Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Politics

The Company He Keeps

Bush's speech at Bob Jones University will haunt him

By John Leo
Posted 2/27/00

George W. Bush seems to think that the controversy over his speech at Bob Jones University will fade in coming weeks. But it won't. As campaigning heats up in states with large numbers of politically active minorities and Roman Catholics, the speech will come up again and again. If he gets the Republican nomination, he will hear about it from Al Gore right up to Election Day. Nothing in Bush's February 2 talk was dishonorable or offensive. It was a standard stump speech calling for standards and discipline in public schools, respecting and rebuilding the military, and returning dignity and honor to the White House. But he spoke under the auspices of a university that forbids interracial dating and has historically been committed to the notion that the Bible calls for the separation of the races. Bush likes to point out that his brother Jeb, the governor of Florida, is married to a Mexican-American woman. What he doesn't say is that if Jeb and Columba Bush had attended Bob Jones University, they probably wouldn't have been allowed to date. In the 1960s, Mrs. Bush might not have been allowed to attend.

The Bob Jones tradition has managed to combine negative attitudes toward nonwhites with negative attitudes toward nonfundamentalist Christians, Catholics mostly, but members of some other Protestant denominations as well. Bob Jones Sr., founder of the university, was a fanatic anti-Catholic, active in the movement to defeat Al Smith, the Catholic Democratic nominee for president in 1928. Bob Jones Jr., son of the founder, was a close friend and ally of Ian Paisley, the rabidly anti-Catholic leader of Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party. In 1966, two days after Paisley was released from prison, Jones traveled to Northern Ireland to give Paisley an honorary degree from Bob Jones University. (Others who received Bob Jones honorary degrees were George Wallace, Strom Thurmond, and Lester Maddox.)

Paisley ideology. Paisley thinks the Catholic Church is an instrument of the devil and "the mother of all harlots." "Popery is contrary to Christ's gospel," he said in one sermon. "It is the Antichrist. We ought to pray against it." He refers to the pope as "the great fornicator." In their 1986 book Paisley, Irish journalists Ed Moloney and Andy Pollak wrote that Paisley and Bob Jones Jr., "share a profound hostility, bordering on paranoia, toward any religious group, however evangelical, which has any time for ideas deemed by them not to be based on the infallible Bible. . . . From [Jones] Paisley learned about the extraordinary variety of deviations from true American Protestantism: dubious Southern Baptists, neo-evangelicals like Billy Graham (already a favorite Paisley target), followers of 'neo-orthodoxy,' 'pseudo fundamentalists,' false revivalists, and the 'new Pentecostalists' of the charismatic movement--a particular anathema to Jones. . . . [Jones] was also an apologist for slavery, arguing that the average black worker on a plantation in the Deep South before the American Civil War was better off than the average black unemployed man in America's urban slums in the late 20th century."

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