Shurden is always outstanding. This speech, however, is doubly so. It is essential reading for all moderate, mainstream Baptists. Here's an excerpt:
Let me be clear at the outset. I am not suggesting that we are on the lip of any kind of political totalitarianism in this country. I don't believe that.
I am suggesting, however, that there are "American Christians" for whom the adjective is more important than the noun.
I am suggesting that some Christian churches in our country have been transformed into political temples and some pastors have embraced the moniker of "patriot pastors."
I am suggesting that devoted theocrats have an eye on the machinery of national and state governments, and that they make no apology for it.
And I am suggesting that a skewed reading of our nation's history is sending forth armies of buck privates scurrying to wreck Jefferson's wall.
IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE
But many blithely say, "It can't happen here." The last time I heard that was in a hotel lobby in Houston, Texas, in 1979, after the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention when the fundamentalists began their complete takeover of the SBC.
"But we have a Constitution that makes things clear," so it cannot happen here.
"We have a Bill of Rights and the First Amendment that makes things even clearer."
"Our national pluralism will not permit it to happen here."
And in an otherwise beautiful and provocative book, American Gospel, Jon Meacham optimistically forecasts that it cannot happen here because of the existence of a sane middle in American life that will not permit it to happen here.
IT CAN HAPPEN HERE
Let me tell you why I believe it can happen here, this idolatrous mixing of church and state.
It can happen here because "Generation Joshua" is loose in our country. Have you heard of "Generation Joshua?" It is an effort by Michael Farris, founder of Patrick Henry College, to turn Christian, home-schooled students into political foot soldiers to gain political power in order to subsume everything -- entertainment, law, government, and education -- under their right wing version of Christianity. Like Joshua of the Hebrew Bible, Generation Joshua's job is to possess the land, to conquer the land, or, in the words of the religious right, "to take back the land." And, according to Michael Harris, in the spring semester of 2004, Patrick Henry College had more interns in the White House than any other college in the nation. It can happen here because of a religious right-wing militancy.
It can happen here because by 2004 The Christian Coalition gave 42 out of 100 United States senators a rating of 100%. More than half of the senators received ratings of 83% by the militant Christian Coalition. It can happen here because sincere religious ideologues are rampant in our country, and they mean business.
It can happen here because a recent survey of 100,000 high school students in America concluded that one out of three students believes that the First Amendment goes TOO FAR in the rights it guarantees! That last sentence ought to be absolutely horrendous to your ears. In fact, that sentence reminds me of a phone call we got about 12:30 one night when we were living in Louisville, Ky. The call was from Wayne Dehoney, pastor of Walnut Street Baptist Church in the city. He said, "Walter, this is Wayne Dehoney, I just received a call from Cullman, Ala., and Grady Nutt was killed in a plane crash tonight. I knew that you were close friends, so I am calling to tell you so that you can go be with his wife." It was my first and only death notice in the middle of the night. I remember saying in stunned shock and disbelief, "Wayne, you are going to have to say that again." He said, "I understand." And then, with all those years of pastoral care under his belt, he slowly said once more, "I received a call from Cullman, Ala., and Grady Nutt was killed in an airplane crash tonight."
I do not trivialize my dear friend Grady Nutt's death by saying to you that, if you hear it carefully, the sentence about the high school students and the First Amendment has all the tone and sound of a death announcement in the middle of the night about someone you love. So I want to repeat it, slowly, so that it will sink in: ONE IN THREE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN THIS REPUBLIC SAYS THAT THE FIRST AMENDMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES GOES TOO FAR IN THE RIGHTS IT GUARANTEES TO YOU AS A CITIZEN!
The survey did not end there, however. It contained more surprises. More shocking still, only one-half of the students surveyed said that a newspaper should be allowed to publish freely without government approval of stories.
My friends, we are talking about my grandchildren's future here! This is America's tomorrow speaking! One third of them want the freedoms of the First Amendment curbed. And one half of them want newspapers to secure government approval for their stories!! These are astonishing and inconceivable attitudes for high school students in the United States of America. This survey is a terrible, scary phone call in the middle of the night about what has happened and what is happening in our nation. It can happen here because of ignorance of our history.





6 comments:
So true. As a high school history teacher it's like spitting into the wind when you try to talk about the importance of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Today's students are either at home being brainwashed into accepting a theocracy or the ones in public schools are being standardized tested to such an extent that their education is nothing more than a mental enema. Eat it in and regurgitate it out. No learning takes place. No understanding takes place.
The reason for a public education was to have an elightened electorate. The Colleges of Education with all their shit-for-brains theories about self-esteem and the politicians so called fixes have nuetralized all our schools from doing their intended job. Education.
If anything, the threat is even greater than Shurden sees. Our country has been moving in a fascist direction. (Note, I said MOVING there, not that we had yet arrived.) Mussolini defined fascism as "state power and corporate power" combined and we have certainly seen much of that. We've also seen the erosion of our checks and balances and the concentration of power in the Executive--and that was a mark of Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, fascist Spain, etc. In each case of rising fascism there was an attempt (usually successful) to seduce the churches into becoming cheerleaders for the fascist government. The vision of the Religious ("Christian") Right may be a theocracy, but I think the secular Right is simply manipulating the churches for its own ends in true fascist fashion. This has begun to worry a group of Baptist congregations on the West Coast related to the Baptist Peace Fellowship, as one sees here:
http://www.bpfna.org/westcoaststatement . This kind of worry seems, at last, to be piercing the complacency of the CBF, too: http://www.ethicsdaily.com/article_detail.cfm?AID=7538 I only hope it is not too late to turn back from this course.
Actually, the public schools are being used to motivate social change guided by a Godless worldview. They are the ones producing political foot-soldiers in masse. The argument would be more credible if the left wingers weren't so energetic in their efforts to change the society to better suit thier own views. The right-wing response is largely reactionary to the rather radical viewpoints being endoctrinated in govenment schools and the media. Why is it that the ideas of the few should be freely preached day in and day out to the youth of this country and the grass roots movements of the populace should be seen as a threat. This makes no sense in the light of the phrase "we the people." Sinners hate the word of God and anything that might constrain their own lustful pursuits.
Was there an earlier version of this survey? I am curious whether this is a change in thinking among 18-year-olds, how this compares and has compared to the thinking of older citizens, and, in general, whether this is news or not.
Yes, we're one of those homeschooling families. But we're the kind that has the First Amendment hanging on the wall and does not live in fear of the religious right.
And I found it encouraging today that I wasn't the only one with the feeling that much of the nonsense we have had to endure -- because we are too darned polite to tell a fool to shut up, imo -- may be on the way back to that place under the rock that it crawled out of -- http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/
story/0,,1805330,00.html
A longer view gives me hope and that's why I question whether the level of ignorance indicated by the survey results you mention is something new or pretty typical for graduates of our high schools.
Nance
"Sinners hate the word of God and anything that might constrain their own lustful pursuits."
This is at least the second time this week where someone who I assume believes themselves to be a Christian has made a statement like this.
Both times I thought "aren't we all sinners?"
That has always been my understanding of sin as it relates to Christianity.
Many times I have heard Christians speak of "sinners" as though "sinners" were somebody other than them.
With respect to education I believe the public schools should be for exactly that...education...not indoctrination...not my liberal worldview...not someone elses conservative worldview...education with as little spin as possible.
Bruce,
Howdy! This doesn't relate much to the discussion except that I saw your reference to Grady Nutt and thought you might be interested in adding to a remembrance page I'm hosting at http://gradynutt.blogspot.com/.
I'm just a fan, but sounds like you were a close friend. I think you'll be pleased with the posts so far.
I've had a tribute page up for a long time at my web site
www.the-cartoonist.com, but thought it would be nice to jump into the 21st Century with a related BLOG.
Godspeed!
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