Talk to Action Writers to be Featured on State of Belief -- Sunday, May 21st [UPDATED!]
Frederick Clarkson printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Sat May 13, 2006 at 11:14:34 PM EST
On Sunday, May 21st the Air America radio show State of Belief, hosted by Rev. Dr.  Welton Gaddy, will feature a discussion of the attacks on the mainline churches by the Institute on Religion and Democracy and related groups. The three guests are all contributors to Talk to Action: Rev. Dr. John Dorhauer; Rev. Dr. Bruce Prescott, and Rev. Dr. Andrew Weaver.  

The program will air on about 40 stations around the country, XM Satellite Radio, and over the internet via streaming audio, as well as via podcast. Visit the State of Belief section of the Air America web site for details.

We made reporting on and discussion of the attacks on the mainline churches a focus of Talk to Action, because while the churches have been in the sights of the strategic thinkers and financiers of the right for at least a generation -- media coverage, even in progressive and religious media has been spotty at best. This oversight was strange because the historic churches of mainline Protestantism have been at or near the forefront of every major movement for social and economic justice in the Unites States for a century.

We are very encouraged that State of Belief is broadcasting a pioneering discussion of this subject.

Update [2006-5-15 15:13:50 by Frederick Clarkson]: Here is a link to the State of Belief press release on the show.

Given their standing at the center of American cultural and religious life since the founding of the nation, some found the church rising in this way unsettling. Indeed, sometimes the churches found themselves in opposition to powerful corporate interests, as well as the proponents of the excesses of American foreign policy. So, these interests looked to how they could neutralize or dismember the churches as they would business or military opponents.  

The strategic hub of the resulting war of attrition is the Washington, DC-based agency, the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD) -- which was bankrolled by the founding funders of the major institutions of rightwing politics and public policy in Washington, DC.  

IRD went on to organize conservative rump factions into sources of internal division, while neutralizing or countering positive media coverage -- and generating negative media coverage.  (One concrete result of the efforts to marginalize the mainline churches has been, as Media Matters and the United Church of Christ have pointed out, is that none of the Sunday morning public affairs talk shows have had a mainline protestant church leader on their program in many years, turning instead to leaders of the Christian Right such as Jerry Falwell.)

Writers at Talk to Action have stepped into the breech. Of the guests on State of Belief, John Dorhauer has posted weekly on the efforts of IRD affiliated or alligned cnservative "renewal" groups, bent on wreaking havoc and internal division in the United Church of Christ. Bruce Prescott (Mainstream Baptist) has reported extensively on the fundamentalist takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention. And Andrew Weaver has posted a number of investigative pieces on IRD-related attacks on the United Methodist Church, and the mainline church community in general.  

For general background in advance of the show, I suggest my recent article:  The Battle for the Mainline Churches, which appears in the Spring issue of The Public Eye magazine.

Here are some excerpts:

"Make no mistake," wrote Avery Post, the national president of the United Church of Christ in 1982, "the objectives of the Institute on Religion  and Democracy are the exact opposite of what its name appears to stand for. The purpose of its leaders is to demoralize the mainline denominations and to turn them away from the pursuit of social and economic justice.

"We must not wait for this attack to be launched in the congregations of the United Church of Christ. I urge you to move quickly to tell the ministers and members of the churches in your conference about this campaign to disrupt our church life and to explain to them how and why the National Council of Churches has been chosen to be its first victim and the opening wedge for attacks on the denominations themselves."

Post's letter to regional leaders of the 1.3 million-member church followed the Institute of Religion and Democracy's (IRD) media attacks against the National Council of Churches (NCC) and its member denominations in Readers Digest and on 60 Minutes. Both were smear jobs, alleging that money from Sunday collection plates were financing Marxist guerrillas. 60 Minutes producer Don Hewitt told TV talk show host Larry King in 2002 that it was the one program he truly regretted in his career. Twenty years late, but at least he acknowledged the error.

Avery Post was prophetic in his warning. Unfortunately, he was not widely heeded. Although the episode was big news at the time, it seemed to drift from people's consciousness. These days, the battle lines are drawn over such issues as same sex marriage and ordination of gay and lesbian priests and ministers. But as important as these matters are, the stakes are far larger. They go to the extent to which the mainline churches will continue to play a central role in American public life, or the extent to which they will be marginalized, perhaps forever.

People outside of the churches may wonder, why they should care? Methodist minister Andrew Weaver, who has researched the Institute and its satellite groups, explains that the member churches of the National Council of Churches account for about 25% of the population and half of the members of the US Congress. "NCC church members' influence is disproportionate to their numbers," he says, "and include remarkably high numbers of leaders in politics, business, and culture.... Moreover, these churches are some of the largest landowners in the U.S., with hundreds of billions of dollars collectively in assets, including real estate and pension funds. A hostile takeover of these churches would represent a massive shift in American culture, power and wealth for a relatively small investment."

What is more, the institutional moral authority, leadership, and resources of the churches have been vital to major movements for social change throughout the 20th Century--from enacting child labor laws, to advancing the African-American civil rights movement, to ending the war in Vietnam.


For much of the 20th century, the mainline Protestant churches maintained a vigorous "social witness." That is what these Protestants call their views on such matters as peace, civil rights and environmental justice. While there was certainly conservative opposition to the development of these views, and to the activities that grew out of them, the direction of mainline Protestantism was clear. The churches became powerful proponents of social change in the United States. They stood at the moral and political center of society with historic roots in the earliest days of the nation. Indeed, they epitomize the very idea and image of "church" for many Americans. In retrospect, it seems inevitable that powerful external interests would organize and finance the conservative rump factions into strategic formations intended to divide and conquer--and diminish the capacity of churches to carry forward their idea of a just society in the United States--and the world.

When the strategic funders of the Right, such as Richard Mellon Scaife, got together to create the institutional infrastructure of the Right in the 1970s and 80s, they underwrote the founding of the IRD in 1980 as a Washington, DC-based agency that would help network, organize, and inform internal opposition groups, while sustaining outside pressure and public relations campaigns.

IRD was started as a project of the Coalition for a Democratic Majority (CDM), an organization of conservative Democrats (many of whom later defected to the GOP), who had sought to counter the takeover of the party by liberals associated with 1972 presidential candidate George McGovern. IRD was originally run by Coalition chief, Penn Kemble--a political activist who did not attend church. According to a profile by the International Relations Center, IRD received about $3.9 million between 1985 and 2002 from The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Sarah Scaife Foundation, John M. Olin Foundation, Castle Rock Foundation, The Carthage Foundation, and JM Foundation.

The Institute remains a well-funded and influential hub for a national network of conservative factions called the Association for Church Renewal. The member organizations, called "renewal" groups, variously seek to neutralize church tendencies of which they don't approve; drive out staff they don't like; and seek to take over the churches, but failing that--taking as many churches and assets out as possible. The network's spokespersons are treated as credible voices of conservative dissent by mainstream media.


...in 2002, a foundation controlled by Richard Mellon Scaife "gave $225,000 to the IRD for its "Reforming America's Churches Project"-- among whose stated goals is the elimination of the Methodists' General Board of Church and Society, the church's voice for justice and peace, as well as discrediting United Methodist Church pastors and bishops with whom they disagree by instigating as many as a dozen church trials over the next few years.

The longtime director of IRD, the late Diane Knippers was, according to Salon.com's Max Blumenthal, "the chief architect" of an initiative "to `restructure the permanent governing structure' of `theologically flawed' mainline churches... in order to `discredit and diminish the Religious Left's influence.'

IRD and its agents in all of the major denominations have indeed used the internal church judicial system to create division while seeking to enforce their versions of orthodoxy. The Presbyterian Church USA, for example, has seen many judicial battles over, among other things, ordination of gay clergy and the carrying out of same sex commitment ceremonies during this period.

You can read the entire article at the web site of The Public Eye. To those Americans who want to preserve democracy in America, State of Belief host Welton Gaddy, observes regarding the fundamentalist takeover of his church:

"The Southern Baptist Convention was lost not because of those trying to take it over, but because of people arguing that it wasn't a big deal."



Display:
Check with your Air America affiliate to see if they carry State of Belief, and if so, at what time.

If you are going to listen on the internet, test it out in advance.

The audio archive of the show will be available afterwards.

by Frederick Clarkson on Sat May 13, 2006 at 11:46:23 PM EST


...but I hope that someone will post a link to the stream so I can listen to it when it is made available.

That's the bad thing about living in the heartland- stuff like Air America is as scarce as an ivorybill woodpecker.

by Lorie Johnson on Sun May 14, 2006 at 05:19:57 PM EST

to the stream is above. visit the State of Belief web site or click on "details" above, and you will find out everything you need to know.

by Frederick Clarkson on Sun May 14, 2006 at 05:39:24 PM EST
Parent

No Air America in Oklahoma.

Thank God we live in the age of the internet.

by Mainstream Baptist on Sun May 14, 2006 at 07:33:55 PM EST
Parent

is not even available in many areas of the Bi-Coastal regions.  

Smart use of streaming audio and other internet tools are increasingly important.  I think helping people to get access, and then to make effective use, ought to be an organizing priority for those concerned about the matters discused on this site -- just as inviting people to read and to partcipate here is important; as well as teaching people what they need to know to meaningfully participate.

by Frederick Clarkson on Mon May 15, 2006 at 01:45:32 AM EST
Parent




Anyone know how to find out if your church is targeted?



Abu Ghraib: Hell House of the Religious Right II
by sendtoscott on Wed May 24, 2006 at 09:11:27 AM EST
John Dorhauer's series on local churches dealing with these matters. He points to some specific signs in several of his posts.

by Frederick Clarkson on Wed May 24, 2006 at 08:59:50 PM EST
Parent


A country has to deal with democracy and politics as well as its problems. The part of such things must be ensured in the state. People had a favor choice of their own member. When it comes to resolve windows dll errors, I feel professional in tackling them.

by Abbot45558 on Wed Nov 20, 2019 at 07:06:06 AM EST


WWW Talk To Action


Cognitive Dissonance & Dominionism Denial
There is new research on why people are averse to hearing or learning about the views of ideological opponents. Based on evaluation of five......
By Frederick Clarkson (374 comments)
Will the Air Force Do Anything To Rein In Its Dynamic Duo of Gay-Bashing, Misogynistic Bloggers?
"I always get nervous when I see female pastors/chaplains. Here is why everyone should as well: "First, women are not called to be pastors,......
By Chris Rodda (195 comments)
The Legacy of Big Oil
The media is ablaze with the upcoming publication of David Grann's book, Killers of the Flower Moon. The shocking non fiction account of the......
By wilkyjr (110 comments)
Gimme That Old Time Dominionism Denial
Over the years, I have written a great deal here and in other venues about the explicitly theocratic movement called dominionism -- which has......
By Frederick Clarkson (101 comments)
History Advisor to Members of Congress Completely Twists Jefferson's Words to Support Muslim Ban
Pseudo-historian David Barton, best known for his misquoting of our country's founders to promote the notion that America was founded as a Christian nation,......
By Chris Rodda (113 comments)
"Christian Fighter Pilot" Calls First Lesbian Air Force Academy Commandant a Liar
In a new post on his "Christian Fighter Pilot" blog titled "BGen Kristin Goodwin and the USAFA Honor Code," Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan......
By Chris Rodda (144 comments)
Catholic Right Leader Unapologetic about Call for 'Death to Liberal Professors' -- UPDATED
Today, Donald Trump appointed C-FAM Executive Vice President Lisa Correnti to the US Delegation To UN Commission On Status Of Women. (C-FAM is a......
By Frederick Clarkson (126 comments)
Controlling Information
     Yesterday I listened to Russ Limbaugh.  Rush advised listeners it would be best that they not listen to CNN,MSNBC, ABC, CBS and......
By wilkyjr (118 comments)
Is Bannon Fifth-Columning the Pope?
In December 2016 I wrote about how White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who likes to flash his Catholic credentials when it comes to......
By Frank Cocozzelli (250 comments)
Ross Douthat's Hackery on the Seemingly Incongruous Alliance of Bannon & Burke
Conservative Catholic writer Ross Douthat has dissembled again. This time, in a February 15, 2017 New York Times op-ed titled The Trump Era's Catholic......
By Frank Cocozzelli (64 comments)
`So-Called Patriots' Attack The Rule Of Law
Every so often, right-wing commentator Pat Buchanan lurches out of the far-right fever swamp where he has resided for the past 50 years to......
By Rob Boston (161 comments)
Bad Faith from Focus on the Family
Here is one from the archives, Feb 12, 2011, that serves as a reminder of how deeply disingenuous people can be. Appeals to seek......
By Frederick Clarkson (176 comments)
The Legacy of George Wallace
"One need not accept any of those views to agree that they had appealed to real concerns of real people, not to mindless, unreasoning......
By wilkyjr (70 comments)
Betsy DeVos's Mudsill View of Public Education
My Talk to Action colleague Rachel Tabachnick has been doing yeoman's work in explaining Betsy DeVos's long-term strategy for decimating universal public education. If......
By Frank Cocozzelli (80 comments)
Prince and DeVos Families at Intersection of Radical Free Market Privatizers and Religious Right
This post from 2011 surfaces important information about President-Elect Trump's nominee for Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos. -- FC Erik Prince, Brother of Betsy......
By Rachel Tabachnick (218 comments)

Respect for Others? or Political Correctness?
The term "political correctness" as used by Conservatives and Republicans has often puzzled me: what exactly do they mean by it? After reading Chip Berlin's piece here-- http://www.talk2action.org/story/2016/7/21/04356/9417 I thought about what he explained......
MTOLincoln (253 comments)
Fear
What I'm feeling now is fear.  I swear that it seems my nightmares are coming true with this new "president".  I'm also frustrated because so many people are not connecting all the dots! I've......
ArchaeoBob (107 comments)
"America - love it or LEAVE!"
I've been hearing that and similar sentiments fairly frequently in the last few days - far FAR more often than ever before.  Hearing about "consequences for burning the flag (actions) from Trump is chilling!......
ArchaeoBob (211 comments)
"Faked!" Meme
Keep your eyes and ears open for a possible move to try to discredit the people openly opposing Trump and the bigots, especially people who have experienced terrorism from the "Right"  (Christian Terrorism is......
ArchaeoBob (165 comments)
More aggressive proselytizing
My wife told me today of an experience she had this last week, where she was proselytized by a McDonald's employee while in the store. ......
ArchaeoBob (163 comments)
See if you recognize names on this list
This comes from the local newspaper, which was conservative before and took a hard right turn after it was sold. Hint: Sarah Palin's name is on it!  (It's also connected to Trump.) ......
ArchaeoBob (169 comments)
Unions: A Labor Day Discussion
This is a revision of an article which I posted on my personal board and also on Dailykos. I had an interesting discussion on a discussion board concerning Unions. I tried to piece it......
Xulon (156 comments)
Extremely obnoxious protesters at WitchsFest NYC: connected to NAR?
In July of this year, some extremely loud, obnoxious Christian-identified protesters showed up at WitchsFest, an annual Pagan street fair here in NYC.  Here's an account of the protest by Pagan writer Heather Greene......
Diane Vera (130 comments)
Capitalism and the Attack on the Imago Dei
I joined this site today, having been linked here by Crooksandliars' Blog Roundup. I thought I'd put up something I put up previously on my Wordpress blog and also at the DailyKos. As will......
Xulon (330 comments)
History of attitudes towards poverty and the churches.
Jesus is said to have stated that "The Poor will always be with you" and some Christians have used that to refuse to try to help the poor, because "they will always be with......
ArchaeoBob (148 comments)
Alternate economy medical treatment
Dogemperor wrote several times about the alternate economy structure that dominionists have built.  Well, it's actually made the news.  Pretty good article, although it doesn't get into how bad people could be (have been)......
ArchaeoBob (90 comments)
Evidence violence is more common than believed
Think I've been making things up about experiencing Christian Terrorism or exaggerating, or that it was an isolated incident?  I suggest you read this article (linked below in body), which is about our great......
ArchaeoBob (214 comments)

More Diaries...




All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. Comments, posts, stories, and all other content are owned by the authors. Everything else © 2005 Talk to Action, LLC.