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Keyes: 'The victory is for God'
Chicago Sun Times ^ | August 22, 2004 | BY CATHLEEN FALSANI Religion Reporter

Posted on 08/22/2004 6:15:20 PM PDT by EternalVigilance

First impressions can be misleading.

Two weeks ago, a wild-eyed Alan Keyes stood in front of news cameras in a hot, crowded Arlington Heights banquet hall sweating profusely, yelling and shaking his fist as he enthusiastically accepted the Republican nomination to run for U.S. Senate in Illinois.

"I will promise you a battle like this nation has never seen," Keyes shouted with the passion of a preacher talking about spiritual combat with the forces of evil, thrusting his fist heavenward for emphasis. "The battle is for us, but I have confidence because the victory IS FOR GOD!"

A few days after he delivered the fiery speech that was replayed time and again on television newscasts across the nation, a decidedly different Alan Keyes is seated behind the desk of a spartan office in what was until recently the Jack Ryan for Senate headquarters on North Clinton in Chicago.

On this particular afternoon, the 54-year-old Maryland conservative, political pundit and two-time presidential hopeful is about to spend more than an hour, one-on-one with a reporter, in an interview about his personal faith.

He's in tie and shirtsleeves, leaning back casually in his chair. Two small, gold charms -- a crucifix and twin Ten Commandment tablets -- that usually dangle from a long gold chain are tucked into his breast pocket, the chain pulled across his chest at an angle giving him just the faintest air of a bishop.

"The boss and the rules," he'll quip later as he pulls the charms out of his pocket and allows them to fall on top of his silk tie.

Whether his mood is irascible or reflective, Keyes, a lifelong Roman Catholic, wears his faith on his sleeve as well as around his neck.

When asked to describe himself spiritually, Keyes is reasoned, sincerely thoughtful and significantly more reserved than that man behind the lectern on TV.

"Well, in the fullest sense, I describe myself as a Christian," he says. "I believe that Jesus Christ is the son of God, came amongst men in order to redeem us from original sin and to offer us a way to his father, which he offered us in his words and examples and exposed to us the truth: that God loves us as individuals and knows our weaknesses because Christ has experienced them.

"And therefore, with really infinite understanding and mercy, is ready to welcome us into his home if we are willing to turn around and accept his grace," he says.

How does he define what a Christian is?

"One of the essential characteristics of Christianity is that it is about faith. Christ often says, 'Your faith has saved you,' to people. And that means that your willingness to acknowledge in truth the authority of God and the mercy of God in the person of Jesus Christ, is the route to salvation," he says, without hesitation.

"We are transformed by our knowledge of Christ, and that's why there is going to be a manifestation in us of that change, which shows itself in the different way we start to relate to people."

Cradle Catholic

Born in a New York military hospital in 1950 while his father was serving in Korea, Keyes describes himself as an "Army brat." Along with his sister and three brothers, he was raised on military bases across the United States, and, for a time, in Italy.

His parents, Alison and Gerthina, both now deceased, were converts to Roman Catholicism.

Keyes says his first concept of what God is like is inextricably bound to Catholicism.

"My earliest idea that I remember was Jesus Christ, he was my idea of what God was like," he says. "When you grow up Catholic, I remember being encouraged to think of Jesus as your friend. Just a friend, like the friends you had on the playground, or in school. And I can remember that that was a part of my developing thought life when I was a child, having conversations with Jesus in my head, as if he were one of my playmates. . . . He was a child, just like me."

And now what does he think God is like?

"He's grown up," Keyes, who is married with three children, says, busting out in a belly laugh. "He's grown up. And I hope, I've grown up a bit. But I think that depth of it hasn't changed. We go through 'times.' We advance, we retreat, we struggle, we wrestle."

Keyes insists his faith has remained fairly constant throughout his life, though there were times when he says he felt more distant from his faith than he does today.

"I think the Bible is right [when] it says that you raise up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old, he will not depart from it," Keyes says, paraphrasing a passage from the 22nd chapter of the Biblical book of Proverbs. "That obviously implies -- doesn't it? -- a kind of gap. There's something in youth that somehow implies that people do depart from it a little bit. But if you raise them in the way they should go, then the roots take over again. And one returns."

When he was a doctoral student in the late 1970s at Harvard working on his dissertation about constitutional theory, Keyes says, he struggled a bit spiritually.

"When you're a graduate student, you go through your ups and downs and sometimes you hit really great lows. Some people, as a result of that, give up and they never reach their degree," he recalls. "At a moment of crisis for me -- I'll never forget -- I was feeling just that low, sort of thinking, 'I've been working at it and I'm never going to finish and it's just hopeless.'

"I called my mom, and that conversation, in which she really did nothing but listen to me and remind me that I'd gotten through different things in my life through faith -- sparked an experience I still remember," he says, his voice breaking with emotion. "And it transformed my sense of what my faith meant to me."

He received his Ph.D. in government from Harvard in 1979. He also earned his undergraduate degree from Harvard in 1972.

Keyes describes a mild crisis of faith that had grown alongside his intellectual pursuits.

"In American academics, it's difficult to be a person of faith. There's a certain kind of patronizing, a sense of, 'Oh, you'll grow out of it,' " he says.

"So you begin to push your faith into the background, and maybe not really want to show it and so forth and so on. You start to doubt whether or not you are being intellectually honest if you are relying on premises of faith."

It's a conundrum Keyes seems to have resolved with a vengeance.

The word became flesh

Keyes would never make himself out to be some sort of Biblical scholar, but when it comes to Scripture, he knows what he's talking about.

He reads Greek -- he travels with a laptop loaded with Bible software, including a copy of the Septuagint, the Greek version of Hebrew Scriptures -- and can wax eloquent at length about the etymology of certain words and how they correspond to theological principles.

"I try to read or think about some element of the Bible every day," he says, leaning back in his office chair, and propping his feet up on the desk.

When asked what portion of the Bible he most enjoys reading, he says, without hesitation, "Genesis."

"I often tell people that my greatest problem in the Bible is that in any serious way I've never been able to get past Genesis," he says, chuckling. "Now, I have read the whole Bible and I read other books, but what I mean is the book that I keep going back to over and over again is Genesis.

"For the longest time, I was really going back over and over again, thinking and writing about, the creation myths, because it seemed to me that there's an enormous depth of kind of philosophical implication," he says.

In addition to his Biblical studies, Keyes is a philosophy buff.

"People will think this is strange I suppose, but . . . there are books like Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and Hegel's Logic and things like that, and every once in a while I get hit by this mood and I have to wrestle with these books that are very abstract and that are kind of philosophy in the viewless realms where you are really dealing with concepts that have no corresponding material images or anything to go along with it," he says, excitedly. "You just have to go with pure concepts to think about things. And I think, in the sense of that kind of philosophical thinking, meditation and reasoning, Genesis is an enormously powerful experience."

This launches Keyes into a 20-minute discussion of what he describes as his latest "breakthrough" in examining a portion of Biblical text.

Specifically, the candidate says for four or five months he had been reading, re-reading and picking apart several dozen verses from the 4th, 5th and 6th chapters of Genesis, beginning with one of those "begat" passages.

So and so, son of so and so, begat so and so, father of so and so, who begat.. ..

These particular begat passages start with a descendant of Cain, the son of Adam and Eve who murders his brother Abel, and end with Noah -- the fellow with the ark.

With an almost childlike enthusiasm, Keyes recounts how he traced the lineage of Noah and the descendants of Cain, examined the ancient roots of certain words, and learned, according to his interpretation, that God's covenant with Noah after the flood included the institution of capital punishment for the first time.

"It's fascinating, don't you think?" Keyes asks, smiling broadly, when he's concluded an exegesis of the text that, at least in its methodology, would give any seminary professor or preacher a serious run for his money.

A boundless sorrow

Keyes could be a preacher, a Biblical scholar, or professional apologist for Christ. But instead, he's chosen to enter the secular political realm.

Why choose a field that can so often obfuscate faith?

It's a question, apparently, that moves Keyes to tears.

His eyes turn red, he stops talking for several minutes, stares at the ceiling, drums his fingers on the desk, and apologizes for his loss of composure.

After several attempts to begin speaking, only to have his voice crack with emotion, Keyes tries again to explain what he's feeling.

"I'm sorry, I'm getting a grip," he says, eyes red with tears. "When I was young, I encountered a problem, I guess. A challenge. And I guess it was an encounter that disillusioned me, yes, in the literal sense. And that was my first encounter with the reality -- intellectually and emotionally . . ." he pauses again, his voice trailing off for a few moments. " . . . Of what the slave experience meant to my ancestors. And I think I've been working that out ever since.''

When pressed to explain just what this "encounter" was, Keyes reveals that it was, in fact, an intellectual incident.

When he was about 15, he read Lerone Bennett's book Before the Mayflower: A History of the Negro in America, 1619-1964. And it broke his heart, he says.

"It's sorrow," he says, explaining why 40 years later he's still so emotional about something he read as a teenager. "It's not a sorrow for yourself, it's not a sorrow for individuals, it's a sorrow for the reality of our kind of sad experience . . . of life without God."

And it's that sorrow and outrage that in part has led him into politics, Keyes says.

"It's a problem of justice and to understand it and resolve it somehow is not an intellectual exercise. You have to meet the challenge of it in your own time and life. And at some level, that's what politics remains at its heart, in America," he explains.

"It's impossible to be a Christian and really live out your relationship with God apart from life and action," he says. "And that action requires that you kind of be aware of and sensitive to how in fact the injustice that was involved in slavery is like one of those difficult plants where you cut off what appears on the surface but the root is still there. And it springs up again in another place, in what seems like another form, but it is the same evil. It's the same root."

Christus victor?

So, what did he mean, exactly, back at that podium in Arlington Heights, when he exclaimed that "the victory is for God"?

Was he saying God is on his side -- the side of the righteous -- and not on that of his Democratic opponent, Barack Obama, a man who professes the same Christian faith?

"Well, professing is the operative word," Keyes says, in a moment of snarkiness conspicuously absent from the rest of the interview.

"I thought it was pretty clear. Maybe it wasn't," he says, reflecting on his acceptance speech a few days earlier. "What I meant by it was the victory is in God's hands for his will and decision. That's why I couldn't promise it to people. I might lose. I don't know. None of us knows.

"The notion that you can stand there and say, 'Rah! We're gonna win!' I know you're supposed to do that, but I find it very difficult to say stuff that I know, even if it's rhetorical, is not true," he says.

Keyes is puzzled by the idea that some people would be afraid of the notion of "God on our side."

"I rather want people to think God is on their side, because that means they know he's watching them, and that his rules still apply to what they do," he says, smiling. "I hope that's the result."

"I often tell people that my greatest problem in the Bible is that in any serious way I've never been able to get past Genesis. Now, I have read the whole Bible and I read other books, but what I mean is the book I keep going back to over and over again is Genesis."

http://www.suntimes.com/output/falsani/cst-nws-keyes22.html


TOPICS: Philosophy; Politics/Elections; US: Illinois
KEYWORDS: keyes; thengodmustbealoser
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet

No problema!


101 posted on 08/22/2004 9:21:33 PM PDT by Luis Gonzalez (Sin Patria, pero sin amo)
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To: Modernman

I could be wrong, but I really believe Alan would stay true to what he believed no matter what type of race he ran.

Concerning Hillary you can believe that pipe dream if you like. If there will ever be an 8 years of Hillary she will have gotten there by the machinations of her own and the media. It's unfortunate we can't trust those who count the ballots. I honestly believe the diversion in Florida helped her to pull that one off.


102 posted on 08/22/2004 9:22:09 PM PDT by swheats
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To: EternalVigilance

Thread disruptor!!!

LOL!!!

You just hate it when the annointed one is disrespected, don't you EV?


103 posted on 08/22/2004 9:24:01 PM PDT by Luis Gonzalez (Sin Patria, pero sin amo)
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To: A Citizen Reporter
Oh, how very generous of him.

So, you would just as soon give over the Washington policy debate to a bunch of hacks and left-leaning politicos, eh?

Because that is what you would have 'in between election cycles' without voices like Alan's.

104 posted on 08/22/2004 9:24:12 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (John Kerry - Vietnam's Benedict Arnold)
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To: asmith92008; thad5611
Ironically, I view those who value commerce over the lives of the unborn as the unreliable members of the Republican coalition.

Nah, that's not irony. What's ironic is that you and thad need each other, and neither one of you seems to realize it. Last time I checked the Republican majority was still so slim that we really can't afford to lose anyone.

105 posted on 08/22/2004 9:24:41 PM PDT by Melas
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To: Luis Gonzalez
He's on the payroll.

Now you resort to lying? Is that all you have left, Luis?

I've made it clear here that I am not on his payroll.

106 posted on 08/22/2004 9:26:13 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (John Kerry - Vietnam's Benedict Arnold)
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To: EternalVigilance; Luis Gonzalez
I've made it clear here that I am not on his payroll.

Maybe he wasn't hanging on your every word. Just a guess.

107 posted on 08/22/2004 9:29:01 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Some of my best friends are white, middle-class males.)
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To: EternalVigilance
"So, you would just as soon give over the Washington policy debate to a bunch of hacks"

Look, I voted for Alan during the 2000 primary. It's what I've seen him do and say since then that has completely turned me away from him. And now, I consider him a "hack", as you say.

108 posted on 08/22/2004 9:29:22 PM PDT by A Citizen Reporter ("It's the Hypocrisy, Stupid,")
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To: EternalVigilance
All Republicans should be 'Keyes supporters'. You supporting the alternative?

No way. I support Keyes insomuch as it would be 1 more Republican senator to count towards a majority, but I'm afraid that support ends there. Or in simpler words, if I lived in IL, since he has the nomination, I'd be voting for Keyes over Obama.

However, that's not to say that I give Keyes enough credit that I believe he could honestly survive a primary these days and be a legitimate candidate for office, and that goes for his home state as well as IL.

So yeah, I'd vote for ABO (anyone but Obama) but that doesn't mean I think Keyes was a wise choice to run in IL...but that's what happen when the primary system is circumvented, even when it's by necessity as in this case.

109 posted on 08/22/2004 9:29:33 PM PDT by Melas
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To: EternalVigilance; A Citizen Reporter
Because that is what you would have 'in between election cycles' without voices like Alan's.

You overstate Alan's influence, I think. Did President Bush reverse his stem cell funding decision because Alan Keyes found it "evil"?

110 posted on 08/22/2004 9:30:51 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Some of my best friends are white, middle-class males.)
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To: Melas

Sometimes I could swear that the RINOs real goal is to split the GOP.

But I for one am not going anywhere.

I have worked straight through since Philly in 2000 to build and maintain Republican unity.

But these attacks on Keyes by a noisy minority have been merciless here in recent weeks.

I've strictly been running defense for a good man and someone who has been a tireless proponent of the principles that Jim Robinson's Free Republic stands for.


111 posted on 08/22/2004 9:31:32 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (John Kerry - Vietnam's Benedict Arnold)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet

You have no idea what Alan's influence has been.


112 posted on 08/22/2004 9:33:31 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (John Kerry - Vietnam's Benedict Arnold)
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To: Melas
I don;t know I agree with you. Folk like Thad are mercenary soldiers. If a Libermen-esque Democrat came along promising enough tax cuts, they'd follow the money. What the GOP needs is to honestly educate the public on both the social and economic aspects of conservatism instead of hiding social conservatives in the attic until we're needed to win elections.
113 posted on 08/22/2004 9:33:32 PM PDT by asmith92008 (If we buy into the nonsense that we always have to vote for RINOs, we'll just end up taking the horn)
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To: Engraved-on-His-hands
Some of us would like to see Keyes win. Others would like to see Obama win.

This simplistic view is getting old in the retelling. There are plenty of us who would pull the lever in favor of Keyes over Obama, who still aren't fans of Keyes himself. Futhermore, since in this race Keyes is a pinch hitter who wasn't vetted by the primary process, I think criticisms about him being chosen to fill Ryan's shoes are especially valid.

114 posted on 08/22/2004 9:34:32 PM PDT by Melas
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To: EternalVigilance

That's an answer?


115 posted on 08/22/2004 9:34:52 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Some of my best friends are white, middle-class males.)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet

Yes, that's an answer.

You're clueless.


116 posted on 08/22/2004 9:36:07 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (John Kerry - Vietnam's Benedict Arnold)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
Hi Clueless, my names Whocares.

I haven't seen this much spleen over a doomed campaign in a long time.

117 posted on 08/22/2004 9:43:22 PM PDT by CWOJackson
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To: EternalVigilance

Angry, bitter, and lashing out at everything that moves is no way to go through life, EV.

You might even be able to change minds for Keyes if you could get that through your head.


118 posted on 08/22/2004 9:44:01 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Some of my best friends are white, middle-class males.)
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To: CWOJackson

Hi, Whocares. Very nice meeting you. : )


119 posted on 08/22/2004 9:44:30 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Some of my best friends are white, middle-class males.)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
You hang around in some seedy places.

I can't believe how vicious these Keyes threads are.

120 posted on 08/22/2004 9:45:54 PM PDT by CWOJackson
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