Washington Post On Faith Columnist's Flawed Article Dismisses Dominionism
Rachel Tabachnick printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Mon Aug 29, 2011 at 12:37:52 AM EST
Samuel Rodriguez, who joined the International Coalition of Apostles in 2009, was a regular contributor to the Washington Post On Faith column from 2007 to 2010, publishing 49 articles. (ICA list 2009) He often claimed support of religious pluralism. But Rodriguez was simultaneously a leader in a movement that literally demonizes other religions as well as other sectors of Christianity. He is vice president of the Oak Initiative, a religio-political entity which produced a video in 2010 claiming that the nation is in the grips of a Marxist insurgency.  The Oak Initiative is currently working with its affiliate Transformation Michigan to prepare for The Call Detroit on 11/11/11, promoted as a massive spiritual warfare effort against Islam. And that's just the tip of the iceberg. This is an excellent example of why we need to know about the New Apostolic Reformation. We did not gain any insight from Lisa Miller, also writing for On Faith, when she described the New Apostolic Reformation as a "previously unknown group" and Dominionism as the "paranoid mot du jour."
In her On Faith column on August 18, Lisa Miller dismisses the concerns about Dominionism and the New Apostolic Reformation.  The NAR has drawn attention since leaders in the movement coordinated and led Rick Perry's Houston prayer rally. Curiously, Miller describes Pat Robertson as "actually a dominionist," using a fairly tame quote that pales in comparison to those coming from the apostles of the NAR.  She also sources Mark DeMoss as her expert on the obscurity of Dominionist ideology, quoting him as saying,
"You would be hard-pressed to find one in 1,000 Christians in America who could even wager a guess at what dominionism is."
Mark DeMoss founded the DeMoss Group, which is advertised as the largest public relations firm in America representing faith-based organizations. Clients include: Jay Sekulow's American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), founded by Pat Robertson; the Jerry Falwell-founded Liberty University; and Campus Crusade for Christ, founded by Bill and Vonette Bright.  Vonette Bright made an appearance at Perry's event, calling for prayer and the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms, and her late husband is credited with being given a vision from God in 1973 for the Seven Mountains mandate. This is a campaign to take over the institutions of society and government, currently marketed across the nation by the Dominionists which Lisa Miller sarcastically dismisses.

A Time Magazine article from 1999 describes the foundation of the family of the late Arthur DeMoss and its many millions of dollars of contributions to evangelizing projects, organizations, and the Republican Party, including 1.6 million dollars to the Robertson-founded ACLJ in 1997.

"Nancy [Arthur DeMoss' widow] plays host at evangelizing dinners for the rich and powerful at her houses in Florida and Manhattan (one invitee estimated the events' cost at $80,000 each). Privately, she contributed $70,000 to Newt Gingrich's political-action committee, GOPAC. A daughter, Deborah, worked for Senator Jesse Helms as a Foreign Relations Committee aide, specializing in the right-wing Latin American parties Helms favored in the 1980s. (She has since left the foundation board.) Mark, a board member, worked for Jerry Falwell before founding the DeMoss Group, a p.r. firm for evangelists like Billy Graham's son Franklin. Mark's father-in-law is Art Williams, the insurance magnate who bailed out Falwell's debt-ridden Liberty University with a $70 million gift."

The 1999 Time article is about Power for Living, a 27 million dollar campaign by the Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation to promote a booklet also titled Power for Living.  The Time article states that at one point ads for the somewhat mysterious campaign were on CNN fifty times a day, in Time magazine, and on the walls of transit stations. The first printing of the booklet was published in 1983 by Gary DeMar's American Vision and the authors included DeMar, David Chilton, and Ray Sutton, all leading Reconstructionists. (Chilton died in 1997.)

Photobucket

In an effort to point out that evangelicals are divided in their support of Republican candidates for president, Miller states that DeMoss is "working to persuade evangelicals to vote for Mitt Romney" without mentioning that DeMoss was hired as a senior advisor for the Romney campaign. But this is beside the point. Those warning of the NAR's support of Rick Perry's event have not claimed that all conservative evangelicals are Dominionists, or involved with the NAR, or uniformly supporting Rick Perry for president.  Quite to the contrary, the NAR is controversial among evangelicals and fundamentalists.

Frederick Clarkson has written in a previous Talk2action article about Lisa Miller's column, stating

"If the knocking down of straw men is remarkable in this piece, so is the use of false equivalence."
Miller's arguments are disingenuous.  She accuses those warning about Dominionism of "lumping all evangelicals together and associating them with the fringe views of a few," but it is actually the refusal to acknowledge Dominionism and the NAR that will likely result in other Americans believing that NAR's activism must be representative of the evangelical world at large.

The NAR's Dominionism Compared to Christian Reconstructionism

The apostles and prophets of the movement dubbed as the New Apostolic Reformation have packaged Dominionism as a more attractive and less draconian-sounding product, but their agenda is similar to that of the Christian Reconstructionism of Rousas Rushdoony.  Reconstructionism has a limited number of admitted adherents, but the apostles and prophets of the NAR have marketed their version of Dominionism to tens of millions worldwide.  They have demonstrated their ability to initiate grass roots organizations in all 50 states and to access politicians from Africa to Asia and from Hawaii to Florida.

C. Peter Wagner, the major architect of the movement, writes that theocracy will not be necessary in order to take dominion, and that it can be achieved inside a democratic framework. He uses language that is less threatening than the legalistic tome of Rushdoony's 1973 The Institutes of Biblical Law.  Wagner states in his 2008 book Dominion!,

"The rules of the democratic game open the doors for Christians, as well as for non-Christians who have Kingdom values, to move into positions of leadership influential enough to shape the whole nation from top to bottom."

Under the heading "The Majority Rules," Wagner adds,

"If a majority feels that heterosexual marriage is the best choice for a happy and prosperous society, those in the minority should agree to conform - not because they live in a theocracy, but because they live in a democracy.  The most basic principle of democracy is that the majority, not the minority, rules and sets the ultimate norms for society."

Wagner is also not insistent on forcing uniformity in end times narratives or eschatology, as long as there is agreement on the need to take dominion over society as soon as possible.  He argues that one's belief about the timing of the events of the end times and Jesus' return should not hinder their goal of taking dominion, because,

"... if He does come sooner than later, we have not lost anything in our efforts to take dominion.  We win either way!"

Gary North, son-in-law of Rushdoony and one of the leading thinkers of Reconstructionism, also talks about working inside the democratic system to achieve the goal of dominion. He promotes a long term agenda. In this quote, he is referencing the work of Rushdoony, who is touted as the father of modern homeschooling and source of Christian Nationalist histories of the U.S.

"So let us be blunt about it: we must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy in constructing a Bible-based social, political, and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God. Murder, abortion, and pornography will be illegal. God's law will be enforced. It will take time. A minority religion cannot do this. Theocracy must flow from the hearts of a majority of citizens, just as compulsory education came only after most people had their children in schools of some sort."

Peter Wagner, a professor for 30 years, seldom uses language as threatening as that of North and other Reconstructionists, and Wagner would lead us to believe that despite the demonization, other religions will be tolerated when his brand of Christianity takes dominion. Some of the other promoters of the Seven Mountains campaign have spelled out their intentions more clearly.

Johnny Enlow is author of the book, The Seven Mountains Prophecy, endorsed by  Wagner.  Enlow describes a developing Elijah Revolution which will be the "body on earth" of Jesus and will "crush" his enemies before he can return.  "You" in the following quote is referring to Jesus.

"The last generation will be the 'foot' generation and will rule on Earth over Your enemies.  Until they do so, You are not going back to rescue, rapture, save, or anything else. Your body, in fact, will not be a beautiful bride until she has accomplished this crushing of Satan.  

...The world will come to learn, for example, that though God passionately loves every homosexual, remaining in that sin will cause someone to fall under the sword of His judgment."

Another dismissal of Dominionism was posted on the Acton Institute's Power Blog.  The Acton Institute has been a sponsor of  American Vision's annual conference featuring Reconstructionists Gary North (quoted above), Joseph Morecraft, and John Eidsmoe, mentor to Michele Bachmann.  

This is the same American Vision which first published the Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation's Power for Living. That booklet was revised later in 1983 by Jamie Buckingham, editor of Ministry Today magazine, published by Strang Communications.

This year's denials about Dominions and the NAR are reminiscent of 2008, when Sarah Palin's involvement with leading NAR apostles began to make the news.  The naysayers that year included the editor of Strang Communication's Charisma magazine, J. Lee Grady.  He failed to mention that at that time both he and owner/publisher Stephen Strang were members of C. Peter Wagner's International Coalition of Apostles.

It is those dismissing the threat of Dominionism who threaten to paint all evangelicals with one brush. I agree that it is true that most evangelicals have no theocratic intentions, but as the New Apostolic Reformation's activism becomes more widely publicized (and it will), some Americans may assume that the apostles are representative of American evangelical belief.  Lisa Miller and the other naysayers are not helping to educate the public on the differences between the New Apostolic Reformation and the majority of conservative evangelicals and this is tragic, most of all for evangelicalism.  

See Part Two of "Dismissing Dominionism, a look at Samuel Rodriguez and The Oak Initiative. Also note that the syndicated article Bachmann and Dominionism, in which the author attacks Ryan Lizza's article and interview on Michele Bachmann and Dominionism, is written by Richard Weikart. Weikart is a senior fellow of the Center for Science and Culture of the Discovery Institute and author of "From Darwin to Hitler."

[Author's note: I changed the title and slightly altered the introductory paragraph of this article on 8/29/11 for clarity.]




Display:
"What, then, is a dominionist? In the context of American evangelical efforts to penetrate and transform public life, the distinguishing mark of a dominionist is a commitment to defining and carrying out an approach to building society that is self-consciously defined as exclusively Christian, and dependent specifically on the work of Christians, rather than based on a broader consensus." (Barron, 1992, Heaven on Earth? p. 14).
_ _ _

Chip Berlet: Research for Progress - Building Human Rights
by Chip Berlet on Mon Aug 29, 2011 at 08:58:07 AM EST

Donb't give up Rachel.  We find folks who do not understand appear to think these things are exagerated to make a point.  From experience, our own denomination never knew what hit them when this train ran over them.  Some like you tried to tell them but they were like many, still in a state of denial.  

by wilkyjr on Tue Aug 30, 2011 at 10:44:47 AM EST


WWW Talk To Action


You Can Scrub, But You Can't Hide
Dr. Ergun Caner, the disgraced former Dean of Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary (affiliated with Liberty University, founded by Jerry Falwell), has sicked his lawyer......
By Frederick Clarkson (0 comments)
A Talk to Action Anthology on Nullification and Secession
Over the past few months a number of posts have addressed the growing movement advocating the nullification of federal laws and even secession of......
By Frederick Clarkson (1 comment)
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. And the Right to Oppress
In the last several posts we have examined an element of the Catholic Right  comprised of neo-Confederate apologists who openly advocate both the state......
By Frank Cocozzelli (10 comments)
Freedom From Foolishness?: Texas Gov. Misconstrues Religious Liberty
Whenever I hear someone - especially a politician - say that the First Amendment protects freedom of religion, not freedom from religion, I just......
By Rob Boston (9 comments)
What is Christian nationalism?
Author Michelle Goldberg one of the early regular contributors to Talk to Action, posted an announcement and preview of her excellent book, Kingdom Coming......
By Michelle Goldberg (45 comments)
Fresh Religious Supremacism from the Rev. Dr. Albert Mohler
The Rev. Dr. Albert Mohler, the president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary has fired another salvo in the war of attrition that has been......
By Frederick Clarkson (5 comments)
Bench Press: Atheist Group Wins Right To Display Monument In North Florida County
By the end of the month, the courthouse in Bradford County, Fla., will be home to a large granite bench covered with quotes from......
By Rob Boston (8 comments)
How the Catholic Bishops Outsmarted Washington Voters
Across the U.S., religious healthcare corporations, called "healthcare ministries" by the Catholic Church, are absorbing once secular and independent hospitals. In the process they......
By Valerie Tarico (1 comment)
Sen. Lautenberg's Stand Against David Barton - More Than Just a Stand for Church/State Separation
With a career spanning three decades, Sen. Frank Lautenberg will be remembered by many different people for many different reasons. Upon hearing of his......
By Chris Rodda (0 comments)
Thomas Jefferson's Twilight Reminder About Religious Equality
Last year I was honored to write a story for The Islamic Monthly, a magazine operated by American Muslim writers and scholars.  I see......
By Frederick Clarkson (0 comments)
The NeoCon War Against the Mainline Protestant Churches, Continues
The recent smear of prominent Christian journalist Cynthia Astle by a staffer at the nefarious Institute on Religion and Democracy was a stark reminder......
By Frederick Clarkson (0 comments)
Refuting Nullification, Part Two
In this series we have been discussing the emerging influence of Thomas E. Woods and other Catholic Right neo-Confederates, who are advocating that states......
By Frank Cocozzelli (2 comments)
How to Respond to a Bully
We are honored to welcome Cynthia B. Astle as a guest front pager. She is project coordinator for United Methodist Insight, where this post......
By CynthiaAstle (1 comment)
Prayer Wars: When It Comes To Religion, The Majority Does Not Rule
As many of you know, the U.S. Supreme Court decided last week that it will hear an appeal of an Americans United case challenging......
By Rob Boston (4 comments)
The Church Child Sex Abuse Scandal Widens and Deepens
In a recent post, I discussed the apparent lack of sufficient seriousness with which the Southern Baptist Convention and the Catholic Bishops still treat......
By Frederick Clarkson (4 comments)

Democrats in Mississippi win big
Despite (or perhaps because of) endorsements made by Gov. Phil Bryant (R) and other Republican state officials, voters in Mississippi elected a surprising number of Democrats in several hard fought mayors races. ......
COinMS (0 comments)
Pat Robertson has a sad over PFAW calling him out
cross-posted at dKos Pat Robertson apparently knows that People for the American Way's Right Wing Watch project has frequently made him a target.  And he doesn't like it.   Yesterday, Robertson led off the......
Christian Dem in NC (0 comments)
Christian Hate For Hire
The Chairwoman of Republican Liberty Caucus of Washington (the Ron Paul formation), is Sandi Brendale, wife of Philip Brendale–a featured speaker at the regional Anti-Indian Conference held in Bellingham on April 6. Sandi Brendale,......
Jay Taber (3 comments)
Mississippi high school forces students to attend Christian lectures: lawsuit
Reposted from Raw Story: A high school in central Mississippi allegedly forced students to watch a Christian video and listen to church officials preach about Jesus Christ. The American Humanist Association's legal center filed......
COinMS (0 comments)
PA Candidate Max Myers Advocates Theocratic Church Governance
I'm working on a story to go with this video, but for now here's just the video. For context, see Rachel Tabachnick's story, NAR Leader Running for Governor in Pennsylvania - As a Democrat......
Bruce Wilson (1 comment)
Former Maranatha Pastor Stars as Thomas Jefferson in Fox and Friends Segment
I wasn't planning on playing Seven Degrees of Maranatha Campus Ministries this evening, but was instead perusing my usual array of news and opinion websites when I found this gem on Talking Points Memo:......
ulyankee (5 comments)
American Family Association launching drive to influence 2014 elections
CBN's David Brody has learned that the American Family Association is greasing the wheels for an effort to influence the 2014 elections.  The American Renewal Project, an AFA-affiliated group that helped push Prop 8......
Christian Dem in NC (2 comments)
Kevin Swanson encourages Christian educators to break law and push religion on kids
cross-posted at dKos Kevin Swanson of Generations Radio was in rare form on his podcast yesterday.  He decried the numerous Supreme Court decisions that have resulted in government-mandated prayer being barred from the public......
Christian Dem in NC (1 comment)
Far-right religious group behind 'Path to 9/11' film continues to infiltrate mainstream media
‘Path to 9/11’ director David Cunningham, who was outed a few years ago as a member of the far-right group Youth with a Mission, has been toiling away on a number of media projects......
unholyalliances (1 comment)
S. 3526: Military Religious Freedom Act of 2012
My senator, Roger Wicker, has introduced the Military Religious Freedom Act of 2012. A couple of things here: 1.) It's very interesting that it bears the exact same name as the Military Religious Freedom......
COinMS (2 comments)
West Point cadet drops out to protest influence of fundamentalist Christianity
Blake Page was a senior at the United States Military Academy, slated to graduate in May.  He was due to be commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Army, and once he left the......
Christian Dem in NC (2 comments)
Brownback endorses major fundie/dominionist prayer rally on Saturday
Those of you in the Kansas City/Topeka area, be on alert--there's going to be a major invasion of fundie lunacy in Topeka on Saturday.  And it has the endorsement of none other than Kansas'......
Christian Dem in NC (2 comments)
Why is the religious right defending an unrepentant con man who preyed on minority communities?
All indications are that the religious right is rallying to the defense of Jews Offering Alternatives for Healing (JONAH), the "pray away the gay" outfit that is facing a lawsuit from four former clients......
Christian Dem in NC (1 comment)
Mike Bickle's Sexually Charged "Bridal Mysticism" IHOP Teachings
I've been picking through Mike Bickle's teachings on Bridal Mysticism and the Song of Solomon - which Bickle seems to view as allegorical for the end-time relationship of the church (the Bride of Christ)......
Bruce Wilson (19 comments)
Rick Joyner and Bob Jones delude themselves into thinking Obama will help them
Two days ago, I mentioned that Rick Joyner hosted a post-election "webinar" with another NAR leader, Bob Jones.  In it, Joyner and Jones actually laughed about the damage wrought by Hurricane Sandy because......
Christian Dem in NC (3 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.