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The following was posted on the PeaceEfforts list. As one who spent 3 years
studying theology, I concur fully with Carter. What has emerged as the
Christian right, is not at all Christian. It is some sort of perverse demonic
body disguised is pseudo-Christian clothes. Such is extremely dangerous. The
Nazis developed their own version of Christianity (minus the 'Jewish' bible)
along similar lines to justify their hatreds. Ed Kent --

Carter's Crusade

Jimmy Carter explains how the Christian right isn't Christian at all.

By Ayelish McGarvey Web Exclusive: 04.05.04

Former President Jimmy Carter, America's first evangelical Christian
president, still teaches Sunday school at his Baptist church in Plains,
Georgia, and he and his wife, Rosalynn, continue their human-rights work in
developing nations through the Carter Center at Emory University. In recent
months, the Carters toured Togo, Ghana, and Mali to raise awareness of the
public-health needs of those nations. In February, Carter spoke about the role
of evangelical Christianity in democratic politics with Prospect writing
fellow Ayelish McGarvey.

Republicans have been extremely successful at connecting religion and values
to issues like the fight against terrorism, abortion, and gay rights.
Democrats have been far less adept at infusing our issues -- compassion, help
for the poor, social justice -- with any sense of religious commitment or
moral imperative. Why do you thiink that is?

When I was younger, almost all Baptists were strongly committed on a
theological basis to the separation of church and state. It was only 25 years
ago when there began to be a melding of the Republican Party with
fundamentalist Christianity, particularly with the Southern Baptist
Convention. This is a fairly new development, and I think it was brought about
by the abandonment of some of the basic principles of Christianity.

First of all, we worship the prince of peace, not war. And those of us who
have advocated for the resolution of international conflict in a peaceful
fashion are looked upon as being unpatriotic, branded that way by right-wing
religious groups, the Bush administration, and other Republicans.

Secondly, Christ was committed to compassion for the most destitute, poor,
needy, and forgotten people in our society. Today there is a stark difference
[between conservative ideology and Christian teaching] because most of the
people most strongly committed to the Republican philosophy have adopted the
proposition that help for the rich is the best way to help even poor people
(by letting some of the financial benefits drip down to those most deeply in
need). I would say there has been a schism drawn -- on theology and practical
politics and economics between the two groups.

What has attracted conservative Christians to a party that protects corporate
interests and promotes an aggressive foreign-policy agenda? How do those square?

There is an element of fundamentalism involved, which involves the belief on
the part of a human being that [his or her] own concept of God is the proper
one. And since [he or she has] the proper concept of God, [he or she is]
particularly blessed and singled out for special consideration above and
beyond those who disagree with [him or her].

Secondly, anyone who does disagree with [him or her], since [he or she is]
harnessed to God in a unique way, then, by definition, must be wrong. And the
second step is if you are in disagreement with [his or her] concept of the way
to worship, even among the Christian community, is that you are inferior to
[him or her]. And then the ultimate progression of that is that you're not
only different and wrong and inferior but in some ways you are subhuman. So
there's a loss of concern even for the death of those who disagree. And this
takes fundamentalism to the extreme. This is an element of the fundamentalist
cause in this country. If you are a wealthy white man, then you are naturally
inclined to think that the poor are inferior and don't deserve your first
consideration. If you are a wealthy white man, then you also take on the
proposition that women are inherently inferior. This builds up a sense of
prejudice and alienation that permeates the Christian right during these days.

What issues do you see galvanizing moderate evangelicals as they go to the
polls in November?

I've been involved in national politics now for more than 25 years. But this
year we will see the Democratic Party more united than ever before in my
memory, and even the earlier history that I studied before my life began. I
think we're completely united with a determination to replace the Bush
administration and its fundamentalist, right-wing philosophy with the more
moderate qualities that have always exemplified what our nation is: a nation
committed to strength in the military. I served longer in the military than
any other president since the Civil War except Dwight Eisenhower. I was a
submarine officer. I used the enormous and unmatched strength of America to
promote peace for other people and preserve peace for ourselves.

Now it seems as though it is an attractive thing in Washington to resort to
war in the very early stage of resolving an altercation; a completely
unnecessary war that President Bush decided to launch against the Iraqis is an
example of that. And I think that a reaction against that warlike attitude on
the part of America to the exclusion of almost all other nations in the world
-- and arousing fear in them -- is going to be a driving issue.

I think that the abandonment of environmental issues even endorsed by
President Nixon when I was governor (as well as virtually all of the
Republicans and Democrats) has been notable under the Bush administration. One
of the things I learned as a young Baptist boy was to be a steward of the
world that God blessed us to enjoy. And I think the abandonment of basic
environmental standards by the Bush administration rallies us.

And I think the third thing is the obvious orientation of the Bush
administration toward Halliburton, Enron, and other major corporations. You
see this in the enormous tax reductions that have been granted to people that
make more than $200,000 a year. That is another issue on which the Democrats
will rally a common goal.

Do you think that Democrats will be able to attract Bible-believing Christians
in a year that gay marriage will be used as a smokescreen to distract
attention from those issues?

I think so. There isn't a major candidate who has endorsed gay marriage; they
are in favor of equal protection through a civil-union arrangement. I
personally, in my Sunday-school lessons, don't favor the religious endorsement
of a gay marriage. But I do favor equal treatment under the law for people who
differ from me in sexual orientation.

What about abortion? How would you speak to moderate evangelicals who withhold
support for Democratic candidates on that single issue?

This was an issue that I had to face when I was campaigning 25 years ago. I
have always been against abortion; it's not possible for me in my own concept
of Christ to believe that Jesus would favor abortion. But at the same time, I
have supported the Supreme Court ruling of our country as the law of the land.
And the present arrangement, whereby a woman is authorized to have an abortion
in the first trimester of the pregnancy, or when the pregnancy is caused by
rape or incest -- these are the things that moderates who have beliefs like
mine can accept as the present circumstances in our country. The liberality of
abortion is anointed by the laws of our country, including the ultimate ruling
of the Supreme Court.

How do you think the fundamentalist Christian right has misrepresented
Christianity, as well as the democratic process?

Well, what do Christians stand for, based exclusively on the words and actions
of Jesus Christ? We worship him as a prince of peace. And I think almost all
Christians would conclude that whenever there is an inevitable altercation --
say, between a husband and a wife, or a father and a child, or within a given
community, or between two nations (including our own) -- we should make every
effort to resolve those differences which arise in life through peaceful
means. Therein, we should not resort to war as a way to exalt the president as
the commander in chief. A commitment to peace is certainly a Christian
principle that even ultraconservatives would endorse, at least by worshipping
the prince of peace.

And Christ reached out almost exclusively to the poor, suffering, abandoned,
deprived -- the scorned, the condemned people -- including Samaritans and
those who were diseased. The alleviation of suffering was a pphilosophy that
was enhanced and emphasized by the life of Christ. Today the ultra-right wing,
in both religion and politics, has abandoned that principle of Jesus Christ's
ministry.

Those are the two principal things in the practical sense that starkly
separate the ultra-right Christian community from the rest of the Christian
world: Do we endorse and support peace and support the alleviation of
suffering among the poor and the outcast?

You spent so much of your career working toward a reasonable, peaceful
solution to violence and strife in Israel and Palestine. Increasing attention
has been paid to traditionalist evangelicals' strong support for Israel, based
on the New Testament prophecy that the reconstruction of the ancient kingdom
of David will usher in the 'end times' and the Second Coming of Christ. As a
believer and a peacemaker, how do you respond to this?

That's a completely foolish and erroneous interpretation of the Scriptures.
And it has resulted in these last few years with a terrible, very costly, and
bloody deterioration in the relationship between Israel and its neighbors.
Every president except for George W. Bush has taken a relatively balanced
position between the Israelis and their enemies, always strongly supporting
Israel but recognizing that you have to negotiate and work between Israel and
her neighbors in order to bring about a peaceful resolution.

It's nearly the 25th anniversary of my consummation of a treaty between Israel
and Egypt -- not a word of which has ever been violated. But this
administration, maybe strongly influenced by ill-advised theologians oof the
extreme religious right, has pretty well abandoned any real effort that could
lead to a resolution of the problems between Israel and the Palestinians. And
no one can challenge me on my commitment to Israel and its right to live in
peace with all its neighbors. But at the same time, there has to be a
negotiated settlement; you can't just ordain the destruction of the
Palestinian people, and their community and their political entity, in favor
of the Israelis.

And that's what some of the extreme fundamentalist Christians have done, both
to the detriment of the Israelis and the Palestinians.

Think all evangelicals are right-wingers? Just as many are politically
moderate. Read more about them in Ayelish McGarvey's piece, "Reaching the
Choir", from the print edition.

Ayelish McGarvey, who writes a biweekly online column about religion, is a
Prospect writing fellow. Copyright (c) 2004 by The American Prospect, Inc.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts




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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
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