Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Nation & World

God and Country by Dan Gilgoff

How Paul Weyrich Founded the Christian Right

December 18, 2008 04:15 PM ET | Dan Gilgoff | Permanent Link | Print

By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

Who's the person most responsible for bringing evangelicals—who had retreated from public life in America after the public relations disaster of 1925's Scopes Monkey Trial—back into politics? Here's a hint: he cofounded the Moral Majority.

No, it isn't Jerry Falwell.

It's Paul Weyrich, the powerful but low-profile conservative activist who died this morning. Weyrich was the behind-the-scenes architect of Falwell's very public organization, which began a legacy of evangelical political activism that has since been taken up by the likes of the Christian Coalition and Focus on the Family.

Weyrich was a visionary. Back in 1962, when the Supreme Court handed down a ruling that banned state-sponsored school prayer, there was no Christian right to protest. Weyrich, then a 19-year-old Republican activist and program director for a Kenosha, Wis., radio station, called the Wisconsin Republican Party and insisted it denounce the decision.

The party chairman demurred, saying that "businesspeople would think it was strange that we are getting involved in a religious issue."

"That was the moment I said to myself, 'By golly, this is just off the track,' " Weyrich told me in a 2006 interview. " 'I'm going to see to it that one day the party will listen to these kinds of issues,' and that really became my mission in life."

There was only one problem. Before Weyrich could get the GOP to start listening to the political concerns of evangelical and fundamentalist Christians, he needed to get religious conservatives to speak up. "Christian conservatives of the evangelical and fundamentalist type had been told for years—ever since the Scopes trial—that they should not be involved in politics," Weyrich told me. "That it was a sin to be involved in politics."

Or at least that was the perception of most evangelical pastors. They were convinced their flocks would resent them if they got political. It wasn't until more than a decade and a half later, in 1979, that Weyrich developed a plan to prove them wrong. He raised money to conduct a national poll asking churchgoers if they'd tolerate their pastors getting political—and whether they'd give money to faith-based political organizations on top of their weekly church contributions.

When the poll results came back, Weyrich smiled. "Among evangelicals and fundamentalists," he told me in 2006, "not only did they want their leaders involved in public policy, they were clamoring to have their leaders involved in public policy. And moreover, they said, 'Yes—we will financially support both organizations.' "

But Weyrich, who'd founded the Heritage Foundation earlier in that decade, knew he needed a figure who could tap into the masses of theologically conservative evangelicals and fundamentalists across the country. Weyrich himself couldn't do it—he'd been raised a Roman Catholic and had since joined the orthodox Eastern Catholic Church. And he wasn't a preacher.

But Weyrich had recently been introduced to a Virginia preacher who hosted a popular weekly TV show and who'd founded a bible college. His name was Jerry Falwell.

Weyrich drove to Lynchburg, Va., and told Falwell that there were tens of millions of conservative evangelicals, fundamentalists, Catholics, Mormons, even mainline Protestants, who could form a mighty voting block by putting their theological differences aside to pursue common political goals. It was a radical concept that Falwell would later call "cobelligerency."

"I said, 'Out there is what you might call the moral majority,' " Weyrich said, remembering his 1979 sit-down with Falwell. "And Falwell turned to his guy and said, 'If we get involved, that's the name of the organization.' "

And so, the first major Christian right organization was born, helping fuel a long Republican ascent that is just ending now.

How could Weyrich have guessed then that 30 years later, a Democratic president-elect would be tapping into that same religious movement, inviting one of its leading lights—Rick Warren—to give the invocation at his inauguration?

Tags: religion | Christianity

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Reader Comments

Extension of mass mail political action hurt the USA

Weyrich & Viguerie began subverting "the voice of the people" when their mass mail corporation began telling Far Right voters to flood offices of lawmakers with phone calls and letters. They knew that in ordinary times, public officials believed that if they got one protest letter, there must be 150 people who would vote the same way but did not bother to write or phone. So when all this stuff came into them, naive or collusive public officials told news outlets they were overwhelmed, and they would vote this or that way. It was a sneaky way to negate the true "will of the people." Now that public officials have Email addresses, people can quickly send in opinions without being "alerted." It was a great moneymaking project for those two Catholics. Their tithes, if ten per cent of income, must have helped their church a lot.

Weyrich was ardent papal subject, subversive to USA

To hide the Vatican source of "The Moral Majority," Catholics Weyrich and Richard Viguerie (sp?) let Falwell be its president. Falwell then swiped Protestant Evangelical assets and let them be used to advance civil enforcement of the Code of Canon Law. It bans abortion, suicide, and attempted self-destruction. All of those put an end to tithing. Catholic Phyllis Schlafly called herself "The Sweetheart of the Moral Majority." I have a copy of her 1980's "Eagle Forum Insider Newsletter." She said "If the ERA becomes law, tax exemption will be removed from churches that don't ordain women." She's personally to blame for making women take lower pay than men for doing the same work. Falwell, by aiding the pope, betrayed Protestants with his interfaith "ecumenism." How did it happen that five Supreme Court justices are papal subjects? Power of appointment. Catholic Jeb Bush, Florida governor, helped cheat Bush into the presidency, with power of appointment.

From another Blog....

This is great.

"For a man who believed so hard that he was doing the will of god, it turns out that his god wasn’t so grateful for all his hard work. In 1996, Weyrich suffered from a major spinal injury from which he never recovered. From 2001 on, he was bound to a wheelchair. Complications from a fall led to the amputation of his legs in 2005, and he was in constant pain from his spine up until his death. With that in mind, I kind of wish he was still alive just so he could have suffered for just a little bit longer. His selfish actions have led to the continuing hate and discrimination that has divided this country and dominated our broken political system since the Regan administration, and as men like Falwell and Weyrich start dying off, we can begin to assess the damage done by the conservative Christian movement and learn from our mistakes as a nation. Good bye, Paul, and good riddance. I hope the afterlife is nothing like you expected it to be, and I hope your “soul” remains as restless as the citizens of this nation have been ever since your malevolent ideology hijacked our government and way of life.

And for those who thought that was all a bit too harsh, I guess I shouldn’t mention that I wouldn’t mind dancing on his grave… I have the legs to do so, after all. Jesus must love me more."

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Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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