http://www.alternet.org/stories/50366/
AlterNet:
Radical Christian Right Preaches Liberal Evil

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig. Posted April 10, 2007.

Members of the radical Christian End Times movement are being taught 
to believe that America is ruled by evil, clandestine organizations 
disguised as liberal groups. As a result, the fearful are hoping for 
the end.

The Gilead Baptist Church, outside Detroit, is on a four-lane highway 
called South Telegraph Road. The drive down South Telegraph Road to 
the church, a warehouse-like structure surrounded by black asphalt 
parking lots, is a depressing gantlet of boxy, cut-rate motels with 
names like Melody Lane and Best Value Inn.

The highway is flanked by a flat-roofed Walgreens, a Blockbuster, 
discount liquor stores, a Taco Bell, a McDonald's, a Bob's Big Boy, 
Sunoco and Citgo gas stations, a Ford dealership, Nails USA, The 
Dollar Palace, Pro Quick Lube and U-Haul.

The tawdry display of cheap consumer goods, emblazoned with neon, 
lines both sides of the road, a dirty brown strip in the middle. It 
is a sad reminder that something has gone terribly wrong with 
America, with its inhuman disregard for beauty and balance, its 
obsession with speed and utilitarianism, its crass commercialism and 
its oversized SUVs and trucks and greasy junk food. It is part of our 
numbing assault against community and connectedness.

Ten or fifteen minutes of negotiating the traffic down South 
Telegraph Road makes the bizarre attraction of the End Times -- the 
obliteration of this world of alienation, noise and distortion -- 
comprehensible. The manufacturing jobs in the Detroit auto plants 
nearby are largely gone, outsourced to nations with cheaper labor. 
The paint is flaking off the cramped two-story houses that lie in 
ugly grid patterns off the highway.

The plagues of alcoholism, divorce, drug abuse, poverty and domestic 
violence make the internal life here as depressing as the external 
one. And those gathering today in this church wait for the final, 
welcome relief of the purgative of violence, the vast, bloody 
cleansing that will lift them up into the heavens and leave the world 
they despise -- the one that was devastated by corporatism -- to be 
racked by plagues and flood and fire until it and all those whom they 
blame for the debacle of their lives are consumed and destroyed by 
God. It is a theology of despair. And for many, it can't happen soon 
enough.

The guru of the End Times movement is a small, elderly, gnome-like 
man with dyed coal-black hair, a battery-powered earpiece and a 
pedantic, cold demeanor. He is Timothy LaHaye, a Southern Baptist 
minister and the co-author, along with Jerry Jenkins, of the "Left 
Behind" series of Christian apocalyptic thrillers that provide the 
graphic details of raw mayhem and cruelty that God will unleash on 
all nonbelievers when Christ returns and raptures Christians into 
heaven. The novels are the best-selling books in America, with over 
62 million in print. They have been made into movies, as well as a 
graphic video game in which teenagers can blow away nonbelievers and 
the army of the Antichrist on the streets of New York City.

The global nightmare that leads to the end of history is a visceral 
and disturbing expression of what believers feel about themselves and 
our world. The horror of apocalyptic violence -- the final aesthetic 
of the movement -- at once terrifies and thrills followers. It feeds 
dark fantasies of revenge and empowerment.

This theology of despair is empowered by widespread poverty, violent 
crime, incurable diseases, global warming, war in the Middle East and 
the threat of nuclear calamity. All these events presage the 
longed-for obliteration of the Earth and the glorious moment of 
Christ's return. But until then believers are told they must battle 
Satan. And Satan comes in many guises. In churches across the United 
States believers are being girded for a holy war, one as 
self-destructive as that preached by radical Islam.

"We are at war with the religion of Islam," Gary Frazier, another 
popular leader, tells the crowd in the church outside Detroit, "and 
it is not a handful of radical Islamists who are taking over the 
religion and hijacking it. The fact is, ladies and gentlemen, today 
if you read the Koran, and any person who reads their Koran, the holy 
book of the Muslims, and believes what the book says, over a hundred 
times it calls for the putting to death of any person that does not 
embrace the teachings of Mohammed.

"Can you explain to me how in the West that we would understand a 
person who would strap dynamite upon themselves and blow themselves 
up along with innocent men and women and children with the promise 
that they would have 70 brown-haired, I mean blond-haired, blue-eyed 
virgins for their unlimited sexual pleasure in this place called 
Paradise? And the parents of that person then throw a party 
celebrating the destruction of their child. You want to tell me you 
understand that kind of mentality? Because I don't believe that. 
There's no one in the Western world that can comprehend that kind of 
mind-set, but, ladies and gentlemen, that is the mind-set of the 
religion of Islam around the world.

"Islam," Frazier says dramatically, "is a satanic religion."

He warns of Muslim "sleeper cells" in America waiting to carry out 
new terrorist attacks.

"You may have a Muslim doctor, and he may be a wonderful person," he 
says. "He may love his family, but you know what'll happen? One day, 
they will come to him -- I'm just using this as an illustration -- 
they will come to him and they'll say, 'We have a mission for you, 
and you will either do as you're told,' [or,] and they'll whip out 
the pictures, 'Here are your three children. We'll send their heads 
to you in a box.' Now, the difference is, is that if somebody told 
you that, you'd call the FBI or Homeland Security or somebody like 
that. They're not going to do that. Do you know why? Because they 
know the Muslim will do just what they say, and when it comes right 
down to where the rubber meets the road, boys and girls, they're 
going to save the lives of their own children before they'll save 
your own. And you most likely would probably do the same thing 
yourselves."

He pauses and slowly scans the crowd, which sits silently, 
expectantly awaiting his next sentence.

"I thank God for our men and women who are fighting over there 
because if they weren't fighting there, we'd be fighting right here 
in the streets of America. I'm convinced of that," he says, and the 
sanctuary erupts in loud applause.

America, the crowd is told, is being ruled by evil, clandestine 
organizations that hide behind the veneer of liberal, democratic 
groups. These clandestine forces seek to destroy Christians. They 
spread their demonic, secular humanist ideology through front groups 
such as the American Civil Liberties Union, People for the American 
Way, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 
the National Organization for Women, Planned Parenthood, the 
Trilateral Commission and "the major TV networks, high-profile 
newspapers and newsmagazines," the U.S. State Department, major 
foundations (Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford), the United Nations, "the 
left wing of the Democratic Party" and Harvard, Yale "and 2,000 other 
colleges and universities." All of these groups have joined forces, 
LaHaye has warned, to "turn America into an amoral, humanist country, 
ripe for merger into a one-world socialist state."

The radical Christian right has no religious legitimacy. It is a mass 
political movement. It is interchangeable, in many ways, with other 
traditional political movements ranging from fascism to communism to 
the ethnic nationalist parties in the former Yugoslavia. It shares 
with these movements an inability to cope with ambiguity, doubt and 
uncertainty. It also embraces a world of miracles and signs and makes 
war on rational, reality-based thought. It condemns self-criticism 
and debate as apostasy. It places a premium on action. It dismisses 
those who do not bow down before its god -- and the leaders who claim 
to speak for God -- as heretics and traitors.

This movement shares with corporatists, who are busy cannibalizing 
our society for profit, the belief that there are a chosen few who 
know the truth and therefore have the right to impose it. The 
citizen, the individual, no longer has any legitimacy in this new 
world. All legitimacy is assumed by groups, whether they are 
corporate groups herding us over the cliff of globalization or 
religious groups that give popular vent to corporate-generated 
despair through faith in the Christian utopia. In this paradigm -- 
corporate and religious -- we become disempowered, afraid, passive 
and easily manipulated.

Apocalyptic visions like this one have, throughout history, cowed 
populations and inspired genocidal killers. They have enticed 
societies into collective suicide. These visions nourished the 
butchers who led the Inquisition, the Crusades and the conquistadors 
who swept through the Americas converting and then exterminating the 
native population.

These visions sustained the SS guards at Auschwitz, the Stalinists 
who consigned tens of thousands of Ukrainian families to starvation 
and death, the torturers in the clandestine prisons in Argentina 
during the Dirty War and the Serbian thugs with heavy machine guns 
and wraparound sunglasses who stood over the bodies of those they had 
slain in the smoking ruins of Bosnian villages.

Those who promise to purify the world through violence, to relieve 
the anxiety of moral pollution and despair, appeal to our noblest 
sentiments, our highest virtues, our capacity for self-sacrifice and 
our utopian visions of a cleansed world. It is this coupling of 
fantastic hope and profound despair, along with visions of peace and 
light and absolute terror, of selflessness and murder, which frees 
the consciences of those who call for and carry out the eradication 
of those they have banished from moral consideration.

When leaders of this movement, such as Jerry Falwell and Pat 
Robertson, sanction, as they do, pre-emptive nuclear strikes against 
our enemies, and therefore the enemies of God, they fuel the passions 
of terrorists in love with the same apocalyptic nightmares. They 
march us to our own doom cheered by the delusion that once the dogs 
of war, even nuclear war, are unleashed, hundreds of millions will 
die, but because Christians have been blessed and chosen by God they 
alone will arise in triumph from the ash heap.

In this new world, where those who seek to do us harm will soon have 
in their hands cruder versions of the apocalyptic weapons we possess, 
dirty bombs or chemical or biological agents, the vision of those 
among us who welcome catastrophic warfare, indeed seek to hasten it, 
who fervently await the apocalypse and the end of time, who believe 
they will be lifted up into the sky by a returning Christ, forces us 
all to kneel before the god of death. The prayers these "Christians" 
near Detroit -- and tens of millions across the nation -- utter for 
deliverance and apocalyptic glory only hasten our flight from reality 
and ensure our self-annihilation.


Chris Hedges, who graduated from seminary at Harvard Divinity School 
and was a foreign correspondent for nearly two decades for The New 
York Times, is the author of "American Fascists: The Christian Right 
and the War on America."


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