounding right-wing Christian ideology, regularly organized Rosh Hashanah celebrations because, as Robertson claimed during one broadcast, “We identify with our dear friends in the Jewish community and Israel.”

Yet he was also capable of comments like this, made during a 2014 program in which Robertson hosted the Orthodox rabbi Daniel Lapin and claimed: “What is it about Jewish people that make them prosper financially? You almost never find Jews tinkering with their cars on the weekends or mowing their lawns.”

To which Rabbi Lapin concurred that he paid others to tend his car and lawn. Robertson added that the rabbi was busy “polishing diamonds, not fixing cars.”

When this exchange was reported in the media, Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN) issued a press release attempting to defuse the exchange as a mere “jovial back-and-forth” featuring “good-natured ribbing” by Robertson, rather than a “slur on the Jewish people.”

Yet Robertson’s long and lucrative career was littered with comparable misunderstandings, in part because his attraction to Jews and Israel was complicated by a need to convert Jews to Christianity, through associations with groups like Jews for Jesus.

This imperative was evident even in his less blatant comments about Jews. Robertson began a televised presentation around 2004, “Why Evangelical Christians Support Israel” by citing an anecdote in which Queen Victoria supposedly asked her Jewish prime minister, Benjamin Disraeli, for evidence of the existence of God. Disraeli’s reply: “The Jew, your majesty.”

Although doubtless intended as a tribute to the resilience of Jewish survival, the specious tale, as theologians Aron Engberg and Stephen Haynes have explained, has been used about a variety of European leaders in antisemitic, as well as philosemitic, contexts.

As Engberg suggests, the fictional story casts Jews as a species apart from the rest of humanity, seen with hatred and love, what the Polish Jewish literary critic Artur Sandauer termed allosemitism.

Sandauer’s compatriot, the sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, found the word allosemitism useful because it captured the ambivalence of multiple messaging. Pat Robertson specialized in this type of rhetoric.

Pat Robertson stumps for Donald Trump at Regent University, Oct. 22, 2016, in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Photo by Getty Images

Despite his loud support for Israel as a place to be reclaimed by Christians, in 2006 Robertson reacted to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon suffering a stroke by suggesting that the illness was divine punishment for “dividing God’s land.” Sharon was seen by Robertson as making unacceptable concessions by ordering Israel’s disengagement from Gaza the previous year.

On the same broadcast, Robertson also diagnosed the 1995 assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin as God’s punishment for Rabin’s efforts to achieve peace by giving land to the Palestinians. Abraham Foxman, then-director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), called Robertson’s comments “un-Christian and a perversion of religion. Unlike Robertson, [Jews] don’t see God as cruel and vengeful.”

A 1994 ADL report on the religious right’s attempts to make America an entirely Christian nation so irked Robertson that he wrote to Foxman:

“It is painfully obvious that you are a deeply troubled individual who has somewhere along the way lost your Judaic roots. Please know, Abe, that I will pray earnestly that you may indeed meet personally the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.”

To which Foxman retorted:

“It’s just like you to decide for others what their spiritual needs are or should be. I have met my God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and do not need your guidance, prayers or intervention.”

Indeed, it was like Robertson to tell Israelis what to do in their own country, or what Jews should do to be acceptable in his eyes. Robertson’s 1991 book The New World Order repeated antisemitic conspiracy theories about the Jewish financiers Paul Warburg, Jacob Schiff and the Rothschild family. He also underlined that “Communism was the brainchild of German-Jewish intellectuals.”

In 1995, responding to ongoing controversy, Robertson told The New York Times that it was all a misunderstanding. Claiming that a reporter from Haaretz had once told him, “You’re more Israeli than Menachem Begin,” Robertson noted that he opposed American Jews who “have embraced the New Deal and the Fair Deal and incorporated them into Judaism,” adding: “And to me, they’re not a part of Judaism.”

For Robertson’s brand of approved right-wing Jews, toeing the line offered potential rewards. During a run for the presidency in 1988, as he later recalled in The New World Order, he was surprised that his promise to accept only Christians and Jews in government service offended some people. He was certain that “those who believe in Christian values are better qualified to govern America than Hindus and Muslims.”

On a 700 Club broadcast, Robertson had specified: “Individual Christians are the only ones really — and Jewish people, those who trust the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob — are the only ones that are qualified to have the reign, because hopefully, they will be governed by God and submitted to him.”

Along these lines, in a 1986 interview with New York Magazine, Robertson likened non-Christians to “termites” who destroy “institutions that have been built by Christians,” before concluding with an apocalyptic warning: “The time has arrived for a godly fumigation.” Whether Jews who failed to fit his definition of Judaism were also candidates for fumigation went unmentioned.

Small wonder that during one of Robertson’s controversies, Russell Moore, dean of the School of Theology at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, commented that Robertson had long propounded a “prosperity gospel” that he likened to an Asherah pole, mentioned repeatedly in the Hebrew Bible as a cult object related to the worship of a rival deity to Yahweh.

According to one report, at a 1980 staff meeting of the CBN, Robertson asserted that Jews were “spiritually deaf” and “spiritually blind.” The English Jewish polemicist Christopher Hitchens noted that Robertson was given to referring to The Economist magazine as “the Rothschild publication.”

Classifying Robertson among his fellow televangelists as “Chaucerian frauds, people who are simply pickpockets who prey on the gullible,” Hitchens had undisguised contempt for their “antisemitic innuendo.”

Likewise, the journalist Bill Moyers, accepting an award from the American Jewish Committee in 1995, bemoaned that the “party of Abraham Lincoln has become the parish of Pat Robertson.”

Whatever his parish featured, Robertson was far from a regular churchgoer. In 1987 he admitted to an interviewer that although nominally a member of Virginia’s Freemason Street Baptist Church, he had not attended services in years, explaining: “It is boring. I didn’t enjoy going there.”

An Esquire Magazine report in 1994 visiting a private Christian university he founded in 1977, Christian Broadcasting Network University, later renamed Regent University, expressed surprise that no church had been included on the extensive campus. Only in 2013 did Robertson’s university add a chapel, as if in an afterthought.

So in evaluating Robertson’s troubled rapport with Jews and Jewish tradition, it may be useful to consider that perhaps his legacy really is primarily about political clout and money-making, with spirituality merely a “boring” detail.

Saturday, May 02, 2020

THE MAN ON THE TV IS SAYING BAD THINGS AGAIN

TV Preacher Pat Robertson Blames Gay Marriage, Abortion for COVID-19: “God Holds Us Guilty”

Pat Robertson is leading the pack in blaming LGBTQ folks for COVID-19.
EVANGELICALS ARE NOT CHRISTIANS!

THEY ALLOW THEMSELVES TO BE POSSESSED
AND CLAIM THEY ARE TALKING TO GOD

ITS CTHULHU YOU IDIOTS!

Dr. CLARK ASH-TON, MISKATONIC UNIVERSITY

(TMU) — Since the coronavirus pandemic began ripping through the United States, causing major human suffering and contributing to spiraling economic distress, certain extremist members of the Christian right have sought to blame the LGBTQ community for the COVID-19.

And sure enough, when gay people are being scapegoated by the evangelical religious right, Christian media mogul Pat Robertson will be there hoping to lead the pack in blaming LGBTQ folks for COVID-19.

In an episode this week of his long-running series, “The 700 Club,” Robertson suggested that God won’t put a stop to the pandemic until people “turn from their wicked ways,” a reference to the alleged sins of homosexuality and other supposedly “terrible things.”

In a clip captured by watchdog group Media Matters for America, the 90-year-old televangelist is asked by a caller:

“How can God heal our land and forgive the sins when abortion and same-sex marriage are laws and many people are anti-Israel. Doesn’t this prevent his healing and forgiveness?”

Unsurprisingly, Robertson agreed with the caller’s recitation of Christian right talking points. He responded:

“You know, I think you put your finger on something very important.

“We are not turning when we have done terrible things. We have broken the covenant that God made with mankind. We have violated his covenant.

“We have taken the life of the innocent, slaughtered them by the tens of millions. Children made in the image of God … I mean, we’ve allowed this terrible plague to spread throughout our society.”

Concluding, he said:

“And it’s a small wonder God would hold us guilty. But the answer is, you know, you confess your sins and forsake them. Then he heals the land. It’s not before. You are right.”

Robertson’s “700 Club” has been airing since 1966, and has long been an outlet where hardcore Christian evangelicals can propagate far-right perspectives on social issues ranging from same-sex marriage to foreign policy, immigration enforcement, reproductive rights, Islam, and feminism.

On Thursday, the flagship program of the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN) featured the controversial Ret. Lt. Gen. Jerry Boykin speaking about society’s alleged “war against men.”

An estimated 650,000 U.S. households tune into “The 700 Club” every day, according to CBN, while the network itself has close ties to the Trump administration and frequently features White House officials as guests.

Rights advocates and LGBTQ activists quickly denounced Robertson’s statements as a homophobic distortion of the Christian gospel.

In a statement, Michael Vazquez, director of the Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s religion and faith program, said:


“Pat Robertson is once again using tragedy to advance anti-LGBTQ rhetoric that will continue to isolate and harm the LGBTQ community.”

“Jesus never said that being LGBTQ is a sin, and in no way does the Bible correlate the LGBTQ community to natural disasters or other global events and pandemics, including COVID-19. The Bible does, however, give clear instruction to those who adhere to it to ‘do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with God.’

“At the core of the Christian faith is an ethic of love and justice, and what Robertson is advocating for is an ethic of hate and violence. Christians who continue to use the LGBTQ community, and other marginalized populations, as scapegoats for tragedy betray their God-given duty to be people of love and inclusion, and doers of mercy and justice.”

Robertson isn’t the first evangelical Christian in the U.S. to blame the so-called “sins” of the American people for the massive health crisis that first erupted in Hubei Province, China, before sweeping across the globe.

Last month, Ralph Drollinger—the minister who leads the weekly Bible study group for President Donald Trump’s cabinet—suggested that China, LGBTQ people, environmentalists, and people with “depraved minds” were responsible for God’s judgment being visited upon us in the form of the novel coronavirus.
Prosperity preacher Kenneth Copeland, who heads the Kenneth Copeland Ministries megachurch, has also described the coronavirus as a “very weak strain of flu” while, nevertheless, claiming that detractors of President Trump have “opened the door” for the virus through their alleged “displays of hate” against him.

Meanwhile, Christian church leaders such as Pastor Tony Spell of Life Tabernacle Church in Baton Rouge, Lousiana and Tampa, Florida-based pastor Rodney Howard-Browne have continued holding services in spite of warnings from authorities and health officials that defying physical distancing guidelines could lead to the exponential spread of the deadly disease.


By Elias Marat | Creative Commons | TheMindUnleashed.com

Friday, January 06, 2006

Pat Robertson Curses Again

The Man Who Would Be 666

Robertson suggests God smote Sharon

A tip o the blog to Green Knight who posted this story,
with a very interesting link to Pat Robertsons Investment scheme in Israel; Gods Fantasyland and Wonder Park.

It appears that after calling for the assassination of Hugo Chavez, Pat Robertson is saying that Ariel Sharon got his just desserts.

US Christian broadcaster says Sharon's stroke divine retribution

But here he is at the point of death. He was dividing God's land, and I would say woe unto any prime minister of Israel who takes a similar course to appease the EU, the United Nations or United States of America. God said, "This land belongs to me, you better leave it alone."


And its not just Secularists, Libertarians and the Left Wing that is outraged over Robertson. The Conservative blog; Rightwing Nuthouse says;
The modern, secular world no longer has much tolerance for people who claim to talk to God (or, at least have a direct line to what God is saying). They are considered kooks and crazies. If they stand on a street corner in ragged clothes with a sign saying “The End Is Near” we tend to feel pity. But when they go on television dressed in $1,000 suits and claim that illness is divine retribution for being disobedient of God, we are rightly outraged

Robertson is now saying that the biblical G*D of Israel , Yod He Vau He, Jehova, Yaweh, has smote Ariel Sharon, and good on him for doing it. Whoa, there laddie get a grip on yourself. Look in the Mirror and listen to the words coming out of yer mouth.

And it ain't the word of the Lord G*D but of that lil ol devil Pat Robertson the conspiracy monger as
Theologian, the man who would be President of them thar United States of America.

Robertson is engaging in that old black magick of the early Catholic Church. It's called the death liturgy and for a few coins would be said by a priest during mass to curse one's enemies. It is the origin of the Black Mass.
(See H.T. F. Rhodes, The Black Mass, one of the more definitive and objective books on the subject though now sadly out of print. Rhodes was a Forensic Criminologist.). The Catholic Death Mass or Black Mass, Misae Morte, went out of fashion around the late thirteenth century but has reappeared amongst the penatacostal based evangelicals like Robertson. Its known as cursing, and curse magick. That old hoodoo, good old black magick.

Of course Pat is in good company when it comes to the Lord of Israel, G*D who roared with the voice of thunder with smoke and ash smouldering from his nostrils when he called down the death of his enemies and the enemies of the Isrealites. He literally appears in Psalm's as if he were that other guy, you know the one with the horns and tail......

Psalm 18

In my distress I called on Yahweh,
and cried to my God.
He heard my voice out of his temple.
My cry before him came into his ears.
18:7 Then the earth shook and trembled.
The foundations also of the mountains quaked and were shaken,
because he was angry.
18:8 Smoke went out of his nostrils.
Consuming fire came out of his mouth.
Coals were kindled by it.
18:9 He bowed the heavens also, and came down.
Thick darkness was under his feet.
18:10 He rode on a cherub, and flew.
Yes, he soared on the wings of the wind.
18:11 He made darkness his hiding place, his pavilion around him,
darkness of waters, thick clouds of the skies.
18:12 At the brightness before him his thick clouds passed,
hailstones and coals of fire.
18:13 Yahweh also thundered in the sky.
The Most High uttered his voice:
hailstones and coals of fire.
18:14 He sent out his arrows, and scattered them;
Yes, great lightning bolts, and routed them.
18:15 Then the channels of waters appeared.
The foundations of the world were laid bare at your rebuke, Yahweh,
at the blast of the breath of your nostrils.


But Pat is supposed to be a preacher of Jesus the pacifist, a preacher of the New Testament. Istead he calls for assassinations and curses leaders of Israel for his own investment profit. He not only is groping back to the old testament G*D but he sure does sound like Anton LeVay.

Of the Nine Satanic Statements:

5. Satan represents vengeance, instead of turning the other cheek!1

Now this makes a lot of sense since Pat is a preacher of the old testament G*D.
Pat wants to be G*D's King on Earth, the Caesar of the New Millineum, the President of the Untied States of Armageddon hastening the last days of the Earth. Scary eh.

So now you have met the Anti-Christ and he is smiling in his Armani suits and beaming his vision of the apocalypse around the world on his tax free church of the TV waves CBN.

Put ol blue eyes on vitrola and sing along with his rendition of That Old Black Magic. Cause that's what Preacher Pat is all about.

In keeping with this, Pat's fondest wish is to witness the Tribulation -- the bloody seven-year cataclysm through which God will restore His kingdom on Earth. It's going to be absolutely spectacular. The Lord will finally manifest His divine wrath against the Sodomites, the Feminists, the Secularists, along with all the other blasphemers. But that just can't happen until everything's exactly right. Jesus is waiting for us to restore some of America's godliness. Once that happens, He can get this Armageddon thing started and then it's party time. Until then, we're stuck in a holding pattern for the duration.

Banishing sinfulness and immorality from the United States is going to be no small task. But once we're done, things are going to be a lot different around here. We'll have a theocracy and all that entails: book burnings, compulsory religious services, forced conversions. Think Afghanistan under the Taliban regime, except without the ridiculous wardrobe. Plus, it will be based on the actual word of God, instead of some pseudo-religious cult.

In 1980, Pat announced that the Tribulation would begin in "the Fall of 1982." Unfortunately, this simply did not happen. In his 1990 book The New Millennium, Robertson proposed that the Tribulation would begin on April 29, 2000. Again, no dice. Things like that can be very disappointing.





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Friday, June 09, 2023

Pat Robertson, who made Christian right a political force, IN U$A dead at 93





Paul HANDLEY
Thu, June 8, 2023 

Pat Robertson, the soft-spoken televangelist who helped make America's Christians a powerful political force while demonizing liberals, feminists and gays as sinners, died Thursday at the age of 93, his organization announced.

The longtime host of "The 700 Club" on his huge Christian Broadcasting Network and one-time presidential candidate died at his home in Virginia Beach, according to a network statement.

Robertson promoted "a worldview that believes in the inerrancy of the Bible," CBN said.

"Today, his influence and legacy crisscross interests and industries that have broken barriers for countless Christian leaders and laypeople."

Broadcasting "The 700 Club" daily since 1966, the avuncular Robertson promoted a literal belief in "end of times" prophecies of the Old Testament Book of Ezekiel that forecast the destruction of the world to become a Christian paradise.

In practice, he advocated for an extremely conservative Christianity focused on "traditional" families and a country founded on the Bible, rejecting the longstanding US principle of separation of church and state.

He defined the world as riven by an epochal fight between Islam and Christianity, and meanwhile spearheaded US Christian support for Israel as the land of the "chosen" Jewish people.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu once called Robertson "a tremendous friend of Israel and a tremendous friend of mine."

But he also drew loathing from progressives with his condemnations of feminism and LQBTQ culture as destroying America.

His powerful support in 2016 for Donald Trump -- arguably helping seal Trump's presidential victory -- further widened the cultural chasm dividing the country.

- Marine, lawyer, minister -

Robertson was born on March 22, 1930 in Lexington, Virginia, son of a conservative Democratic member of the US House of Representatives and then the Senate for 34 years.

After graduating from Virginia's Washington and Lee University, in 1948 he joined the US Marines, serving in Korea.

He then graduated from Yale Law School, was ordained a Baptist minister, and in short order launched in 1961 what became the massive CBN empire from a small television station in Tidewater Virginia.

After CBN's early financial struggles, he named "The 700 Club" for an early core of 70 supporters who pledged $10 each month.

The program mixed news, spiritual and lifestyle stories along with interviews of public figures, and became a hit especially in rural communities across the country.

That made it a mainstream stop for political candidates courting Christian voters: guests included Republican Ronald Reagan and Democrat Jimmy Carter.

Robertson expanded into other media business, launching what became the popular, conservative "Family Channel" on cable television, and the influential Christian-based Regent University in Virginia Beach.



- Push into politics -


In 1987, he launched the Christian Coalition, seeking to bring together different Christian denominations as a force for the conservative values he espoused.

Ever since, the organization has been at the forefront of the US culture wars, pressuring Congress and the White House on moral and religious issues such as abortion and the separation of church and state.

In 1990, he launched the American Center for Law and Justice, a legal lobby to advance Christian religious rights against secularism in the courts.

Robertson himself sought political office, running unsuccessfully in the Republican presidential primary in 1988.

But what he built had a lasting impact: a conservative Christian voter bloc instrumental in bringing Trump to power and still exercising enormous influence over the Republican Party.

"He shattered the stained glass window," TD Jakes, a Dallas pastor said in CBN's statement. "People of faith were taken seriously beyond the church house and into the White House."

- Controversies -


But there were controversies along the way.

He courted Democratic Republic of the Congo dictator Mobutu Sese Seko and Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe, hoping to convert their countries to Christian states where gay people were banned -- while investing in diamond mining in a deal with Mobutu.

In 2001, as America reeled from the September 11 attacks, Robertson endorsed the view that tolerance for lesbians, gays and doctors carrying out abortions had drawn God's wrath on the country.

In 2005, he called for the United States to assassinate then Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez. "It's a whole lot cheaper than starting a war," he quipped on "The 700 Club."

And last year, he said Russian President Vladimir Putin was "compelled by God" to attack Ukraine, because it was predicted in the Book of Ezekiel as a step toward the end of times.

Washington's political establishment was remarkably quiet Thursday in response to Robertson's death.

Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor, said Robertson "touched so many lives and changed so many hearts."

"He stood for America -- and more importantly, for truth and faith," she said.

But on the left, there was little sympathy.

"Robertson's death doesn't mean we must overlook his long record of extremist rhetoric," wrote Rob Boston of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

"Robertson spent most of his time spreading hate, conspiracy theories and lies," he said.



Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Pat Robertson Bev Oda

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Pat Robertson Anti-Christ


In good old liberal Vermont a local radio DJ has come up with a comic book that declares Evangelical preacher, founder of CBR and the 700 Club Pat Robertson is the Anti-Christ. Not the Great Beast, that was Crowley. Just the good old Anti-Christ. And just in time for Easter.

Of course like President Bush, Robertson says he talks to God and God talks to him. But we all know now as
Jesus told Judas that God is Ialdabaoth , the lesser diety, the Satan of the world. And Pat Robertson is one of his messangers. Bush is the other.

My articles on Robertson

Also see my article:
Bush the satanist

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Saturday, March 12, 2022

Russia-Ukraine war: Some pastors wonder about “end of days”

By DAVID CRARY
THE CONVERSATION

1 of 3
Ukrainians cross an improvised path under a destroyed bridge while fleeing Irpin, in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 8, 2022. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has prompted some of America’s most prominent evangelical leaders to raise a provocative question — asking if the world is now in the biblically prophesied “end of days” that might culminate with the apocalypse and the second coming of Christ.

There’s no consensus on the answer, nor on any possible timetable.

Megachurch pastor Robert Jeffress, addressing his congregation at First Baptist Dallas, said many Christians are wondering, in the face of carnage in Ukraine, “Why does God permit evil like this to continue? …. Are we near Armageddon and the end of the world?”

“We are living in the last days,” Jeffress said, “We’ve been living in the last days for the last 2000 years. We don’t know, is this the end? Is this the beginning of the end, or the end of the beginning?”

The curators of raptureready.com -- which shares commentary about “end of days” prophesies – suggest things could move quickly. Their “Rapture Index,” -- on which any reading above 160 means “Fasten your seatbelts” -- was raised this week to 187, close to its record high of 189 in 2016.

One of the most detailed alerts came from televangelist Pat Robertson, who came out of retirement on Feb. 28 to assert on “The 700 Club” that Russian President Vladimir Putin was “compelled by God” to invade Ukraine as a prelude to an eventual climactic battle in Israel. Robertson said verses of the Old Testament Book of Ezekiel support this scenario.

“You can say, well, Putin’s out of his mind. Yes, maybe so,” Robertson said. “But at the same time, he’s being compelled by God. He went into the Ukraine, but that wasn’t his goal. His goal was to move against Israel, ultimately.”

“It’s all there,” added Robertson, referring to Ezekiel. “And God is getting ready to do something amazing and that will be fulfilled.”

Also evoking Ezekiel – and a possible attack on Israel -- was Greg Laurie, senior pastor at a California megachurch whose books and radio programs have a wide following.

“I believe we’re living in the last days. I believe Christ could come back at any moment,” Laurie said in a video posted on YouTube.

Citing the war in Ukraine and the COVID-19 pandemic, he said biblical prophesies “are being fulfilled in our lifetime.”

“We are seeing more things happen in real time, closer together, as the scriptures said they would be,” Laurie said. “So what should we do? We should look up. We should remember that God is in control.”

Predictions of an imminent “end of days” have surfaced with regularity over the centuries. Pat Robertson, for example, has inaccurately predicted apocalyptic events on previous occasions.

“One of the characteristics of apocalyptic thinking is that the most recent crisis is surely the worst — this is the one that is going to trip the end times calendar,” said Dartmouth College history professor Randall Balmer.

“Now, admittedly, there may be some evidence for that, especially with Putin mumbling about nuclear weapons,” Balmer added via email. “But I also remember the urgency of the Six Day War and George H. W. Bush’s Persian Gulf War and, of course, 9/11.”

The suggestion that God is somehow using the Russia-Ukraine war to fulfill biblical prophesies troubles some Christian scholars, such as the Rev. Rodney Kennedy, a Baptist pastor in Schenectady, New York, and author of numerous books.

“This evangelical insistence of involving the sovereignty of God in the evil of Putin borders on the absurd,” Kennedy wrote recently in Baptist News.

“Rapture believers fail to understand that if they assist in bringing about world war, there will be no Superman Jesus appearing to ‘snatch’ all true believers into the safety of the clouds,” Kennedy wrote. “The rapture is an illusion; the rupture caused by Putin is a deadly reality.”

Russell Moore, public theologian at the evangelical magazine Christianity Today, said it’s wrong to try to connect world events to end-times prophecy, noting that Jesus himself said his second coming would be unexpected and unconnected with “wars and rumors of wars.”

“It’s not consistent with the Bible and it’s harmful to the witness of the church,” said Moore, noting that the world has outlived many episodes of end-times speculation.

Moore said most Christians he’s talked with are more concerned about Ukraine’s well-being.

“I’m surprised at how little I am finding the idea that these events are direct biblical prophecy,” he said. “I’m just not seeing that in the pews.”

That’s a change from the recent past, he noted, when many evangelicals tried to interpret world events as a road map to the apocalypse – driving sales for hugely successful authors Tim LaHaye (“Left Behind”) and Hal Lindsey (“The Late Great Planet Earth”).

“It’s very rare for me to find someone under the age of 50” preoccupied with such views today, Moore said.

Jeffress said members of his congregation in Dallas are “very troubled by the atrocities being committed against the Ukrainian people and think we should push back forcefully against Putin’s aggression.”

“However, they are not headed toward their bunkers and preparing for Armageddon — yet,” Jeffress said via email. “Most of our members understand that while the Bible prophesies the end of the world and return of Christ one day, no one has a clue when that day will be.”

Laurie, in a written reply to questions from The Associated Press, said his congregation at Harvest Christian Fellowship “isn’t fixated on the ‘end times.’”

“My message for Christians during this time and really all people in general is don’t panic, but pray,” Laurie advised. “Live every day like it may be your last.”

The war in Ukraine has heightened anxieties for some members of Mercy Hill Chapel, said Oleh Zhakunets, lead pastor of the small Southern Baptist church that holds services in Ukrainian and English in Parma, Ohio, a Cleveland suburb.

Several members have close relatives in Ukraine – some in more dangerous zones in eastern Ukraine and others who are welcoming refugees in the west, he said.

“It’s a bag of mixed feelings,” said Zhakunets, citing their worries for loved ones and their hope that God is in control.

Congregation members believe in biblical passages detailing signs of Jesus’ return, he said, but they don’t see Russia’s invasion as fulfilling a specific prophecy.

“A lot of that is just guesswork,” Zhakunets said. “We have hope that he’s coming, but in terms of specifics, we’re not going to give that kind of what we see as a false hope.”

___

Associated Press reporters Peter Smith, Holly Meyer and Deepa Bharath contributed to this report.

___

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.


Friday, May 31, 2024

GNOSTIC    ANTINOMIANISM 


‘Bad Faith’ sounds the alarm on the past and future of Christian nationalism

Filmmakers Stephen Ujlaki and Chris Jones trace the origins of Christian nationalism from the Ku Klux Klan to the election of Donald Trump.


In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo, a man holds a Bible as supporters of Donald Trump gather outside the Capitol in Washington. The Christian imagery and rhetoric on view during the Capitol insurrection sparked renewed debate about the societal effects of melding Christian faith with an exclusionary breed of nationalism. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)


May 30, 2024
By Jim McDermott

(RNS) — In 1980, conservative political operative Paul Weyrich approached evangelical Christian leaders Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson with a proposal: If they would mobilize their believers to begin voting Republican, he would help them in their quest to roll back many of the civil rights protections they chafed against. Over the next 40 years, Weyrich and his Council for National Policy would guide these groups to greater and greater political success while slowly radicalizing them into a potent force — the Moral Majority — whose particular ideas of Christianity and Christian values drove nearly all their voting decisions.

Weyrich was not subtle in his motivations for a reigning political class, telling a group of evangelical leaders in 1980 that “our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down.”

In “Bad Faith: Christian Nationalism’s Unholy War on Democracy,” filmmakers Stephen Ujlaki and Chris Jones trace the origins of Christian nationalism from the Ku Klux Klan in the 19th century through the creation of the Moral Majority, the sudden rise of the tea party and the election of Donald Trump. What they uncover is an essential aspect of our current political situation, one that puts evangelical Christianity in new light.

Where many liberals have long dismissed evangelical Christians and their fundamentalist beliefs as ridiculous and absurd, Ujlaki and Brown work to understand them on their own terms — and discover not hypocrisy but a deeply consistent, radically dualistic theology that, for many, is worth defending, even to the point of violence.

Religion News Service spoke with Ujlaki by phone in Los Angeles about the making of “Bad Faith” and the story it tells of how a large swath of religious voters came to believe that President Joe Biden is in league with the devil while Trump is essential to the spiritual salvation of America. The film is now available for streaming on Amazon Prime, YouTube, Tubi and other platforms.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

What initially made you want to tell this story?

When Trump got elected, I was shocked. Nobody thought he had a chance. He was obviously a joke. It was never going to happen. When he got elected, I realized I didn’t really know anything about what was going on. I was in a bubble.



Stephen Ujlaki. (Photo by Jon Rou/courtesy of Loyola Marymount University)

More than anything, my wanting to make the film was just to find out: How did he do it, how did he win, and who were the Christian evangelicals (who supported him)? But then I discovered all of this plotting, all of these deals, and the fact that those behind them were anti-democratic from the beginning.

The heart of the film is the story of Paul Weyrich and the deal he made with evangelical Christian leaders to use abortion to motivate their people to begin to vote for Republicans. How did that all work?

There were a couple of congressional elections in which the people who were running for office were very anti-abortion. And Weyrich, who had been a Catholic, found that they were successful campaigns, more so than they should have been. Abortion was very successful in ringing people’s bell.

Evangelicals had nothing against abortion. Frankly, they thought it was a good way to keep the Black population down. The Southern Baptist Convention applauded Roe v. Wade in 1973. But Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson agreed to start telling people this is bad, in return for which they were going to get help turning back all the progressive things they hated that the Supreme Court had done and that Lyndon Johnson had done. The Great Society, all of those progressive things that gave a lot of us hope in the 1960s and ’70s were anathema to them, and they were determined to turn that back. So they would faithfully help elect Republicans, and they would get rewarded.

It (abortion) was a great way to cover the fact that they were really trying to stop integration. It’s much better to say that we’re trying to defend the rights of the unborn.
I was surprised to learn that Christian evangelicals were not always so politically engaged.

For many, many years they were completely opposed to political involvement. The public square was the devil’s playground. To convince them to get involved and to vote Republican, Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson applied the Manichaeanism of their theology. There’s a good and bad; there’s evil, and there’s God. The Republican Party is the party of God, and the Democratic Party is the party of the devil. They got that.


But this has nothing to do with theology, nothing to do with religion, nothing to do with God or with Jesus. I don’t even consider Christian nationalism as a religion. What is its ethos? What is its morality? It’s actually amoral, which is why it uses the church. The church lends it that moral, ethical authority that it doesn’t have otherwise.

Jesus is anti-democratic and God likes authoritarian governments? It’s the antithesis of anything Christian.

Would it be fair to say Christian nationalism’s goal is fascism?



“Bad Faith” poster. (Courtesy image)

Yes. It’s pure fascism. It’s pure power. They have been wanting and plotting the same thing for 40-plus years. They were incredibly adept at concealing what their motives were. You had to decode what they were saying. When they were talking about re-creating the kingdom of God on Earth, if you thought they were talking about something theological and spiritual, you would be mistaken. They were talking about replacing democracy with theocracy.

The one exception, and this to me is like the smoking gun in the film, was the Weyrich Manifesto (“The Integration of Theory and Practice,” 2001). Born of his complete frustration with the knowledge that his followers were never going to be the majority, Weyrich argued the only way they were going to create a Christian nation was to bypass democracy. They had to weaken and destroy it, creating a vacuum, which leaves room for the strongman to appear.

If you look around you at the divisiveness and the distrust of institutions that exist today in this country, you will realize how incredibly successful they have been in executing their plan. It’s been like a slow-motion revolution in a way, happening bit by bit all over the place.

And yet even so, Donald Trump seemed like such a reach for people concerned about goodness and morality.

Everything he stood for was against what they believed in. A number of people were saying they would do it but they would be holding their noses, because they didn’t really believe in it.

Then you had his spiritual adviser, a charismatic, Paula White, who had befriended Trump a year or so earlier and was his sort of secret adviser. She started the ball rolling by telling her group that Trump had become a Christian. That was one attempt to deal with the thing. But more was needed.

Then, looking in the Bible, another charismatic Christian came up with the idea that God sometimes uses pagans to accomplish good works on behalf of the Jews. King Cyrus was this horrible pagan who did all kinds of bad things, but he was very good for the Jews.
And so Trump becomes reinterpreted as, in a sense, part of salvation history?

The notion was that looking at the Bible, we see that what was really happening was God using Trump in order to redeem America and bring it back to God. And as (evangelical Christian and former Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security) Elizabeth Neumann says in the film, the notion that they could be living out the prophesies got evangelical Christians so excited they all got behind this notion of Trump as King Cyrus. That’s what God was doing. That was the answer. They figured it out.

There comes a point in the film where you interview a man who seems very thoughtful about Biden’s desire to unify the country. But then his conclusion is that it’s impossible because good and evil cannot work together.


That’s one of the scarier parts of the film. Because he seems like a reasonable, intelligent person, and yet he’s deeply convinced of this, even sad about it, not triumphant. It’s simply a fact, good cannot unify with evil.

The notion that over half the country is in fact demonic and evil, and evangelical Christians are the holy ones and should be allowed to do whatever they need to do in order to take control from the devil, it’s incredible when you think about it.

Watching the film, it certainly sounds like the leaders of the Christian nationalist movement see civil war, or something like it, as the path to power.

That’s right. That’s the only way they’re going to get it. They’re not going to get it through democracy, they’re never going to be the majority. They are going to weaken and destroy and then conquer. That’s the game plan.

It’s so hard, people aren’t willing to accept the fact there are sizable numbers of people in this country who don’t believe in democracy. And the national media doesn’t know how to deal with it. They’re constantly accommodating, normalizing, and not fulfilling what I would take to be the mandate of proper newsgathering. They call them “conservative” in The New York Times. They’re not conservative. These are seditionists, treasonous, anti-democratic.


People with this kind of liberal notion of fair and balanced think we’re not going to be over the top like them. But the thing is, one is following the rules and the other isn’t.

It’s so difficult, because you don’t want people to be so terrified that they think it’s hopeless. You don’t want to have to think “I better stay out of this.”

On the contrary, what it should show you is that you need to fight for your democracy if you want to keep it.

RNS is the recipient of an ongoing grant from the Stiefel Freethought Foundation, founded and led by Todd Stiefel, who is an executive producer of “Bad Faith.”