Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Robert Reich's War on Evangelicals
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | December 8, 2003 | Don Feder

Posted on 12/08/2003 5:41:54 AM PST by SJackson

In a recent article in The American Prospect, the former Labor Secretary sees a nation teeming with fascist religious Evangelicals. And Catholics. And Jews . . . .

Former Labor Secretary Robert B. Reich has declared war on evangelical Christians. At least we can be grateful for his candor.

For years the liberal-left and its minions in the media and judiciary have waged a relentless -- albeit a covert -- offensive against Judeo-Christian values and done everything short of homicide to drive religious expression from the public square. Reich makes explicit what has for some time been the stealth strategy of progressive politics.

Writing in the liberal periodical The American Prospect (“The Religious Wars”) on December 1, Reich starts the season of good will toward men on a benevolent note. Since the Supreme Court decision in Lawrence v. Texas (overturning the anti-sodomy laws of 14 states), “evangelicals have grown louder” in their demands to legislate their morality, Reich cautions.

Said Testament-thumpers intend to make the Massachusetts’ Supreme Judicial Court ruling (in effect mandating gay marriage) “a major issue during the upcoming presidential campaign.” The “ground troops of the Republican Party” were “emboldened” by their victory with the ban on partial-birth abortion. Now, evangelicals are “mounting an all-out offensive” for judicial nominees like Alabama Attorney General William Pryor, who is most disrespectful of Roe v. Wade, and (oh horror of horrors!) “they’re determined to put religion back into the public schools.”

Can nothing be done to stop these fundamentalist fanatics?!

Reich argues that America’s only hope to defeat the coming theocracy is a Democratic Party willing to stand up to the zealots. “Democrats should call all this for what it is – a clear and present danger to religious liberty in America,” Reich writes. “For more than 300 years, the liberal tradition has sought to free people from the tyranny of religious doctrines that would otherwise be imposed on them. Today’s evangelical right detests that tradition and seeks nothing short of a state-sponsored religion. But maintaining the separation of church and state is a necessary precondition of liberty.”

But which religion do evangelicals want the state to sponsor? Evangelical Protestants (a generic term) are divided into dozens of denominations. Alan Keyes and William Bennett, icons of the religious right, are Roman Catholics. The U.S. Catholic Bishops Conference entirely agrees with evangelicals on issues like same-sex marriage and abortion.

Then there are Jewish talk show hosts like Dennis Prager and Michael Medved, who see eye to eye with evangelicals on the above issues, as well judicial nominations and school prayer. Perhaps Judaism will also receive state-sponsorship in the coming regime.

In reality, what many of us – including this Jew – seek is an America true to the vision of the Founding Fathers, what’s loosely called the Judeo-Christian tradition. Sorry, Bob, but that’s not synonymous with an “establishment of religion” prohibited by the First Amendment. If it was, the Founders would have had themselves arrested. (Washington, Adams, Madison and, yes, even Jefferson believed in public acknowledgement of religious principals, but not in public support for a specific church.) The first official act of the first Congress was to hire a chaplain.

Liberals like Reich are engaged in monumental historical revisionism. The ex-Clintonista seems to be saying that regulations on abortion, a non-denominational prayer (or a moment of silent meditation) and limiting marriage to a man and a woman constitute state-sponsored religion. If so, America was a theocracy as recently as 1962.

Abortion was then illegal throughout the United States. I grew up saying the New York state Regent’s prayer. Not even Lenny Bruce imagined that there would one day be a judicial drive to turn marriage into a free-form institution.

Did we have a state-sponsored religion 40 years ago? Were we all forced to pay taxes for the support of one denomination? Was there a religious test for public office? Who was the Archbishop of the United States? Even to ask these questions is to highlight the absurdity of Reich’s thesis.

However, the ex-Cabinet officer, now a Brandeis professor, is correct in one regard: A religious/culture war is being waged in this country. It’s been going on for roughly four decades, though its pace is accelerating. It’s a war on all who adhere to Biblical morality regardless of where they pray, a war to radically remake America – to turn it into a nation hostile to traditional religion and a Judeo-Christian worldview – and a war to establish liberalism as our official, state-sponsored creed.

What are the tenets of this secular dogma? That human life isn’t God-given, hence expendable (ergo, that the unborn child can be destroyed and brain-damaged patients starved to death). That morality should be based on societal whims, shaped by popular culture, instead of on eternal standards. That every philosophy (communism, environmentalism, feminism, sexual liberation, animal rights, anti-globalism) has its place in the political marketplace of ideas except that philosophy on which the nation was founded – an ethical perspective first enunciated at Sinai 3,300 years ago.

Perhaps Reich’s most absurd premise is that, on so-called church-state issues, “public opinion sides with the Democrats,” who will win next year via a frontal assault on evangelicals.

But if the public was on its side, the Left wouldn’t have needed the courts to mandate gay marriage – it would have been enacted by Congress or the state legislatures, or passed by popular referenda.

Like every other social revolution engineered over the past 40 years, (legalized abortion, turning our schools into religion-free zones and the abolition of public standards of decency), gay marriage came to us not courtesy of the people or their elected representatives but from the least democratic branch of government – one essentially insulated from public opinion – an imperial judiciary.

To cite but one example of public sentiments on what liberals like Reich would call the co-mingling of government and religion, in a Sept. 19-21, 2003, Gallup poll, 78 percent of the American people supported a non-denominational prayer in public schools, 70 favored display of The Ten Commandments in public buildings and 64 percent approved of federal funds for social programs conducted by Christian religious organizations.

One can only conclude that while Reich slept, the nation was overrun by cheerleaders for theocracy!

Religious liberty – freedom of conscience – is indeed “a necessary precondition of liberty.” So is an objective, eternal moral code, one grounded in a tradition stretching back millennia. John Adams acknowledged this, when he remarked: “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

Why should I believe that all men are created equal, unless I believe in a God who made them so? Why should I believe in human rights, if I do not believe in a God who gave man free will? (That quotation on the Liberty Bell, “Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof,” comes from the Hebrew Bible, not the ACLU’s charter or the Humanist Manifesto II.)

Demolish America’s religious foundation, and you destroy the basis for liberty, rights and representative government. Consider the fate of Russia and Germany when they turned to Godless isms. Both first dethroned God, then made hell on earth in the name of creating heaven on earth.

Like Robert Reich, the architect of the Third Reich understood the necessity of purging that Old Time Religion before his secular vision could be achieved.

Hitler reportedly told his friend Hermann Rauschning: “We are fighting the perversion of our healthiest instincts…That devilish: Thou shalt! Thou shalt! And that stupid: Thou shalt not…We commence hostilities against the so-called Ten Commandments; the tablets from Sinai are no longer in force. Conscience, like circumcision, is a mutilation of man.” (Quoted by Hannes Stein in, “Return of the Gods,” First Things, November, 1999).

Well, at least Der Fuhrer didn’t do it in the name of preserving liberty and religious pluralism.

Reich wants an intellectual battle over whether a Judeo-Christian or New Age pagan worldview will dominate our laws and institutions? I say: Bring it on!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Don Feder is a former Boston Herald writer who's currently the host of a talk show on WTTT 1150Am in Boston, M-F, 6-9am.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: culturewar; donfeder; evangelicals; robertreich
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-47 last
To: TonyRo76
"Standing up for the Gospel is very different from grandstanding on one's own authority."

I like the way you put that.

41 posted on 12/08/2003 3:46:33 PM PST by Sam Cree (democrats are herd animals)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 39 | View Replies]

Comment #42 Removed by Moderator

To: Sam Cree
" But I am interested that you don't consider TV preachers to be evangelical, that gives me a slightly better impression of them. What about Pat Robertson, for instance? I have seen his face on TV."

TV preachers are to evangelicals as jenny Jones and What's his (you know Mr. Cincinatti) is to your friends and neighbors. I'm very involved with lots of Evangelicals. I don't know of any who watch TV preachers. They are, for the most part, not very representative of the movement as a whole, though Robertson and Falwell have a significant following. If you recall, Robertson dropped out of the running for prez because of his lack of traction with evengelical voters. Like anything else these days, it's the odd and noisy that get the attention.

43 posted on 12/08/2003 8:06:22 PM PST by cookcounty (Army vet, Army dad)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: TonyRo76
"Let's put it this way: I consider C.S. Lewis, Philip Yancey, R.C. Sproul and James I. Packer to be much more credible spokesmen for Biblical Christianity than the Bakkers, Rod Parsley or Jimmy Swaggart."

Here, here. I have many friends that have read these authors, but not many who ever watch TV preachers.

44 posted on 12/08/2003 8:10:20 PM PST by cookcounty (Army vet, Army dad)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 38 | View Replies]

To: SJackson
Religion IS ALREADY taught in public schools.

The religion of tolerance, political correctness, and humanism.
45 posted on 12/08/2003 8:11:08 PM PST by SerpentDove (www.neatophotos.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: TonyRo76
>>Armed with God's revealed, inerrant Word in a handy 66-volume tome, Evangelical Protestant Christians are a powerful agent for good, a force to be reckoned with, and a family to which I'm humbled and honored to belong! :)<<

Same here.
46 posted on 12/08/2003 8:12:57 PM PST by SerpentDove (www.neatophotos.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Sam Cree
It's more up to the legislators, I think. It's up to the voters to pick the right legislators.

Since our form of government is not a direct democracy, you are 100% correct. As Rush says often, "The voters always get what they want."

47 posted on 12/09/2003 5:22:17 AM PST by randita
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-47 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson