“Watchman,
what of the night?”
"The hour has come, the hour is
striking and striking at you,
the hour and the end!"
Eze. 7:6 (Moffatt)
The Forming of the
Image
To the Beast
Is It Now
Accomplished?
Editor's Preface
The author of this special issue wishes to remain anonymous
under the pen name, Pro Libertas. A
Seventh-day Adventist since 1953, he has a legal background as a
graduate of London University and Lincoln's Inn of Court,
London, England, with degrees of LL.B and Barrister-at-Law. He
practiced law in a British jurisdiction for twenty years before
coming to the United States in 1975. Now an American citizen, he
received training in the laws of the United States before
working as an assistant to attorneys in the Corporate and Civil
Litigation law departments of a major California corporation
between 1991 and 1996. Deeply concerned with what he sees taking
place since the American election and having followed closely
the development of the Religious Right, the author has deep
convictions as to the fulfillment of the prophecy of Revelation
13 before our very eyes today. However, he leaves with each
reader the final judgment as to what he sees, really means. Is
the forming of the Image to the Beast now being accomplished?
There is no question but that the events of the past few
months leaves one stunned. The
selection by the Supreme Court of the President of the United
States in a five to four decision, with three of the five judges
confessed Romanists, plus the rapid fire changes initiated by
the President without a clear mandate to govern, clearly
indicates the meaning of what we have been told - "the final
movements will be rapid ones."Consideration needs to be given to
the fact that the common bond between the Religious Right and
the Hierarchy of the Roman Church is the issue of abortion, and
the basis of this factor is grounded in the doctrine of the
immortality of the soul.
The Forming of the Image
to
the Beast
Is It Now Accomplished
Pro Libertas
Page 2
To the knowledgeable Seventh-day Adventist, there should be no
question about the connection between the Roman Catholic Church
and the Image to the Beast It is a fact established beyond all
reasonable doubt that the first beast of Revelation 13 is the
papacy. All the characteristics and identifying marks apply to
none other than the Church of Rome. It can also be established
that the second beast "coming up out of the earth" is Protestant
America. Our Lord revealed that in time the second beast would
exercise all the power of the first beast before him. Sadly the
leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist Church has for many
years departed from the former clear separation of the church
from Rome and apostate Protestantism, so that today the message
of Revelation 13 is at best muted and at worst
repudiated. In the American colonies
the Roman Church had little influence. Of the original thirteen
only Maryland included an appreciable number of Catholics. Roman
Catholics were often unwelcome in the other colonies, and in
some colonies, they were excluded. Some estimates indicate there
were 25,000 in the colonial population of 4,500,000 in 1776. In
1789 John Carroll was appointed Bishop of Baltimore, with a
diocese encompassing the entire new nation. While the laity were
social outcasts, and viewed with suspicion and hostility on the
part of their Protestant neighbors'
well into the 20th century, the hierarchy enjoyed its place in
the free society of the United States from the beginning. This
and the growth of the Catholic population are of profound
significance. In 1850 Catholics made up only 5% of the total
population; by 1906, they made up 17% (14
million out of 82 million) and constituted the largest
single religious denomination in the country. They have never
looked back.
At the 1895 General Conference session, A T. Jones as a part of
his series on the "Third Angel's Message" presented a study on
"The Papacy." He noted the intense interest with which Leo XIII
viewed the American experiment in democracy and the place of the
Roman Church in the United States, where he believed the
stronghold of Romanism of the future lay. Of particular interest
to Leo was the fact that this democracy was "without restraining
bonds." Jones brought this central issue into focus by stating:
The papacy is very impatient of any restraining bonds; in fact,
it wants none at all. And the one grand discovery Leo XIII has
made, which no pope before him ever made, is that turn which is
taken now all the time by Leo, and from him by those who are
managing the affairs in this country, - the turn that is taken
upon the clause of the Constitution of the United States, -
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Leo has
made the discovery that the papacy can be pushed upon this
country in every possible way, and by every possible means, and
that Congress is prohibited from ever legislating in any way to
stop it. That is a discovery that he made that none before him
made, and that is how it is that he of late can so fully endorse
the United States Constitution. (GC Bulletin, pp.29, 30)
In an Encyclical published in the Catholic Standard, February 2,
1895, Leo XIII made it very clear that although the Church of
Rome was enjoying "a prosperous growth" in America, this was not
to be taken as evidence that it was better to have Church and
State separate. Thus was Leo both the admirer and the foe of
democracy and the U.S. Constitution. The diabolical insights and
the machinations of Leo XIII are a critical component of the
relentless assaults against the twin First Amendment
Establishment and Free Exercise clauses of the United States
Constitution.
The Nation with two Lamblike Horns
Christian Edwardson in his book, Facts of Faith,
provides an analysis of the second beast of Revelation 13. In
the last two of six specifications drawn from the prophecy, he
states:
(5)
It would be a great nation, for it was equal in power to
the Papacy (v.12).
(6) And yet its
principles were to be lamblike, mild (v. 11), or as the Danish
and German have it: "Like a lamb" -
Christlike. And
Christ advocated
two great principles: First, separation
of church and state. He said: "Render therefore unto Caesar the
things which be Caesar's, and unto God the things which be
God's" (Luke 20:25). That is keep
the two separate. Second, religious liberty.
He said: "If any man hear My words,
and believe not, I judge him not" John 12:47. "Judge not, that
ye be not judged" Matt. 7:1.
It is evident that only one nation answers to all these
specifications: the United States of America.
(p.235).
There is much talk today by right-wing jurists about the
"original intent" of the framers of the Constitution. Their real
agenda is to reinterpret the Constitution with the primary
purpose of destroying the "wall of separation" between Church
and State. Whatever can be discerned of the original intent of
the founders of this nation, their object in framing the
religion clauses can be determined
from the plain language of their private statements and letters.
The following are a few selections that give the lie to
opponents of the total separation between Church and State:
GEORGE WASHINGTON
The tribute of thanksgiving which you offer to the gracious
Father of lights, for His inspiration of our public councils
with
Page 3
wisdom and firmness to complete the national
Constitution, is worthy of men who, devoted to the pious purpose
of religion, desire their accomplishment by such means as
advance the temporal happiness of mankind. And
here I am persuaded, you
will permit me to observe, that the path of true piety is so
plain as to require but little Political attention. To this
consideration we ought to ascribe the absence of any regulation
respecting religion from the Magna Charta of our country.
(George Washington in a letter to Presbyterian Church
representatives in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, October
1789; emphasis supplied)
JOHN ADAMS
You have not extended your ideas of the right of private
judgment and the liberty of conscience, both in religion and
philosophy, farther than I do. Mine are limited only by morals
and propriety. (John Adams in a letter to M.
M. Noah regarding Jews in America July 31, 1818).
JAMES MADISON
The civil Government, though bereft of everything like an
associated hierarchy, possesses the requisite stability, and
performs its functions with complete success, whilst the number,
the industry, and morality of the priesthood, and the devotion
of the people, have been manifestly increased by the total
separation of the church from the State. (James Madison, letter
to Robert Welsh, March 2, 1819)
The experience of the United States is a happy disproof of the
error so long rooted in the unenlightened minds of well-meaning
Christians, as well as in the corrupt hearts of persecuting
usurpers, that without a legal incorporation of religious and
civil polity, neither could be supported. A mutual independence
is found most friendly to practical Religion, to social harmony,
and to political prosperity. (James Madison, a letter to F. L.
Schaeffer, December 3, 1821)
Every new and successful example, therefore, of
a perfect separation
between the ecclesiastical and civil matters, is of importance;
and I have no doubt that every new example will succeed, as
every past one has done, in showing that religion and Government
will both exist in greater purity the less they are mixed
together. (James Madison, letter to Edward Livingston, July 10,
1822; emphasis supplied)
Ye States of America, which retain in your Constitutions or
Codes, any aberration from the sacred principles of religious
liberty, by giving to Caesar what belongs to God, or joining
together what God has put asunder, hasten to revise & purify
your system, and make the example of your Country as pure &
compleat, in what relates to the
freedom of the mind and its allegiance to its Maker, as in what
belongs to the legitimate objects of political and civil
institutions. (Excerpt from James Madison's Detached Memoranda)
THOMAS JEFFERSON
Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely
between man and his God, that he owes account to none other for
his faith or his worship, that the legislative powers of
government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate
with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people
which declared that their legislature should make "no law
respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof," thus building
a wall of separation
between church and State. (Thomas
Jefferson, Writings, Library of America, p. 510; Emphasis
supplied).
In the case of Reynolds v. United States, decided in 1878,
redecided in 1879, the Supreme Court
quoted Jefferson's statement and said:
Coming as this does from an acknowledged leader of the advocates
of the measure, it may be accepted almost as an authoritative
declaration of the scope and effect of the amendment thus
secured.
In 1947 the Supreme Court again adopted Thomas Jefferson's view
in the case of Everson v. Board of Education and stated, "That
wall must be kept high and impregnable." Opponents of the "wall
of separation" claim that the Court went far beyond Jefferson's
original intent; but this flies in the face of the facts of
history. Similarly, the powerful forces that are now engaged in
the work of undermining the constitutional guarantee of
religious liberty argue that the United States was founded as a
"Christian Nation." Perhaps all of them, or a majority of them,
really believe their own propaganda. The fact is that they are
wrong. In addition to all of the statements of the framers of
the Constitution which indicate the contrary, there was a treaty
between the United States and the Barbary, in which Article 11
expressly stated that the "government of the United States of
America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian
religion." This treaty was made under the presidency of George
Washington and signed into law by President John Adams. The
Catholic hierarchy has never been under any illusion on this
point. The Roman Catholic Church did "recognize" the United
States as a "Christian nation" when in 1892 a Supreme Court
Justice said that it was. However, from Pope Leo XIII's own
statement in his encyclical to America, we know that he
recognized "State and Church to be, as in America, dissevered
and divorced."
The Image speaks as a Dragon
In Facts of Faith, Christian Edwardson makes this comment on Rev.
13:11:
The prophet continues: "He spake as a dragon."
... A
nation speaks through its laws. This prophetic
statement, therefore, reveals that a great change in policy is
to come over our beloved country. The "dragon" is a symbol of
pagan Rome, that persecuted the early
Christians during the first three centuries. ...
This prophecy also reveals what influence will be brought to
bear upon our lawmakers and people to produce this sad change.
We have already seen that "the first beast" of Revelation
13:1-10 represents the Papacy, and by reading the eleventh and
twelfth verses we see that the effort of the lamblike beast will
be to cause "the earth and them that dwell therein to worship
the first beast,
Page 4
whose deadly wound was healed." That is:
The whole trend is
Romeward,
therefore it must be Rome that is working in disguise to bring
about such a trend. (p.239; emphasis added.)
Further:
The Papacy was formed by a
union of church and state, which resulted in the persecution of
dissenters. An "image," or "likeness"
to the Papacy in America would be a union of church and state,
or a co-operation between them, as in the days of papal Rome.
And, seeing it is to be "an image to the beast," it cannot be
the beast itself, but must be an effort started among
Protestants, who desire the aid of the state to enforce some of
their dogmas. (p.302)
The course of history in this Republic which has brought us to
the apocalyptic conditions of the present is precisely in accord
with the above statements. The principle of total separation of
Church and State was under steady assault from the very
beginning. The excerpt quoted above from a letter of George
Washington to church representatives indicates the
dissatisfaction of some church people then to the exclusion of
an establishment of religion from the Constitution. The first
serious effort to reverse this wise action of the framers
occurred in 1864. An amendment to the Constitution proposed by
the National Reform Association, known as the Christian
Amendment, attempted to have inserted God, Christianity, and
Jesus in the Preamble. Sixty-four other religious measures were
introduced in Congress between 1888 and 1910. At all times it
has been Protestants who have been pressing this agenda
publicly. However, the blueprint laid out by Leo XIII has been
followed assiduously by the Catholics. They, in the words of
Christian Edwardson, were:
... focused on America, not in an
antagonistic way, but quietly, in wisely planned, systematically
organized, and well directed efforts along numerous lines, so as
to gain favor among Protestants, and not to be suspected as
propaganda. (p.241)
So successful were the Catholics in gaining favor among
Protestants that the latter sought the former's aid in achieving
their objectives, all unsuspecting of the ultimate goal of
Catholicism in the United States. This is documented in the
final chapter of Facts of
Faith (pp. 304-306). It has now culminated in the modem
political movements and organizations that have now imposed the
distinct form of the Image to the Beast on this Republic that
was founded on the grand principles of civil and religious
liberty.
The Religious Right & Allies Take Over
The origins of the modern religious right can be traced back to
the failed presidential campaign of Barry Goldwater. Following
Goldwater's defeat a conservative movement known as the New
Right was formed with a declaration of war against communism and
a perceived "movement" which they called "secular humanism."
They believed that this "movement" was trying to steer the U.S.
away from a God centered society to "atheistic socialism." Key
leaders of the New Right were three men from the Goldwater
campaign: Richard
Viguerie, Howard Phillips and Paul
Weyrich. By the early '70s they had laid the foundations for a
conservative revolution in the United States.
Viguerie built a fund-raising empire
with the use of a list of Goldwater donors. Phillips founded the
Conservative Caucus which promoted militarism. Weyrich obtained
financial backing from Colorado beer magnate Joseph Coors to
found the Heritage Foundation. This is a right-wing think tank
that has exercised great influence on Republican presidential
administrations since Ronald Reagan's election in 1980. He also
brought into being the Free Congress Foundation for the purpose
of building a right-wing political movement and electing
sympathetic politicians to Congress. Although possessed of
superb organizational skills, the three men did not have a
popular base of support. To remedy this lack, they targeted
Democratic working class voters with social and cultural issues.
(See, "Historical Background of the Religious Right" at
http://www.aclu.org/about/right3.html).
The next phase of the campaign to rid the nation of "secular
humanism" is noted in this ACLU report, under the caption -
"Mobilizing a New Constituency":
In the mid-1970s Viguerie used his
sophisticated direct mail fund-raising techniques to address
another constituency:
evangelical and fundamentalist Christians.
Viguerie sought to tap resentment
toward Supreme Court decisions banning prayer in the public
schools and establishing a woman's right to an abortion. His
direct mail efforts not only brought money into the New Right's
coffers; they disseminated a steady flow of appeals that
encouraged evangelicals to become involved in politics. Other
new activist organizations also played an important role in
mobilizing this constituency. In 1974 and 1975 a group of key
leaders, including Richard DeVos,
president of Amway Corporation, and Bill Bright, president of
Campus Crusade for Christ convened a series of secret meetings
to plan the development of the religious right. This group
published a blueprint for Christians to win elections and a
manual designed to persuade evangelical Christians to adopt
conservative positions on a whole range of issues. Bill Bright
subsequently sponsored the "I Found It," campaign, which used
billboards, bumper stickers, and newspaper ads in a massive
effort to expose every person in the United States to the
gospel. Between 1976 and 1980 the campaign spent several hundred
million dollars, much of it raised by Texas billionaire Nelson
Bunker Hunt. Organizations arose to
mobilize women by appealing to "family values" and anxieties
about the emerging feminist movement. In 1972, Phyllis
Schlafly founded the Eagle Forum to
organize opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment, which she saw
as a threat to the traditional family. (Schlafly
had authored a conspiratorial book titled A Choice Not
An Echo, which had
served as the slogan of Barry Goldwater's presidential
campaign.) And in 1979, Beverly LaHaye
founded what would become the most successful New Right women's
organization, Concerned Women for America. Civil rights for gay
people emerged as another flashpoint for the Right. ...
Page 5
Although usually regarded as a fringe religious cult, the Rev.
Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church,
or Moon Organization, played an important behind-the-scenes role
in spurring the development of the New Right and religious
right. Direct mail guru Richard Viguerie
has raised money for various Moon Organization groups since
1965. The principle source of Moon's funding, however, is in
Japan, where Moon has had close connections with the Japanese
right wing and prominent members of the Liberal Democratic
Party. Beginning in 1975, a conservatively estimated $80 million
a year began flowing from the Japanese branch of the Unification
Church to the United States. Much of this money went to various
New Right organizations and to Moon's
Washington Times,
a daily newspaper that since 1982 has served as a sounding board
for the New Right. Activists for the Moon Organization usually
work with others on the right through an array of groups with
patriotic-sounding names, such as the American Freedom Coalition
and the anti communist CAUSA. Founded in 1987, the American
Freedom Coalition brought together various elements of the
right, including anti-Communist, anti-abortion, and "pro-family"
groups.
The ACLU report describes the organization and work of
Falwell's Moral Majority and its
eclipse. Being –
Disappointed with their accomplishments through the Reagan
Presidency, religious right leaders shifted their strategy and
tactics to winning offices at the state and local level and
gaining control of local Republican Party organizations. With
the eclipse of Jerry Falwell's Moral
Majority, Paul Weyrich and Pat Robertson worked as allies in
both this shift in strategy and this power struggle.
Of enormous significance is the ideology driving the agenda of
the religious right. It is an end-times ideology. The ACLU
describes this ideology as 'To Rule and Reign:" The analysis
reads:
If the religious right is, as many of its leaders say, fighting
a war, then it is a war in which ideas are critical.
Conservative evangelical leaders seek control of political
institutions as a means to implement their theological ideas.
And their theology can provide a powerful motivation for
political activism. Awareness of these ideas is essential to
understanding their political tactics and objectives. [However],
the religious right is by no means monolithic; it is divided on
certain theological issues and organizational style. Yet despite
these divisions, it has forged a working consensus on political
ideology and strategy.
Further, the Evangelical concept of the "End Times" enters the
picture. The report continues:
Belief in an evangelical religion does not automatically lead to
involvement in public affairs. For much of this century,
evangelicals have avoided direct involvement in politics and
instead have focused on saving souls. Evangelicals' motivations
for political activism depend, in part, on their beliefs about
the "end times." Indeed, the most important divisions within the
religious right revolve around beliefs on this issue. There are
two main schools of thought.
In the larger school are the "premillenialists."
They believe that Christians will be lifted into heaven en masse
- in what is known as the rapture - before the battle of
Armageddon, the final battle between good and evil. Afterwards,
they will return to earth, where they will "rule and reign" with
Christ. Since premillenialists
believe that Christ's return will cause the world to be
reformed, they have little incentive to become politically
active and reform the world themselves. Instead, their primary
obligation is to evangelize - to convert as many non-believers
as possible before Christ's return. Overcoming this
disinclination to political activism has been one of the
greatest challenges confronting the leaders of the religious
right. In the smaller theological camp are the "postmillenialists,"
who believe that Christ will not return until after Christians
reign for a thousand years. Because they believe that they must
literally prepare the way for Christ's return, their ranks
include some of the most committed political activists on the
religious right.
Involved in this picture are the "Christian Reconstructionists:"
The most militant postmillenialists
are known as Christian Reconstructionists.
Though a tiny minority on the religious right, their ideas have
exerted an important influence. They stress a literal
interpretation of the Bible and believe that society should be
"reconstructed" to conform to Biblical laws. The most prominent
Reconstructionist is Rousas John
(R.J.) Rushdoony, a former Orthodox
Presbyterian minister and John Birch Society activist who has
published numerous books and tracts through his think-tank,
Chalcedon, headquartered in Vallecito,
California. He and his son-in- law Gary North (now estranged)
are largely responsible for developing and propagating Christian
Reconstructionism's political
program. Rushdoony and North seek to
rebuild society according to a biblical blueprint. Their
prescriptions include the death penalty for unrepentant
homosexuality, abortion, and adultery; the abolition of the
prison system; which would be made possible by imposing the
death penalty on serious criminals and forcing less serious
criminals to make restitution; the elimination of sexually
explicit materials; schools run entirely by the churches; and
the complete elimination of property taxes.
Rushdoony's extreme views are shared by only a tiny
minority of the religious right, but these views have had a
major impact through what is loosely known as "Kingdom" or
"Dominion" theology. According to these theologies, Christians
are mandated by the Bible to take control of all secular
institutions and build the Kingdom of God on earth. Kingdom
theology gives evangelical organizers not only a powerful
incentive to become politically active, but also a long-range
social vision which has become the central, unifying ideology
for the religious right.
It is not possible within the limits of this article to mention
all of the arms of the religious right movement. Suffice it to
say that all of the major religious
right leaders have united in a single political entity called
the Council for National Policy. These include the three
original founders of the New Right movement, all of the
well-known names of the religious right leadership plus some not
so well known, all of the multimillionaire funders of the
religious right organizations, and a number of leaders of the
Republican Congress
Page 6
among
them Dick Armey, Tom DeLay, and Trent Lott. The Council "is an
extremely secretive organization that meets behind closed doors
to strategize and co-ordinate its campaign." (See:
http://www.geocities.com/alanjpakula/triple2.html). Now
President George W. Bush addressed this organization in a secret
meeting in October, 1999, and his presidential campaign refused
to allow the tape to be released. However, notes of persons in
attendance reportedly indicate that his promises included
restrictions on "special" civil rights, "Christian" prayer in
schools which would be "Christian" or corporate only, that he
would "work hard" to overturn Roe v. Wade, and appoint only
anti-choice judges to the Supreme Court and the federal bench.
He expressed his approval of revoking First Amendment guarantees
of separation of Church and State and freedom of speech. In his
view, Christianity is the only real religion.
There is another powerful right-wing organization, not directly
connected with the religious right. It is the Federalist
Society. Its origins are described by Jerry
Landay in The Washington Monthly (March, 2000):
The Society's origins can be traced back to 1979 - the year
before Ronald Reagan's victory - when a legal scholar named
Michael Horowitz published a tract on the public-interest law
movement, exhorting conservatives to overturn a half-century of
liberal dominance of the legal establishment. This could be
done, he wrote, by indoctrinating or winning over succeeding
generations of law students, lawyers, and judges. By definition,
the campaign had to be rooted in the fertile ground of law
schools. To Horowitz's good fortune, Reagan was elected in 1980,
and his administration set to work filling the sails of the
Federalist movement.
Horowitz's concept was taken up with relish by senior members of
the new Administration. They operated on two tracks - designed
to insure that the Reagan Revolution would well outlast the
Reagan Presidency. The first, to reclaim the Federal courts from
liberals, swept an array of conservative scholars and judges
from law schools and state courts onto the Federal bench: the
likes of Robert Bork, Ralph Winter, Antonin Scalia, Richard
Posner, Sandra Day O'Connor, and Anthony Kennedy.
The second track was even more forward looking and involved the
apprenticing of a new generation of conservative
lawyer-intellectual-under-30 to the Reagan
apparat.
The Second track was laid with the establishment of the founding
chapters of the Federalist Society at Yale under Robert Bork,
and at the University of Chicago under Antonin Scalia. It has
been fair sailing ever since.
When one looks for a connection between the Catholic Church and
the religious right, it is not to be found primarily in
institutional organization, but rather in a community of
interests in specifically defined areas such as the
anti-abortion movement, aid to parochial schools, and so on.
However, in the establishment of the Federalist Society one can
see the fingerprints of the Roman Catholics, whose modus
operandi has ever been to capture the elite of society. Scalia
is of course a Catholic. Bork is believed to be an agnostic, but
clearly is subject to a powerful Catholic influence:
his wife is a board member of the Catholic Campaign for
America, which seeks to teach Catholics to bring Catholic values
into public life:
With 25,000 members plus scores of close affiliates nation-wide
- including Supreme Court Justices Thomas and Antonin Scalia,
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, and University
of Chicago brain-boxes Richard Epstein and Frank Easterbrook
(also a federal appellate judge) - the Federalist Society is
quite simply the best-organized, best-funded, and most effective
legal network operating in this country. Its rank-and-file
include conservative lawyers, law
students, law professors, bureaucrats, activists, and judges.
They meet at law schools and function rooms across the country
to discuss and debate the finer points of legal theory and
substance on panels that often include liberals - providing
friction, stimulus, and the illusion of balance. What gets less
attention, however, is that
the Society is
accomplishing in the courts what Republicans can't achieve
politically. There is nothing like the Federalist Society on the
left. (Ibid.: emphasis supplied.)
Starting with the New Right in the '70s, this is the pervasive,
entrenched, sinister power that Satan has built up and put into
place for this end time. The total force of all these movements
has been concentrated on seizing the White House for George
Bush.
The Selecting of a President with a
Religious Mission
Many political commentators who are uncomfortable with the
notion of religion in government indulge in the wishful thinking
that George W. Bush learned from his father's problems with the
evangelicals, and merely professes Christian faith to secure
what has become the base of the Republican
party. But Bush has talked freely about the "spiritual
awakening" that he experienced from a single conversation with
Billy Graham in 1985. does
not describe himself as "born again" he says, because his faith
deepened more gradually than that term implies. He made a
startling statement in a Republican
presidential
primary debate that Jesus Christ was his favorite philosopher
"because He changed my life." An article in the
New York Times (January 23, 2000)
reported that, far from mere political posturing his belief was
"both a central pillar of his life and critical to his vision
for the nation and the way he would govern." This information
came from religious leaders, friends and Bush
himself. The article went on:
As president, Mr. Bush says, he
would “look first” to religious organizations of various faiths,
rather than government or secular agencies, to attack poverty,
homelessness and addiction. He has also said he would not
require religious programs to censor their spiritual teachings
to get government aid. He believes that God has a place in
government, that religion has a place in society, and it is not
to be marginalized and put on the periphery as though it is some
sort of extra,” said the Rev. Tony Evans, an evangelist and
senior pastor of the Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship in Dallas who
prays with Mr. Bush….
Page 7
But behind the scenes, some of the nation's
most prominent Christian conservatives are supporters, friends
and advisers of Mr. Bush. They say they are confident he will
promote their agenda on abortion and "family values,"
as well as church-state issues. (Emphasis supplied.)
We will probably never know what commitments Bush made to the
Council for National Policy; but the above quotations are proof
enough of his enmity against the separation of Church and State.
Bush had two direct masters in the recent presidential election
campaign - the hierarchy of the Roman Church, and its offspring
the New Right-Religious Right alliance. The Washington Post
reported that about two years earlier meetings began between a
small group of conservative Catholics and Carl Rove, Bush's top
strategist, to plan a coalition based on an alliance of deeply
religious, churchgoing Protestants and Catholics. The article
stated:
Their goal was to secure the GOP as the political home of
regular churchgoers. If successful, they would create a
political party dominated by those seeking to advance an agenda
of moral re-generation, with a core committed to ending
legalized abortion, promoting premarital abstinence and
attacking sexuality in the movies and on television. (Oct. 28,
2000)
Significantly, the coalition move coincided with a decision at
the 1998 conclave of the National Conference of Bishops to make
banning abortion the top political priority of the Roman Church.
Flowing from this decision, the Catholic hierarchy "sharply
ratcheted up its political activity during the 2000 elections,"
according to a report in Church & State (December, 2000).
The report by the editor, Joseph L. Conn, stated that, "While
the news media focused its attention on the partisan posture of
the Christian Coalition and some African-American churches, the
political activities of the Roman Catholic Church, the nation's
largest religious denomination, went little noticed." Bush
established close personal relationships with the Catholic
hierarchy during the election campaign. Conn reported that on
the final weekend of the campaign Bush met in private with
Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua of
Philadelphia, who is "one of the most right-wing partisan
prelates in the country." It is not clear how successful the
hierarchy was in its political activism on behalf of Bush. Gore
won 50 per cent of the Catholic vote (down from 53 per cent for
Clinton in 1996) to Bush's 47 per cent (compared to Bob Dole's
37 per cent in 1996.) Considering the report by Church &
State of the intense pressure on the Catholic laity from
pulpits across the nation, it is surprising that Bush failed to
get the majority of their votes to win a clear victory. This can
be credited in part to an independent streak in the Catholic
laity of America. Perhaps it is also a reflection of the uneasy
union between the Religious Right and the Catholic laity?
Nevertheless the damage is done, and there has been a
break-through of enormous magnitude. Can the tide of battle be
turned for a little while before the end? Time will tell.
What George Bush has done from the day of his inaugural ceremony
through the ensuing two weeks so loudly proclaims his antipathy
to separation of Church and State that mention of his
high-handed accession to power is almost redundant However, the
power struggle in Florida, and its outcome, belie the amiable
image that he seeks to project while waging war against the
constitutional rights of the people. Whoever was the true winner
of Florida's electoral votes, the crucial point is that all of
the votes were never counted. Despite the propaganda to the
contrary released by the Republicans and believed by a majority
of Americans, according to the polls, there were persistent,
reliable reports that they feared Gore would have won either a
full recount in the selected counties or a full statewide
recount It was truly alarming to see the undemocratic forces
that were unleashed by the party in the Florida contest. It was
an exercise in raw political power against the will of the
majority of voters in the nation. It was accomplished by
determined action and threats on the ground in the counting
process. It was advanced in the Florida legislature and the U.S.
Congress. There were vicious attacks on the Florida Supreme
Court in the exercise of its rightful jurisdiction as the
ultimate interpreter of Florida law, combined with unprecedented
appeals for intervention by the federal courts. There was no
genuine federal constitutional question involved in the
post-election controversy. The equal protection clause of the
Constitution was rejected by a Federal District Court and the
Federal District Court of Appeals as a basis for halting the
counting of undervotes. The U.S.
Supreme Court did not take up that ground on the first appeal,
but the conservative majority seized on the clause in the second
appeal to hand down a decision that they said must not be taken
as a precedent for any other case. Ironically, the equal
protection clause had been enacted to benefit newly emancipated
slaves, but by its application in the present case it was mostly
the votes of their descendants that were discarded. It was a win
at all costs strategy in which the conservatives on the U.S.
Supreme Court became deeply involved. All of this was done by
Republicans who had been preaching for years that we are a
nation of laws and not men! This was an awesome manifestation of
the very spirit of the beast.
The Scripture says, "Saying to them that dwell on the earth,
that they should make an image to the beast ..." Rev. 13:14
(part 2.) Amazingly George Bush was declaring it throughout his
campaign, and somehow precisely what he was saying did not get
through to millions of Americans, who would never have given him
their vote if they had known. The term "compassionate
conservatism" was not a promise to soften the harsh,
laissez-faire policies of the Republicans which favors the
affluent in our society. Only those who were familiar with the
name Marvin Olasky, and his books,
The Tragedy of American Compassion (1992) and
Renewing Compassion (1996) could have had any idea what was
involved. Only those who were aware of
another Olasky book,
Compassionate Conservatism. What It Is, What It
Does, and How It Can Transform America,
Page 8
for
which George Bush wrote a foreword and an appendix could have
had any inkling what the nation was in for if Bush was elected.
Bush calls Olasky "compassionate
conservatism's" leading thinker. He also says, "Compassion
demands personal help and accountability, yet when delivered by
big government it came to mean something very different" Bush
further states in the Foreword:
Government can do certain things very well, but it cannot put
hope in our hearts or a sense of purpose in our lives. That
requires churches and synagogues and mosques and charities.
Not surprisingly, the ideology of Olasky's
1992 book was enthusiastically embraced by Newt Gingrich and his
congressional allies to form the basis for "The Republican
Revolution." They emphasized economics and smaller
government; but "compassionate
conservatism" is, above all, the blueprint of a plan to, "Tear
down that wall of separation" between Church and State,
Olasky's own phrase spoken in a
lecture, "What Is Compassionate Conservatism and Can It
Transform America?" delivered before the Heritage Foundation on
July 11, 2000.
As alarming as current events are, there is cause for greater
alarm because the opening wedge of "compassionate conservatism"
has already been enacted by Congress as a part of the 1996
welfare reform legislation. It was sponsored by then U.S.
Senator John Ashcroft, now George Bush's Attorney-General. This
devout Pentecostal has a well documented hostility towards many
of our cherished constitutional freedoms, most notably the wall
of separation between Church and State. Charitable Choice frees
religious organizations from the requirement that government
subsidized services be provided in a secular manner, and usually
through a separate legal entity. Sadly, even Al Gore stunned
civil libertarians by endorsing Charitable Choice in May, 2000,
stating that dispensing a little religion along with a hot meal
or job training is a good idea, and government should support
it. As reported by ABC News, Rev. James Dunn, executive director
of the Joint Baptist Committee put it well:
We've got a whole lot of people who are going to take the money
and try to win people to Jesus with it. They are going to take
it and use it to undergird their overall mission. It's who we
are today as a Christian people. We don't distinguish between
our do-gooding and our good-talking.
We can't separate them because we sincerely believe when you are
feeding someone who is hungry, you
should be telling him about Jesus, too. There is nothing evil
about that. That's the way the contemporary Christian
understands the gospel. But we had better not take tax dollars to do it because those tax
dollars were not paid to help my church win converts or to
proselytize. (Emphasis supplied.)
With non-Christians present at Bush's inaugural ceremony, his
presidency started with the promotion of Christianity in the
opening and closing prayers. Rev. Kirbyjon
Caldwell said in the closing benediction, "in the name that's
above all names, Jesus the Christ. Let all who agree say amen,"
to the certain discomfort of many. Bush included in his speech a
promise to give "Church and charity, synagogue and mosque ... an
honored place in our plans and laws." (Emphasis
supplied.) Then, within the first two hours of his presidency,
he made a proclamation declaring January 21, 2001, a "National
Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving to God."
All of this has been followed during his first week in office by
actions on abortion, and an education package sent to Congress
with inclusion of voucher funding for religious and other
private schools. (CONCERNING ABORTION, IT IS OF GREAT
SIGNIFICANCE THAT THE "RIGHT TO LIFE" MOVEMENT IS BASED ON THE
CATHOLIC DOGMA OF THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL, AND THE
CONDEMNATION OF THE UNBAPTIZED ABORTED FETUS TO AN ETERNITY IN
LIMBO.)
On January 29, Bush unveiled a new White House Office for
promoting government aid to "faith-based" organizations (i.e.
churches) as a part of a major "faith-based" social service
initiative. This is a man with a purpose - and in a hurry! Barry
W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation
of Church & State declared:
Bush is throwing the massive weight of the federal government
behind religious groups and religious conversions. The President
appears to believe that the government should use religion to
solve all the nations social
problems. This approach strikes at the heart of the religious
freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment. (See
http:www.au.org/pr126O1.htm [no longer found online].)
The "wall of separation" between Church and State has been
breached by Congress in the Charitable Choice
legislation and now by a broader
executive order. The nation has been set inexorably on course
towards the ultimate fulfilment of
Revelation 13. Is the Image to the Beast now fully formed, or
must the full force of the tyranny and persecution first be
manifest? One must come to his own conclusions. There is one
certainty - prophecy has and will continue to be fulfilled. Our
Lord stated that these things "must shortly come to pass" (Rev.
1:1). As this nation teeters on the brink of the extinction of
democracy and the freedoms we have dearly cherished, we have
only one hope of survival. We must place all our trust and
confidence in Christ whose mighty arm will deliver His people
out of their affliction.
Epilogue
Since the George W. Bush administration's initial flurry of
alarming cabinet appointments, religious declarations, religion
influenced legislative proposals, and executive orders
culminating in the unveiling on January 29 of the White House
Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, the attention
of Congress and the nation has been distracted by the style of
the
Page 9
Bush presidency. In an article by Carla
Binion in the Online Journal, she put it this way:
Today, as George W. Bush reaches out to woo church groups and
Senate Democrats and put them in a virtual trance of peace and
bipartisan harmony, it seems that maybe he picked up a tip from
his dad's longtime supporter, Rev. Sun
Myung Moon. Moonies practice a technique they call love
bombing." One former Moonie. ..
defines love bombing as a "persistent
psychological effort to disarm a skeptical recruit by showering
him with excessive attention and love" in order to win him
over... Bush now takes political schmoozing to unprecedented
heights, but for what ultimate purpose? (Feb. 3, "Stealth
tactics, Moonies and the art of cynicism")
Stealth, and therefore by definition, deceit, is the
modus operandi of
George W. Bush and the allies he has gathered around him. Indeed
this is a characteristic of the Bush family. After referring to
a September, 1995,
Washington Post report of a Moon rally speaking fee paid to
ex-president George H. W. Bush that was to remain secret,
Binion stated:
The problem with these secret fees and other clandestine
activities is that when it comes to the Bush family, what you
see is riot always what you get. The public front is one of calm
good will, but the public record reveals that what happens
behind the scenes is often another matter. For example, George
W. Bush campaign adviser Ralph Reed once defended his Christian
Colalition colleagues for fronting
'stealth candidates" - meaning, politicians running on secular
issues but hiding their religious-right agendas. Reed told the
Los Angeles Times (March 22, 1992) that when it comes to stealth
tactics: "It is like guerrilla warfare. If you reveal your
location, all it does is allow your opponent to improve his
artillery bearings. It is better to move quietly, with stealth,
under cover of night."
Thus as stated by Benjamin Soskis:
These days, when President Bush talks about his newly
established White House Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives, the only gospel he seems to be preaching is
deregulation. "Our plan will not favor religious institutions
over nonreligious institutions," Bush declared in early February
at the National Prayer Breakfast "I am interested in what
works." In the executive order creating the new office, Bush
said he was allowing private charities and religious groups to
'compete on a level playing field." Don't believe him. Bush's
initiative assumes that religion's power to transform lives is
both unique and essential to the nation's welfare. And once upon
a time Bush used to say so. As the former governor of Texas
announced in a 1996 speech titled, 'We Need a Renewal of Spirit
in This Country," in the final analysis there is no overcoming
anything without faith - be it drugs or alcohol or poverty or
selfishness or flawed social policy." (The New Republic, Feb.,
26, art "What Religion Cannot Do")
The propaganda is working. Soskis
stated, "It's a sentiment endorsed by believers on both sides of
the aisle" referring to politicians, and he points out that:
According to a 1999 Gallup Poll, 61 percent of Americans believe
religion "can solve all or most of today's problems." So perhaps
its no wonder that in the weeks
since Bush's announcement. hordes of
commentators have insisted that faith-based organizations do a
better job fixing society's ills than their sterile secular
alternatives.
Here is "a virtual trance of peace and bipartisan harmony"
indeed! In Bush's first press conference on February 22, veteran
reporter Helen Thomas was the lone reporter who raised the
question of Church and State in the following exchange
(cnn.com.2/22/01):
QUESTION: Mr. President, why do you refuse to respect the wall
between Church and State? ... why do
you break it down?
BUSH: Well, I strongly respect the separation of church and
state.
QUESTION: Well, you wouldn't have a religious office in the
White House If you did.
(According to a press release in Americans United for Separation
of Church and State 12/23/011, "Bush
itheril attempted a brief defense, arguing the
constitutionality of his Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives, including a muddled reference to "the line between
the separation of church and state.”)
QUESTION: You are a secular official?
BUSH: I agree. I am a secular official.
QUESTION: And not a
missionary? (emphasis supplied)
This Is the alarm bell that should be
sounding. Instead, there is a seductive sound, the deceptive
ring of a bell of peace and tranquillity.
In reality it is tolling the impending death of democracy and
its civil and religious freedoms. The call now is to all
religions to come and worship the image of the beast.
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