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| 1. A Third Party Christian Right Candidate? Not a Chance. Over the weekend, well-placed leaks to The New York Times, Salon, ABC News, and WorldNetDaily spread a story that the clandestine Council for National Policy (CNP) would rather get behind a third-party candidate than back current front-runner Rudy Giuliani. A seat of power for ideological purists, media moguls, and the Christian right’s fundraising aristocracy, the CNP can pull all the necessary strings -- for the right candidate. Back in 1999, George W. Bush sealed the deal with the Christian right with a speech which, eight years later, is still subject to the organization’s double-super-secrecy rules. The idea that the Christian right would endorse a third-party candidate is ludicrous, given its pathological need to defeat Hillary Clinton and ultimately maintain sway over the White House. Focus on the Family's James Dobson has a history of threatening defection from the GOP to endorse a third-party candidate. He has never followed through because he's savvy enough to know it would render him irrelevant. No doubt the leaks were designed to put pressure on the GOP, not to nominate Giuliani. But it was Romney's camp that really took offense. The Evangelicals for Mitt blog reacted angrily to the leak as a diss of Romney as well. "Thankfully though, and despite popular opinion, James Dobson, Tony Perkins and Richard Land don't speak for the entire evangelical movement. We're actually capable of making difficult political judgments on our own." Tell that to John McCain, who this week gave new meaning to desperation. The courting of the Christian right vote continued. Romney made nice with Pat Robertson's TV camera and later reiterated his commitment to nominating justices "in the strict constructionist mold of Roberts, Alito, Scalia, and Thomas." (No surprise given that his chief evangelical advisers have been knee-deep in every judicial nomination fight and key Supreme Court case relating to core Christian right issues for the past decade. Fred Thompson reportedly wowed the CNP with his speech last spring, but many evangelicals have since withheld judgment. Huckabee, declared the GOP's "dark horse" candidate this week by both Newt Gingrich and Bill Clinton, broke into double digits in a Newsweek poll of likely GOP caucus-goers (albeit with a large margin of error), overtaking Baptist-come-lately McCain for the first time. But Bishop Harry Jackson, whose High Impact Leadership Coalition is co-sponsoring this month's Values Voters Summit along with Dobson's Focus on the Family Action, downplayed Huckabee's ability to raise the campaign cash needed to surge ahead. While a Gallup poll showed strong support for Giuliani among Republican voters who regularly attend church, Hizzoner demonstrated why -- in addition to his positions on gay rights and abortion -- that's not translating into love from James Dobson or any other evangelical power hitters. In his interview with CBN's David Brody last week in 2. The March to World War III Continues Looks like John Hagee might be good at prophesying war after all. After the Senate passed the Kyl-Lieberman Resolution last week, Seymour Hersh reported that With Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to 3. Hagee Claims His New Book Will Reshape Christian Theology Hagee has a new book out this week, In Defense of Israel. In a promotion on his television show, Hagee claimed that the book "will expose the sins of the fathers and the vicious abuse of the Jewish people. In Defense of Israel will shape Christian theology. It scripturally proves that the Jewish people as a whole did not reject Jesus as Messiah." Wow! Does this guy love the Jews, or what? You see, according to Hagee, Jesus did not claim to be the Messiah. How then "can the Jews be blamed for rejecting what was never offered?" Eschatology or Life of Brian? 4. Evangelicals in Speaking of missing the Messiah, Jews have another chance right now! Last week marked the start of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, which many evangelical followers of biblical prophecy see as the time at which the Second Coming will take place. Evangelicals, including both Hagee and Parsley will host "Feast of Tabernacles" celebrations at their churches in the coming weeks during which they purport to celebrate the Jewish holiday as a return to their "Jewish roots," but in fact promote their prophesies of the Second Coming. (More on this in my forthcoming God's Profits.) The International Christian Embassy Jerusalem (which is not an embassy at all but a Christian Zionist group with its eye on Armageddon) held its annual Feast of Tabernacles celebration in Jerusalem this week, hosting some big American evangelical names like Jack Hayford, a pastor to influential leaders and one of the overseers of Ted Haggard's "restoration" from homosexuality. Another big name was Robert Stearns, who is also a regional director of CUFI, which has pledged not to proselytize to Jews. The Chief Rabbinate Council's Committee for the Prevention of Missionary Work in the 5. Can Evangelicals Be Swayed on Global Warming? Last spring, Harry Jackson was part of a group of Christian right leaders who wrote a letter to the National Association of Evangelicals attacking the organization's vice president for government affairs, Richard Cizik, for taking a stand on global warming. Now that In Next week: More presidential politics, the Day of Prayer for Peace in | | |||||||||
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| Sarah Posner is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in the Prospect, The Washington Spectator, AlterNet, and other publications. Her book, God's Profits: Faith, Fraud, and the Republican Crusade for Values Voters will be published by PoliPoint Press next year. | | |||||||||
Friday, October 5, 2007
McChurch - Following John Hagee Into Armageddon
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1 comment:
I'd like to read this post, but all the words are chopped off at the right, so I can't read complete thoughts.
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