The Martyr (Judge Roy Moore) and the Megalomaniac (Newt Gingrich)
Bill Berkowitz printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Thu Dec 15, 2011 at 11:24:12 AM EST
Judge Roy Moore is most famous for refusing to remove a massive Ten Commandments installation from an Alabama courthouse, a refusal that got him - as the Donald might say - fired. Newt Gingrich is renowned for breaking who knows how many of the Ten Commandments.

This year, Moore is running to regain his spot on the Alabama Supreme Court, while Newt is running to run the entire country.

If as Sammy Cahn wrote, and Frank Sinatra sang, "Love is lovelier the second time around," Gingrich may have a royal opportunity to show some 2011/2012 love for Moore.

As Gingrich, the disgraced former Speaker of the House and now the current frontrunner for the GOP's presidential nomination, courts conservative evangelical voters in the early primary states, seeking redemption and forgiveness, he just might consider reminding them that when former Alabama Supreme Court justice Roy Moore, commonly called "The Ten Commandments Judge," was under fire, he came to his defense ... well, in a Gingrichian sort of way.

In 2003, as Religion Dispatches' Sarah Posner recently pointed out, Judge Moore was removed from his position as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court "for defying a federal court order to remove a 2.6-ton monument of the Ten Commandments from his courthouse," that he had installed there in 2001.

While Gingrich didn't exactly rush to the barricades in defense of Moore, he did eventually speak out on his behalf, although it came two years after Moore had already been dumped from the court.

In 2005, Gingrich, then in private life and not actively seeking public office, told John Lofton, a right-wing radio talk show host, that he "would have sided with Judge Roy Moore."

I'm not sure what "would have sided" meant to Gingrich; perhaps he would have authored legislation had he still been in Congress. In or out of Congress, he could have offered Moore a handsome donation. I'm not sure he put his money where his mouth is.

"The elites in Washington find it extremely difficult, at least between New York and Los Angeles, to talk about the role of our Creator in defining America," Gingrich told Lofton in 2005. "And I think all of the secondary arguments - Judge Moore's arguments, for example - come from winning this argument: That is historically false, to suggest that you can describe America as a society whose rights come from any place other than God. Now, as an atheist, you can make that argument but you cannot make it historically. "

While the fight over Moore's Ten Commandments installation wasn't as buzz-worthy as, say, the Terry Schiavo case, it did bring the national news media, as well as a number of right wing activists to Montgomery.

After his expulsion from the Court, Moore reveled in self-imposed martyrdom.

Now, six years later, both Gingrich and Moore are once again running for elective office. Gingrich is vying for the GOP's presidential nomination, while Moore, after briefly flirting with a run for the GOP's presidential nomination, has settled on seeking to return to the Alabama Supreme Court.

While Gingrich is shooting for redemption, Moore might be hoping to extract a measure of revenge.

Both Gingrich and Moore have been quite busy in the intervening years. Gingrich was metastasizing projects: piling up wheelbarrows of dough with his various media efforts, launching a number of money-making enterprises, cavorting with gambling titans, switching his religion, publicly confessing to his marital infidelities on Dr. James Dobson's radio program, blowing up at Tiffany's, and oozing his way back onto the political landscape.

Moore was slogging away in the outposts of far-right Christianity. He wrote a book titled So Help Me God, and penned numerous articles for conservative publications; he received several awards, including the 2011 Great American Award by the Central Texas Tea Party and Republican Freedom Coalition; and he become president of an organization called the Foundation for Moral Law.

Just before Thanksgiving, Moore, who had staged two failed runs for governor (badly beaten in Republican primaries), announced that he would be seeking to get his old job back as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.

"There is no question that I know this job and I believe the people of Alabama know exactly what I stand for," Moore said. "During my term of office as Chief Justice, I wrote major opinions affecting our state, one of which was Advisory Opinion 373 regarding the prohibition of gambling devices in Alabama. That opinion has guided both state and federal courts during the last decade to stop unlawful gambling in Alabama."

Moore added: "Under my leadership and working with the other justices we put a stop to the Equity Funding Lawsuit which had plagued our State and the Appellate Courts of Alabama for nearly 12 years," Moore said. "Not only did we save taxpayers over $1 billion in taxes, but we preserved the right of parents to control the education of their children under the Alabama Constitution."

Moore has pointed out that he has "no plans to move the [Ten Commandments] monument to Montgomery."




Display:
He is campaigning in the role of candidate as reformed sinner. The reformed sinner has a long cultural history in the United States and Newt is taking on the role.

by khughes1963 on Thu Dec 15, 2011 at 10:53:50 PM EST


WWW Talk To Action


Baptist Professor Opposes Gay Concentration Camp
When voices of profound conscience rise to the occasion, something changes. If we didn't hear that voice or notice the change, it could be......
By Frederick Clarkson (11 comments)
Books That Should Never Have Been Written
Recently I finished James Robison's book on economics, politics and American history.  I thought to myself that the book should never have been written......
By wilkyjr (4 comments)
HeavenUp: Christian Competitor for Facebook?
There may not be an IPO in its immediate future, but if Chris Burkhart and Wes McKinsey, who both grew up as sons of......
By Bill Berkowitz (0 comments)
Templeton Foundation, Christianity Today, and the Promotion of NAR Prophet Heidi Baker
This is the third article in a series about the May cover story on Heidi Baker in Christianity Today. Heidi Baker is being virtually......
By Rachel Tabachnick (0 comments)
Flame of Love Project: Margaret Poloma and the Templeton Foundation Mainstream the NAR
"I wonder what new doors to evangelism might be opened in sophisticated, tolerant, politically correct America if Christians started expressing their faith by encouraging......
By Bruce Wilson (4 comments)
Resolve To Stop Wasting Time: Congressional Republicans Promote Yet Another Pro-Prayer Statement
Americans don't agree on much, but one thing pretty much everyone can agree on is that Congress is not a very popular institution right......
By Rob Boston (0 comments)
We Can Add New Teachings To The Bible, Says New Apostolic Reformation Leader Peter Wagner
[NAR leaders have ties to major U.S. politicians including Sarah Palin, Rick Perry, and Newt Gingrich and have led politicized prayer events attended by......
By Bruce Wilson (11 comments)
How Big of a Liar is David Barton? You Ain't Even Gonna Believe This One!
A couple weeks ago, many people were introduced to Christian nationalist pseudo-historian David Barton when Jon Stewart had him on The Daily Show to......
By Chris Rodda (5 comments)
Christianity Today Promotes NAR Prophet Heidi Baker
Part Two It was a pivotal moment in American evangelicalism when Christianity Today featured a New Apostolic leader on its May cover.  More shocking......
By Rachel Tabachnick (1 comment)
The Barton Lies: New Book Exposes `Christian Nation' Advocate's Long List Of Distortions
Last month I wrote about Religious Right pseudo-historian David Barton's new book The Jefferson Lies, which attempts to prove that Thomas Jefferson was an......
By Rob Boston (7 comments)
Christianity Today Should Retract or Correct Cover Article on New Apostolic Leader Heidi Baker
The cover story of the May issue of Christianity Today features Heidi Baker, a significant leader in the "apostolic and prophetic" movement or......
By Rachel Tabachnick (5 comments)
Quietly Dramatic Developments in the War on Women
Amidst all the noise, there are some quietly dramatic developments unfolding in Washington, DC that may change the course of the battle over access......
By Frederick Clarkson (1 comment)
Fighting the Wrong Battle in North Carolina
As North Carolina voters prepare to vote on an amendment that would constitutionally prohibit recognition of same-sex marriages (along with civil unions and domestic......
By Arlene Stein (1 comment)
Capitol Circus: Religious Right Leaders Plan D.C. Prayer Rally For `Evil' America
On May 8, a group called Come Pray With Me plans to hold a prayer service in Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol. This......
By Rob Boston (7 comments)
Pseudo-Historian David Barton's New Jefferson Book is a Load of Crap -- and a Bestseller
Anyone who saw Jon Stewart's interview of Christian nationalist pseudo-historian David Barton on The Daily Show last night probably noticed something missing -- there......
By Chris Rodda (16 comments)

CBS' "Go-to Catholic guy" Steps Down, Admits Fathering Out-of-Wedlock Child
A powerful, cultic religious order whose founder and clergy are accused of sexually abusing minors; admissions of children born out of wedlock... As is often the case, Talk To Action articles written years ago......
Bruce Wilson (4 comments)
Wagner & Rushdoony
In his 2008 book Dominion! - How Kingdom Action Can Change The World, C. Peter Wagner advocated burning books and artwork in the manner of Girolamo Savonarola and traced his movement's dominion theology through......
Bruce Wilson (5 comments)
Jim DeMint to speak at Oak Initiative event
One of the more prominent leaders in the New Apostolic Reformation is holding a conference in June--with a United States Senator as one of the keynote speakers.   Rick Joyner of Morningstar Ministries is......
Christian Dem in NC (0 comments)
Transcript of 1992 John Hagee anti-United Nations/Environmentalism Sermon
This is a transcript of a sermon on a cassette tape I own, titled "Capital Punishment/Environmentalist Agenda/New World Order", that was given by San Antonio Cornerstone Church pastor and Christians United For Israel head......
Bruce Wilson (2 comments)
The Tale of Two Colsons
The tale of two Colsons, one immersed in sin and one redeemed, is the mainstream press's favorite way of approaching the life of Chuck Colson, who died last Saturday. One needs to stress that......
JSanford (0 comments)
Richard Land under investigation for plagiarism
For almost a quarter century, Richard Land has been one of the most prominent voices of the religious right.  But now, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission......
Christian Dem in NC (1 comment)
Bryan Fischer, tax protester
Earlier today, American Family Association policy chief Bryan Fischer pretty much shredded whatever pretense he has of being mainstream--or at least what passes for mainstream on the religious right.  On today's edition of Focal......
Christian Dem in NC (1 comment)
Agree to disagree
This entry is in reply to a comment (or a string of comments) under the Bill Berkowitz's article Kirk Cameron's Christian Revisionist Growing Pains. ......
dscribner (6 comments)
Harry Jackson calls for Christians to form "fifth column"
Harry Jackson, the New Apostolic Reformation "apostle" leading the effort to roll back gay marriage in DC, published a revealing column in Charisma magazine.  He argued that in order to launch a second......
Christian Dem in NC (8 comments)
KONY 2012 video blocked for copyright violations?
Invisible Children's KONY 2012 video, viewed over 80 million times, now appears to be blocked on Youtube, accompanied by an attached message that says, "This video contains content from DigiSay Limited and Scripps Local......
Bruce Wilson (2 comments)
CBN told people to go to a minister first if they suspect child abuse
From at least 1996 until this past week, CBN had a teaching paper on its Website that suggested that if you're a victim of child abuse and molestation, you could feel guilty about......
Christian Dem in NC (5 comments)
CBN takes down paper saying child abuse victims can "consent" to being abused
Just confirmed--that horrible teaching paper has indeed been taken down. It's only a start, though--CBN needs to issue a full apology for putting this out for so long. Keep calling, keep the pressure on.......
Christian Dem in NC (4 comments)
How do we open the eyes of folks on the Religious Right?
Having come from a background in the Religious Right, I have a lot of friends who still hold to that worldview.  I want to educate them, but I'm not always sure of what to......
dscribner (47 comments)
So, This Is Godly American Exceptionalism: David Bartons Long Term Plan To Remake America
He was, he says in a letter of May 15, 1817, often "tempted to think that this would be the best of all possible worlds if there were no religion in it."– President John......
AlBratt (0 comments)
So, This Is Godly American Exceptionalism?
"I Like Your Christ. I Do Not Like Your Christians. They Are Unlike Your Christ.–Gandhi"**************David Barton’s Long Term Plan To Remake AmericaDavid Barton’s Long Term Plan To Remake AmericaBy Kyle Maytyla, RWW, 3-16-12"Back in......
AlBratt (0 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. Powered by Scoop