In August, fundamentalist preacher Dr. Michael Brown organized a regimen of red shirted Bible-thumpers to infiltrate Charlotte’s gay pride event. Hundreds of zealots confronted and harassed festival attendees with their arrogant slogan “God Has A Better Way.”
The hatred and religious bigotry was appalling, but not surprising. What truly bothers me, however, was the lack of mainstream Christians standing up and speaking out against such fanatical behavior. Virtually every time I write about the Religious Right I’m reminded by the faithful that “not all Christians are like that.”
Of course, this is true and some of the most dedicated activists I have worked with are people of faith. Last week, in fact, I teamed up with Resurrection Metropolitan Community Church to host a week of educational seminars designed to counter an “ex-gay” conference in Houston.
Still, the number of mainstream Christians fighting the hate campaigns of the Religious Right is disappointing. With thousands of churches, millions of members and a vested interest in fighting back against religious extremism, they have consistently underachieved and failed to reach their potential.
What would it look like if mainstream churches fought back against the Religious Right?
Picture two hundred of Dr. Brown’s “Red Shirts” smugly descending on innocent families at Charlotte Pride. Out of nowhere, five hundred mainstream, mostly heterosexual Christians appear and surround the theocratic thugs with blue shirts that read: God’s Better Way – Love & Acceptance.”
These despicable bullies would likely have no idea how to react in such a situation where Christians were calling them “unchristian.” Instead of the expected rush of self-righteous glory, I could see these folks slinking off, dazed and ashamed.
Of course, this is just a pipe dream. I’ve organized or attended dozens of protests over the past decade. Time and again, I’m disillusioned by the lack of support from liberal and mainstream Christian organizations. It seems they are either afraid to offend their most conservative members or they are mired in passivity that allows extremists to define their faith.
This lack of coherent opposition has led to a dire situation where Religious Right backed presidential candidates are vying to eliminate or reduce social safety nets, persecute immigrants, undermine working people, shred the middle class, turn the poor into destitute beggars, and roll back minority rights.
This reluctance to stand up and speak out has created a hazardous vacuum where only the shrill and unreasonable voices of fundamentalism are heard. Instead of the dialogue that many progressives of faith claim to desire, this perceived weakness creates a lopsided right wing monologue, which is having a deleterious effect on our nation and the world.
It is time to stand up, speak out, and give voice to our values. If not now, when? Are we going to wait until it is too late and we have lost our country?
Here are four recent examples of the Religious Right flexing its political muscle:
- Texas Gov. Rick Perry held a stadium prayer rally in Houston that preceded his announcing his candidacy for President of the United States. The event was hosted by the American Family Association, a Southern Poverty Law Center-certified hate group. Included among the speakers were many radical clerics from the theocratic New Apostolic Reformation. Also known as the Seven Mountains Movement, this group of extremists wants to turn America into a fundamentalist Christian nation. Their aim is to take over the following seven spheres of society that they refer to as mountains: Religion, Media, Government, Family, Education, Business, Arts & Entertainment.
- The American Family Association is organizing Pastor Policy briefings in presidential battlegrounds. In these events, candidates prostrate themselves at the feet of conservative pastors in Iowa and elsewhere, pledging to enact their agenda if elected.
- Former Christian Coalition director Ralph Reed is making a comeback with a new organization he founded, the Faith and Freedom Coalition. “Our goal is to build a file of 29 million conservative voters,” Reed told the New York Times. “We’ll e-mail them, we’ll call them, we’ll knock on their doors and, if necessary, we’ll drive them to the polls.”
- Extreme right wing organizations have been recruiting candidates in the GOP primaries to sign pledges that lock them into inflexible positions, even at the expense of the nation.
It is critical that people realize that these zealots have a radically different vision of this country than most Americans. If their power keeps increasing, they will be able to drastically reshape this country. There would be a tremendous loss of freedom, liberty and justice, while bigotry, intolerance and religious conformity would become the law of the land.
If the Religious Right can organize and mobilize to stand up for its beliefs in such a robust manner, why can’t the Religious Left? We desperately need to answer this question before Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin defile America – and permanently define Christianity.
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Filed under: Views & Voices












IF GOD WANTED US TO BE THE SAME HE WOULDN’T HAVE MADE US SO DIFFERENT.
to bad the “christian” zealots of apparently forgotten the ancient past when they could have been put to death for their beliefs
dont recall harrassing thy neighbor as being in gods favor
I tried to post this comment on your website but WordPress keeps saying it thinks my comment is spammy… :-/
Sadly, I’m not at all surprised by the absence of mainstream Christians calling out their more radical brethren. The numbers of ‘progressive’ Christians is relatively small – probably larger than the number of truly zealous right-wing Christians, but still small. The vast majority of Christians pretty-much believe what the extremists believe.
Oh, they water it down a little, and if pushed would protest that they would never sanction violence… but when all is said and done mainstream Christianity is at least ‘squeamish’ about homosexuality, and often a little (or a lot) hostile. So basically, there *is* no mainstream Christian support for our rights, as evidenced by the lack of participation by mainstream Christians voicing their opposition to the extremists.
yes
sign the petition to hold these hypocritical catholics accountable http://www.change.org/petitions/president-barack-obama-tell-archbishop-dolan-to-stop-obstructing-justice-for-rape-victims
I was raised as a Roman Catholic, and was never told in my house that being different was bad. My brother is gay, and my parents’ response? They don’t care!!! They just love him as their son and want him to be happy. It sickens me to see people standing up for Jesus, as the song goes, and thinking they know the answer. I’ve said it before and i’ll say it again: If Jesus died to save that lot of narrow-minded fools, he made a pretty poor job of it.
I think I’m missing something here… Don’t understand what could possibly cause this faith groups to actually believe because they read a book and go to some facilities to pray on Sundays they have the right to rule over other people’s life. Who gave them permission to make choices for the rest of us? If their deity is so great and powerful and he doesn’t like homosexuals then I believe this all powerful being can take care of it himself.
These faith groups really need to find a hobby for it seems they have nothing better to do. We need to organize a fund raising campaign to gather funds for the research of the mental illness they call Christianity.
I remember going to church and hearing the preacher go on about how one day you will be ashamed to all yourself a christian. He was saying it would happen because of the lusts of a wordly life. Well 20 years later and I am ashamed to call my self a christian not because of turning away from my faith but because the name “christian” has been hijacked by the far right corporate fascist and used as a dope to
dumb down the masses and distract them from their real evil intent to destroy civil rights and rob the country blind
Adolf Hitler is running for office in this country now could get elected if he ran on a platform of guns and queers!
Please read the Constitution of the United States of America:
Article Six: The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.
The Second Amendment states: ““Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”.