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In
Jesus’ Name
by
John Chuckman
My
subject is Franklin Graham, one of President Bush's very-public religious
confidants. Franklin's father, Billy, served President Nixon in a similar
capacity. Billy's efforts were crowned with a kind of earthly immortality: he's
on those White House tapes in the National Archives sharing anti-Semitic
remarks with Nixon and never flinching or clearing his throat over the idea of
using atomic bombs in Vietnam.
Franklin
has pretty well replaced his ailing father in leading the huge Billy Graham
organization. You may wonder about religious ministries being handed down like
fifteenth-century dukedoms, but the practice is fairly common in America, and
several of the nation's big ministries - the type of outfits that might be
characterized as Las Vegas Showstoppers for Jesus - have been handed down in
this fashion. This happens in American politics, too. After all, a hand-me-down
evangelist serves a hand-me-down President who ran against (and lost the
popular vote to) a hand-me-down politician from Tennessee.
It's
not that Americans accept aristocracy, but in a nation of insanely-frenzied
consumers, an established brand name always still has some juice worth
squeezing.
The
youthful Franklin seems to have been a bit of a trial for his mom and dad,
reportedly exhibiting more interest in sowing oats than saving souls. He had an
obsession with guns one could interpret as slightly at odds with the message of
the Prince of Peace. He may just have been reflecting the quaint traditions of
America's Appalachian subculture - his home is the mountains of North Carolina
- when he once cut down a tree by blasting away at it with an automatic weapon
(I did not make this up). Apparently, he used to be fond of giving automatic
pistols as gifts.
Well,
at some point, I guess the lad realized he was burning out and going nowhere,
and automatic weapons are expensive when you like to give the very best, so
Franklin had something like the President's road-to-Damascus experience. I
doubt he recalled Henry the Fourth's saying Paris was worth a mass (Henry of
Navarre became King of France by adopting Catholicism). It would have weighed
heavily that dad's ready-made, super-slick organization offered a handsome,
steady income, all expenses paid, especially if Franklin had come to recognize
that his next-best career option might be itinerant bingo caller.
Redemption
is one of America's great ongoing themes. It's the spiritual extension of all
the plastic surgery, injections, drugs, youth-inducing potions, diets, and
tales of lives changed by lotteries or get-rich-quick schemes, but it does have
to be the right kind of redemption. None of your consolations of philosophy,
peace of the Buddha, wisdom of the Great Spirit, or following the Prophet will
do. Lives lived decently and peacefully from beginning to end are not admired
because they don't make juicy entertainment.
The
approved American redemption-story template includes years of inflicting hell
on others, often by abusing whisky or drugs, finally being overcome by
frightful (drug-induced or otherwise) visions of going to hell yourself, and
then spending the rest of your life annoying every person who crosses your path
with the opinion that he or she does not know the truth. About 85% of the
nation's country-and Western singers and about 95% of its evangelists spend
their declining years sharing such tales in magazines, tapes, interviews, and
sermons. It's a major industry.
This
is all by way of background to Franklin's words about his new mission. I
suppose it's possible Franklin thinks Nazareth is a trailer park somewhere in
North Carolina or Texas which would account for his thinking that the people in
the Middle East haven't heard about Jesus, but, in any event, Franklin is now
going to tell them about Jesus, at least his gun-totting Appalachian version.
Well, almost, but Franklin has probably been advised that proselytizing for
conversion from Judaism is against the law in modern Israel. With a
Bush-appointed Proconsul, that kind of law shouldn't get in the way of bringing
the good word to Iraqis, although he'll be a bit late to save the souls of
those smashed and broken by American bombs.
Franklin's
organization, Samaritan's Purse, claims that it intends only to bring relief
services and not evangelism to Iraq, but how valid can this claim be? The Billy
Graham organization for decades has worked only to convert people to its narrow
notion of Christianity. It has been criticized even by other Christians for the
nature of its work - cranking out converts like sausages in a vast Midwestern
meat-packing plant. Perhaps when Franklin created his offshoot relief
organization, Samaritan's Purse, it was in part a response to this kind of
criticism.
Franklin's
own words on Islam over the last year hardly resemble a second Albert Schweitzer
yearning to help fellow beings. His tone is militaristic and has the same
nasty, parochial feel as the President's "us and them." One looks in
vain for any generosity of spirit associated with the words of Jesus.
"We're
not attacking Islam but Islam has attacked us. The God of Islam is not the same
God. He's not the son of God of the Christian or Judeo-Christian faith. It's a
different God, and I believe it is a very evil and wicked religion."
Franklin
here makes no distinction between the nineteen individuals responsible for 9/11
and the world's hundreds of millions of Muslims, yet he seems never to have
made the same kind of connections between criminals of other religious
backgrounds and the religions themselves. Did the IRA's outrages elicit such
comments about Catholicism?
“[T]the
persecution or elimination of non-Muslims has been a cornerstone of Islam
conquests and rule for centuries."
I
suppose it would be foolish to expect any sensible perspective on history from
a man of Franklin's limited learning. The work of people calling themselves
Christians in countless wars, religious persecutions, and exterminations just
since the Renaissance dwarfs the volume of spilled blood in all the rest of
human history. The Holocaust, the African slave trade, and the extermination of
many aboriginal peoples were the work of people calling themselves
Christians.
"I
believe it is my responsibility to speak out against the terrible deeds that
are committed as a result of Islamic teaching."
Why
should it be his responsibility to speak against these particular deeds and no
others? Franklin certainly is not known as an advocate for the world's abused
and downtrodden. One does not find him shouldering this responsibility over
other terrible deeds, a number of them the dirty work of his own government.
No, his time goes to "crusades," the word used for decades by the
Billy Graham organization to describe its assembly-line salvation gatherings.
The
denomination with which the Graham family generally has been associated, the
Southern Baptists, has an ugly history in the United States. Extreme
segregationists founded this denomination to keep blacks out of their churches
and a century later, through the Civil Rights revolution of the 1950s and
1960s, Southern Baptists were better known for opposing Dr. King's work than
supporting it. The denomination's official view on a woman's role in marriage
is among the most parochial in the United States. Incidentally, the Southern
Baptists' Mission Board also aims at providing aid in Iraq. Jerry Vines, former
president of the Southern Baptists, described the Prophet Muhammad not very
long ago as a "demon-possessed pedophile."
"There
is no escaping the unfortunate fact that Muslim government employees in law
enforcement, the military and the diplomatic corps need to be watched for
connections to terrorism."
These
are the words of a man teaching suspicion and fear rather than understanding
and brotherhood. One has to ask what such comments have to do with evangelism
or Christianity, but American fundamentalists often ignore Jesus' clear
teaching on the matter and put their visions of government and secular affairs
at the heart of sermons and pronouncements. This suggests that politics, and a
particularly nasty kind of politics, is at least as much a driving force here
as religion.
Franklin
recently gave a Good Friday service at the Pentagon. Reading that, I had the
absurd image of an early Christian preacher praying for Rome's Tenth Legion.
True, there were probably no Christian legionaries at the time, but the fact
remains that the purpose of the Pentagon is exactly the same as that of the
legions, professional killing for the state and its policies, a purpose totally
incompatible with any words of Jesus.
But
of course, the more apt comparison would be a few centuries later when the
legions did their bloody work for a so-called Christian empire.
John Chuckman lives in Canada and is
former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He writes frequently
for Yellow Times.org and other publications.