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Father of Christian Zionism Leaves the Building
OAKLAND, Calif. - The right-wing U.S. Christian evangelist Jerry Falwell, who died Tuesday at the age of 73, is perhaps best known for his fundamentalist social positions and tirades against lesbians, gays and feminists, not to mention "pagans", "abortionists" and assorted other miscreants.But Falwell also had a significant impact on U.S. foreign policy over the last 30 years, and was one of the founding fathers here of so-called Christian Zionism -- the belief that the modern state of Israel is the fulfillment of Biblical "End Times" prophecy and thus deserving of political, financial and religious support.
From his pre-Moral Majority days when he preached against religious folk involved in the civil rights movement, to his support for the President Ronald Reagan-backed contra movements in Central America and Africa that were responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of people, to his invective against Nelson Mandela and South Africa's African National Congress and his support for the apartheid regime, Falwell was a Republican Party stalwart and a dependable voice of reaction.
Today, conservative evangelicals are a formidable lobby group in the United States and a key component of the Republican voting base. However, they had largely stayed out of politics until the mid-1970s, when Jimmy Carter's declaration during the 1976 presidential campaign that he had been "born again" rejuvenated the political activism of the evangelical community.
But Carter's more liberal positions on some social issues, and his support for a Palestinian homeland shortly after his election in 1977, alienated right-wing Christian Zionist leaders in the movement, like Falwell and New Right figures Paul Weyrich and Richard Viguerie, who steered evangelicals toward the Republican Party -- where they remain today.
In the 1980s, Israel's Likud Party drew closer to the right wing in the U.S., and Falwell was a key figure in mobilising conservative Christian voters. In her book "Spiritual Warfare: The Politics of the Christian Right", Sara Diamond notes that Falwell, "often through his television broadcasts and his frequent trips to Israel, played a key role in "dr[awing] evangelicals to pay closer attention to Middle East politics."
In 1979, Israel rewarded Falwell with a private jet. Two years later, he received Israel's Jabotinsky Award for his support.
According to one press account, "Jewish-evangelical relations had become so close by the early '80s that, immediately after Israel bombed Iraq's nuclear reactor in 1981, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin telephoned Moral Majority leader Rev. Jerry Falwell before calling President Ronald Reagan to ask Falwell to 'explain to the Christian public the reasons for the bombing'."
Falwell also served on the board of advisers of the American Alliance of Jews and Christians, an organisation founded by Rabbi Daniel Lapin, the president of the conservative Jewish organization Toward Tradition, and Christian conservative evangelical Gary Bauer, founder of American Values.
This past September, Falwell's church hosted Christians United for Israel's (CUFI) Pastor John Hagee, who accused Iran of being behind the summer war between Hezbollah and Israel. "They gave Syria 14,000 missiles and 100 million dollars," he claimed. "Those missiles were given to Hezbollah." Falwell served on the Board of CUFI.
In the hours since his death, a number of Falwell's supporters have unstintingly praised him as a seminal and courageous figure of the New Religious Right.
Sen. John McCain, who during the 2000 Republican presidential primary called Falwell and the Rev. Pat Robertson "agents of intolerance" but had recently sought his support, issued a statement praising Falwell for his contributions.
While Falwell helped place conservative evangelicals at the forefront of the political landscape, he was also in part responsible for coarsening the political dialogue in this country. In a career that was marked by a continuous stream of controversial -- and sometimes wacky -- statements, perhaps none was as mean-spirited as his reaction to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.
Soon after 9/11, Falwell appeared on Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network's "700 Club," and told Robertson's viewers:
"The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked," he said. "And when we destroy 40 million little innocent babies, we make God mad. I really believe that the pagans and the abortionists and the feminists and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle...all of them who have tried to secularize America. I point the finger in their face and say, 'You helped this happen.'"
He later apologized for those remarks.
Falwell dated his political activism to the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade ruling that established a woman's right to an abortion. "Believing life begins at conception, I became very exercised over this," he said.
In the late 1970s, Paul Weyrich, widely considered as the guru of the modern conservative movement, Terry Dolan, Richard Viguerie, the godfather of conservative direct mail, and Howard Phillips tapped televangelist Falwell to head up the Moral Majority. Over the years, as Falwell became more controversial and influential politically, he became a favored guest on cable television's news programmes.
With Falwell at the helm, the Moral Majority, founded in 1979, prospered. And, unlike some of his televangelist brethren who were severely wounded by sexual and financial scandals, Falwell's enterprises prospered throughout the 1980s.
After the Moral Majority officially shut down in 1989, Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition, Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family, the Family Research Council and a host of other conservative Christian groups stepped into the breech. In 2004, Falwell, seeing a political opening and hoping to re-connect with his funding base, announced the formation of an organization called the Moral Majority Coalition, which he characterized as a "21st century resurrection of the Moral Majority."
In his early seventies, after recovering from a serious illness, Falwell focused on making the Christian liberal arts college, Liberty University, which he founded in 1971, his everlasting legacy. The 4,400-acre campus is home to 9,600 students, and another 15,000 are enrolled in its distance learning program.
The mending-fences visit of Sen. John McCain to the Liberty University campus last year was an example of Falwell's continued involvement in top-level Republican politics. His connection to the founding of the Pastor John Hagee's lobbying group, Christian Zionist Christians United for Israel, also showed that Falwell wasn't only about setting up multi-million dollar endowments and fashioning impressive real estate deals.
Nearly 30 years after entering the political fray, Falwell had formidable political clout up until his death.
Bill Berkowitz is a longtime observer of the conservative movement. His column "Conservative Watch" documents the strategies, players, institutions, victories and defeats of the U.S. Right.
Copyright © 2007 IPS-Inter Press Service

20 Comments so far
Show AllThe Spaniards brought the Christians with them to the New World and sent them ahead to make peace with Native Americans. Followed by the occupiers.
Jesus knew teaching by example was the only way people would understand what he taught. You can twist the Bible the same way Rush Limbaugh twists the truth.
We're all at risk when we swathe all members of a "group" with a single paintbrush. That's taking the easy way out and not thinking too deeply.
Not all people who hold spiritual values are ignorant or evil, just like not all people who support left-wing causes are virtuous! Most people think with either their pocketbooks, their sex organs (or both) and don't stop to consider the deeper ramifications of actions. They too take the "easy way."
Falwell found a very responsive chord among a lot of Americans and used that to build his empire of control, toward his own personal agenda and self-aggrandizement.
Like those of us who lump all Christians into one basket and equate them with the likes of Falwell, Robertson and Dobson, we, who may not profess any religious/spiritual affiliation, also are lumped in with some questionable types. Only when we all begin to see each person as he/she is and not as a part of some "group," will we ever find some common ground and began a badly needed national healing process.
Remember the old song, "walk a mile in my shoes?" It's still good advice.
Dude, this guy gave me nightmare. Next will be Dobson, Bush and all the other. We need a secular world based on Scientific ground. I am ok with a spiritual dimension but it shouldn't control our world. No tv program and no political implication. Stay in your church or mosque. We can do fine without religion.
I completely agree with Bernie. We as progressives need to not stoop to the level of hate-speech. If we do so, we make our arguments so much less persuasive and really fall into the same type of language as those using fear-mongering and hate.
Falwell's post death experiences:
Falwell awakens from his deep slumber, still not aware of what has happened.
Falwell: "Boy, it sure is dark in here. And where in hell am i at?" "At least it's warm. Damn, is it warm. It's so.." At this point, Falwell hears the sound of maniacal laughter, part human and part…??
Falwell: "Damn, the heat is getting unbearable. It's hot as …… Oh, NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO."
For a man that was one of the country's worst bigots that helped spread hate and sow dissension, the TV talking heads of the bullet proof hair variety sure are falling all over themselves, trying to portray Fartwell as some kind of loving messiah.
The problem was never Falwell. Hypocrites and hucksters can't help themselves. The problem is the media and politicians that enabled him buy giving him a platform and credibility.
Anyone who really wants to know what Jesus has to say could quote the Bible. There are even red letter editions so you don't miss the quotes.
Start with the sermon on the mount or when Jesus stopped the stoning of the adulteress.
Compare that to Falwell's statements and you can see that Falwell was not an official spokesman for Christianity.
Some Christian. Who could really take him seriously after he labeled a purple puppet a homosexual? With all his lashing out at homosexuality he must have had some serious questions about his own sexuality.
The disturbing fact is that his Liberty University will continue to send more bigots, misogynists, and professional liars into the world in order to further this buffoon's political and "spiritual" tripe.
Falwell has to be the quintessential American -nothing by halves, nothing in moderation - and everything in excess.
In most other cultures he would have been branded as a nut case and institutionalised.Only in America are he and his ilk perfectly free and untrammeled : to range the the land, preaching their 'gospel' and perverting the minds and the souls of millions.
One thing's for sure though , wherever he goes ,he's certain to turn the place upside down and liven things up .
With apologies to the original....
Falwell Goes to Hell
Jerry Falwell has a heart attack and dies. He goes to Hell where the Devil is waiting for him.
"I don't know what to do," says the Devil. "You're on my list but I have no room for you. But you definitely have to stay here, so I'll tell you what I'm going to do. I've got three people here who weren't quite as bad as you. I'll let one of them go, but you have to take their place.
I'll even let YOU decide who leaves."
Jerry thought that sounded pretty good so he agreed.
The devil opened the first room. In it was Richard Nixon and a large pool of water. He kept diving in and surfacing empty handed over and over and over, such was his fate in Hell.
"No!" Jerry said. "I don't think so. I'm not a good swimmer and I don't think I could do that all day long."
The Devil led him to the next room. In it was Ronald Reagan with a sledgehammer and a room full of rocks. All he did was swing that hammer, time after time after time.
"No! I've got this problem with my shoulder. I would be in constant agony if all I could do was break rocks all day!" commented Jerry.
The Devil opened a third door. In it, Jerry saw Bill Clinton lying naked on the floor with his arms staked over his head and his legs staked in spread-eagle pose. Bent over him was Monica Lewinsky, doing what she does best.
Falwell looked at this in disbelief for a while and finally said, "Yeah, I can handle this."
The Devil smiled and said, "Monica, you're free to go!"
When Paul says that a glutton will not inherit the Kingdom of God, is that just Paul the bigot speaking or is it the word of God? Is it absolute, or just a relative reflection of culture at that time? What would Falwell say? (WWFS?)
right on aldo! i agree!
When Ronald Reagan welcomed Jerry Falwell with open arms into the Republican party, I started looking for some other party to back! I knew from the very beginning it was going to be a bad scene! It always is when religion gets to deeply involved in politic's! Sure enough, that's the way it's been. Until they finally arrived at the fascist George W Bush! They were scraping the bottom of the barrel with him. He has been everyone's nightmare coming true! The Republican Party is so far off track now I don't hold much hope from them! I think it will eventually have to be dismantled or split in two with the right and moderate wings. But, either way as long as they have the "religious right" agenda I will not vote for them!
A hateful segregationist who the mainstream media gave a platform on national TV, good riddance and shame on the media. Maybe his death is a sign from God for the corporate media to stop it's racism. Media Matters had a piece on Sunday morning talk shows being nearly all white, that would be a great place to start some racial healing, America truly needs it.
So, interested, are you saying that Jerry found Heaven at last?
What kind of a world is it where a fat f--- like this has prominence on the world stage? And what kind of idiots are the Israelis for giving him a private jet? -- a jerk that believes Israel will ultimately be leveled and that all Jews will have to convert to Christian or go to hell? Friends, we live in a weird, weird world.
On the departure of Jerry Falwell to hereafter.
Falwell was led straight to Hell where he belongs, and the Devil was waiting for him. The Devil said, "Jerry, you've been the scum of the world, and normally I would send someone like you to the worst corner of the Hell. But as I see on your record, you have one bright spot.
A wide smile appeared on Jerry's fat, pancake face and asked, " Which one was that?"
"Well, it appears that when you were alone with the miniscule conscience that you have, you laughed at your followers' stupidity for believing your nonsense. This shows that at least you've been honest with yourself, and that alone gives you the option to choose one of the three places in Hell."
So the tour started. Jerry was first shown a place where a huge fire was blazing in which people were burning to cinder, then reborn and burned to cinder, again and again.
"No, no, I can't take this." Said Jerry.
Next, he was shown an enormously expansive depression in the ground where lions, tigers, dragons, and huge snakes were doing what they do best, and people were screaming in excruciating pain, dying and constantly being reborn.
By now Jerry was dead sacred and he could barely manage to say," No, please, not this one."
The last place he was shown was a very large, awfully stinking cesspool where he saw a huge crowd submerged up to their necks in the cesspool among whom he recognized some familiar faces such as Hitler, Reagan, etc, each having in hand either Washington Post, The Times, or The Wall Street Journal, and reading it.
Jerry's face brightened with a smile and said, " I'll take this." He was given a newspaper of choice and led into the cesspool. Shortly after, a loud voice on the loud speaker ordered, "OK, the 5-minute break time is over. All heads down under."
My honest feeling!
There are other dimensions according to string theory. When I leave this world I hope to come back to a better place without all this hopelessness.
The people who didn't get it will remain in THEIR hell on earth, that they created. They may come back as a critter over and over and over the rest of time! What kind of critter depends on how they behaved during their time here! (The planet [in three dimensions] will no longer be fit for humans.)
You break it; it's yours!
Poverty, no decent jobs, no education, no health care, no future, deliberately abandoned by America = Despair and Rage = Fundamentalist (here or anywhere in the world). Without that, you don't get Fundamentalism and all the Falwell's are out of a job because they don't have a market. We made the Fundamentalists. Read Chris Hedges.
I think most people completely miss the point. Falwell is like the ignorant, uneducated uncle who has had too much to drink at the family gathering. There are a million Falwells in America, and many millions more around the globe. Wake up! Falwell was a common, ignorant nobody who was empowered by very wealthy, sophisticated back room power brokers who used him to get the ignorant masses to act against their own interests. If you can't see that, you are lost.