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FEATURES: Pilgrims' Progress
By David Aikman
The real legacy of the Religious Right may have nothing to do with politics
The scene certainly looked like a triumphant celebration of
national power by religious conservatives. Two months before the
1994 elections, a procession of leading Republicans arrived at
the ballroom of the Washington Hilton to preen, wink, and troll
for votes in front of a conservative, largely evangelical
gathering of the Christian Coalition. Phil Gramm, Lamar
Alexander, and Trent Lott all delivered stem--winders promising a
moral cornucopia for America if their various presidential and
congressional campaigns succeeded in 1996. All offered visions of
America that were flatteringly attractive to the euphoric crowd
at this "Road to Victory" conference.
One might have concluded that the Christian Coalition had
finally assumed the confident and unquestioned leadership of all
culturally conservative Americans determined to put the country
right--both politically and morally. But it is equally plausible
that all the hoopla masked something far more ordinary: just
another Washington flirtation between presidential wannabes
seeking an enthusiastic audience and partisan activists desperate
for a new moral and political champion.
A Place at the Table
After the election two months later, some in this audience
attributed the stunning success of congressional Republicans to
the ascendancy of the Religious Right. The GOP won a majority in
the House of Representatives for the first time since 1954, and
the hard work and support of Christian Coalition campaigners were
probably indispensable. The Coalition mailed out 33 million voter
guides and mobilized perhaps 4 million election workers during
the campaign, including volunteers from about 60,000 churches,
one--sixth of all churches in the nation.
The Religious
Right has failed in many of its cherished
political and cultural objectives.
In 1996, again with immense support from the Christian
Coalition, congressional Republicans managed to hold onto their
majority. Ralph Reed, the group's executive director, was
enjoying a position of great influence within the GOP. Reed had
broadened the Coalition's agenda to include topics as diverse as
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the expansion
of NATO membership. He had personally helped defuse what might
have become a festering public dispute with the B'nai Brith
Anti--Defamation League, an influential Jewish institution. He
had tried persistently to overcome the suspicion of the
African--American community.
Through all this, he insisted that the only objective of the
Christian Coalition was to secure for Americans of faith a
"place at the table" of American political and cultural
decisionmaking. By April 1997, when he announced his departure
from the Coalition, he had built its membership from zero to 1.9
million in just eight years and had become perhaps the most
articulate and politically astute figure in the entire
Religious Right.
By campaigning so actively on behalf of certain Republican
candidates, the Christian Coalition, in fact, achieved far more
than a "place at the table." For one thing, the 1994
and 1996 cohorts of new House members were far more
representative of the nation's religious affiliations than any
previous Congress. For example, about a quarter of new members of
the House in 1994 were affiliated with evangelical churches,
equaling (for the first time in modern political memory) the
proportion of evangelicals in the U.S. electorate as a whole. And
for the first time in modern political history, a majority of
American evangelicals were telling pollsters that they favored
the Republican party over the Democrats.
Yet the euphoria of 1994 deserves a second look. Success in
House races notwithstanding, no open champion of the Christian
Coalition--and hardly any candidates from the Religious
Right--has been elected to a governorship or to the U.S. Senate
since the Coalition formed in 1989--nor, for that matter, since
the birth of the Moral Majority in 1979. More pointedly, the
White House prospects of any political candidate closely
associated with the Religious Right seem as remote today as they
did in 1988, when Pat Robertson failed in his run for the GOP
presidential nomination. Americans are still too uncomfortable
with the agenda of the Religious Right--at the state or national
level--to embrace it outright. Perhaps, they seem to be thinking,
it is too narrow, too coercive, and, well, too religious
for the country.
After 18 years of intense political activity, the Religious
Right has failed in many of its cherished political and cultural
objectives--from banning abortion to combating the widespread
acceptance of homosexuality. This failure may be due as much to
the movement's political engagement as to the opposition of an
establishment elite that rejects its most deeply held values.
Though modern religious conservatives have become much more
sophisticated in their public relations, they have not yet made
their greatest contributions to American civic life. When they
do, these contributions are likely to come in the area of
culture, not politics.
The Sleeping Giant
To gauge the prospects of the Religious Right, it is essential
to understand its genesis. The term Religious Right, widely used
by the early 1980s, was and is clumsy and somewhat pejorative.
Yet it's a useful way to describe the large, inchoate movement of
often angry Americans who surged to national prominence in the
late 1970s, when the Reverend Jerry Falwell and others founded
the Moral Majority. The spark was a threat by Jimmy Carter's IRS
commissioner in 1978 to strip Christian schools of their
tax--exempt status. This skirmish ignited resentments that had
been accumulating for at least 10 years.
Many of those resentments are easy to identify. The
countercultural movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s had
led to massive increases in divorce, out--of--wedlock births, and
welfare dependency. Crime rates were rising sharply. And, of
course, the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade (1973)
pre-empted the abortion laws of the 50 states.
Along with Falwell and the Moral Majority, other groups rose
to prominence on this tide of discontent. They included groups
such as Focus on the Family, led by James Dobson (syndicated to
some 1,600 radio stations nationwide), Gary Bauer's Family
Research Council, Concerned Women for America (whose membership
of 500,000 is twice as large as the liberal National Organization
for Women), the American Center for Law and Justice (a
public--interest group of 200 attorneys who litigate to protect
religious liberties), and many others. Almost all of them share
the theology of Christians who are evangelical; that is, they
believe in the inerrancy and authority of the Bible, the
necessity of a personal Christian commitment of faith or
"born--again" experience, and the obligation to share
one's faith with others as widely as possible.
As the cultural conflicts wore on, however, they began to
express their evangelical theology in the messy realm of
politics. These evangelicals became convinced that national moral
regeneration, through the adoption of biblically based moral
convictions, was the most effective way to counter the decline of
the nation.
Religion, of course, has often motivated political activists
throughout American history--from the Puritans, to the
Revolution, to the abolitionist and temperance movements, to the
struggle for civil rights. Evangelicals or other devout
Christians were in the forefront of these movements. But today's
Religious Right is different from earlier political and reform
movements in a crucial sense: Its activism grew out of a belief
that the ardent secularists dominating the intellectual and
cultural heights of the American polity were squeezing those with
religious conviction out of political debates altogether. In
other words, people of faith felt--and still feel--like
second--class citizens in the nation they helped establish.
The Falwell Factor
For many years, the American public associated the movement
almost exclusively with Falwell, a Southern Baptist pastor from
Lynchburg, Virginia, who had earned a large national radio
audience and founded Liberty University, a small college linked
to his church.
Falwell was and is sincere in his enthusiasm for preaching the
Gospel and trying to lead the unsaved into the Kingdom of Heaven,
as evangelical theology directs. But he was perhaps too outspoken
about social trends, organizations, and even individuals he
deemed harmful to his vision of a healthy America, and too often
he criticized them in careless, personal terms. As a result, the
intensity of his Christian convictions undermined rather than
underscored his criticisms. How much of his agenda, Americans
wondered, was animated by political goals, and how much by his
evangelical theology?
Numerous other religious figures seemed to share Falwell's
penchant for blurring the line between Christian evangelizing and
political advocacy to repair the moral fabric of America. As a
result, the Religious Right's potential for political success was
extremely limited.
For one thing, the very term "Moral Majority"
provoked deep resentment. It implied a majoritarian consensus in
American national life that was very hard to prove and it
suggested that critics of the group's agenda were themselves
"immoral." Then some conservative Christian groups
tried to evaluate the political positions of members of Congress
according to how "Biblical" they were. Although such
efforts were theologically interesting, they were also
politically absurd. In what sense is a defense budget of $300
billion more "Biblical" than one of, say $250 billion?
Next came the scandals of televangelism. Though they did not
involve Falwell himself, the financial or sexual misdeeds of
television evangelists Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart convinced
many Americans that evangelical leaders were greedy,
hypocritical, and mean--spirited. Then prominent supporters of
the Moral Majority prompted a major backlash when they asserted
that America was a "Christian nation." Though accurate
in a descriptive sense--more than three--quarters of Americans
call themselves "Christian" in the loosest definition
of the term--the phrase was offensive to many secularists, Jews,
and other minorities. It sounded like a trumpet call to impose
Christianity upon the population through the political process.
By the time religious broadcaster Pat Robertson mounted his
presidential run in the 1988 GOP primaries, many--perhaps a
majority--of Americans were convinced that a campaign combining
Christian evangelism with a political platform for America's
moral salvation was not merely inappropriate, but positively
dangerous. Robertson's primary campaign suffered its most
decisive setback on "Super Tuesday" in March, when he
finished third in his home state of Virginia. Although many
voters there probably shared Robertson's core evangelical
convictions and may have agreed with much of his diagnosis of the
state of the nation, they just weren't comfortable with his
prescriptions for the country.
Is the
Religious Right prepared to move to the center
in order to gain wider support for its cultural objectives?
Moral indignation had sparked and fueled the Moral Majority's
emergence and growth during the early 1980s. It had also
galvanized the zealous campaign workers in Robertson's run for
the presidency. But moral indignation is a two--edged sword. It
may energize supporters for short--term heroic efforts of
political activism (as it did on the Left in 1972, when anti--war
fervor propelled George McGovern to the Democratic nomination for
president) but it is seldom enough to secure long--term
political, much less cultural, changes.
Changing Landscape
To Robertson's credit, he and the Religious Right learned much
from the electorate's rejection of him. Evangelical Christian
policy prescriptions for what ailed American life could never
prevail at any level of government without politically organized
support at the grass roots. So in 1989, Robertson changed his
entire political strategy by forming the Christian Coalition and
handing the reins to Ralph Reed, one of the most gifted political
minds in contemporary American politics.
More importantly, the Religious Right started to pursue
nonpolitical approaches to items on its agenda, seeking support
for particular issues among people who were not politically
conservative at all. The groups that broadly constituted the
Religious Right created a division of labor, as major
organizations like Focus on the Family and the Christian
Coalition realized that they could not take up cudgels over every
issue that aroused them.
Meanwhile, smaller groups that focused on very specific areas
of national life enjoyed considerable success. Legal watchdog
groups like the Christian Legal Society, the Rutherford
Institute, and the American Center for Law and Justice (another
group founded by Robertson, and led by the feisty Jay Sekulow)
have doggedly protected religious liberties and fought the often
mindless bias against religion in public education.
Congress and even the White House have embraced the goals of
these activists. The 1984 Equal Access Act, the 1993 Religious
Freedom Restoration Act, and President Clinton's 1996 guidelines
on the legitimate expressions of religion in public schools were
all the result of meticulous legal work and careful educational
campaigns by these organizations and their allies.
Finding Common Ground
Wisely, the Religious Right as a whole appears to have
retreated somewhat from assuming there is an unequivocal
Christian, or even "religious," position on such
complex and controversial topics as NATO expansion, NAFTA,
illegal immigration, or any other burning question of the day.
Ultimately, though, the movement's constituent groups will have
to decide: Is the Religious Right prepared to move towards the
American center in order to gain wider support for long--term
cultural objectives? Is it willing to sacrifice a partisan
preference for GOP candidates in important political races in
order to attract a wider audience for its overall moral vision?
Take the issue of abortion, for example. Poll after poll
indicates that Americans are distinctly uncomfortable with the
procedure, yet unwilling for the most part to ban it altogether.
So it would seem more sensible and realistic to chip away at the
legality of abortion in areas where there is a strong consensus
of public discomfort--such as partial--birth abortions--than to
continue to quest after a total ban on the grounds of spiritual
principle. Even a ban on partial--birth abortions with some
exceptions for the sake of the mother's life or physical health
is surely better than no ban at all.
Even more promisingly, American liberals have given surprising
support for individual items of the Religious Right's agenda when
they are not advanced as part of a grand and threatening
campaign. One of the most interesting and successful Christian
efforts to reduce the American divorce rate is a program called
Marriage Savers that was pioneered by Michael McManus, a
Maryland--based newspaper columnist (see article, page 52).
Though McManus is an evangelical Christian, he has no connection
to the Religious Right. In fact, he has been a rather acidulous
and persistent critic of Pat Robertson.
Yet McManus, the author of a popular book entitled Marriage
Savers, has managed to round up support from such diverse
individuals as Joan Brown Campbell, the general secretary of the
National Council of Churches; Don Argue, the president of the
National Association of Evangelicals; and William Cardinal
Keeler, Baltimore's Roman Catholic prelate. Together, they are
pushing churches and synagogues in 64 American cities to adopt
tough, mandatory marriage--preparation programs and provide
marital "mentoring" programs staffed by lay married
couples. The effort has reduced divorce rates in Montgomery,
Alabama, and Albany, Georgia, by 12 percent in two years, and by
a whopping 19 percent over four years in Peoria, Illinois. One
Michigan judge was so impressed by the program that he has
persuaded all officials performing civil weddings in his
jurisdiction to insist that applicants attend
marriage--preparation programs beforehand.
Is McManus part of the Religious Right? Absolutely not. Are
his objectives in saving American families identical to those of
the Religious Right? Totally. The lesson here is that America's
"people of faith" (nearly 80 percent of the population)
can work together on certain clearly defined social or moral
problems even if they differ on everything else, including
theology. There is no inherent reason, for example, why
evangelical Christians should not work with radical feminist
groups who are as opposed to pornography as they are. Nor should
it matter that on the issue of abortion, radical feminists are at
loggerheads with evangelicals. The collaboration might be
beneficial for both sides, as well as for America.
The Religious Center
Without such collaboration, long--term cultural reform is
unlikely. Abortion remains legal in every state throughout
pregnancy, despite continual protests and lobbying by groups such
as the National Right To Life, Concerned Women for America, the
Family Research Council, the American Family Association, and
others. Pornography has been banned from public display in stores
used by the general public--one success of Religious Right
activism--but continues to flourish on the Internet. But in
regard to the gay lifestyle, another hot button for
conservatives, and something with which the general public is
obviously uncomfortable, the Religious Right has failed so far to
frame the argument in a way that seems neither intolerant nor
bigoted.
The Religious
Right alienated American with a vindictive tone of speech and
action that seemed to outweigh the social worthiness of its
causes.
To be sure, religious, and particularly Christian,
conservatives seeking a national mandate for moral leadership
have always faced bitter antagonism from America's cultural
gatekeepers on the Left. Christian conservatives also encounter a
persistent suspicion that they want to use the political process
to impose puritanical standards of personal behavior upon their
fellow citizens. As much sympathy as they may have for specific
parts of the Religious Right's agenda, Americans as a whole
remain uncomfortable with the notion of the Religious Right's
achieving political power en bloc.
The Religious Right now faces a turning point in its
development. It has accomplished a great deal in the political
arena despite its setbacks at the higher levels of political
power. A broad swath of the American public supports significant
parts of its agenda: preserving religious freedom, securing
educational choice and improvement, saving the American family,
restricting (if not banning) abortion, and limiting pornography.
Perhaps its greatest conceptual challenge now is to persuade both
its supporters and the American people that its ultimate goal is
not the Christianization of America.
As individuals, of course, evangelical Christians have a
constitutional right and a moral duty to proclaim their faith
whenever they have opportunity to do so. But these proclamations
should never intermingle with the political process. Whenever the
public perceives such an association, it objects vigorously--and
rightly so. One way in which the Religious Right could reassure
Americans as a whole that the vast majority of its supporters are
not would--be Ayatollahs is to explain tirelessly that
evangelicals may share exactly the same theology and still differ
with each other sharply on important political questions. Most
Americans harbor fervent antipathy toward any notion of an
established state religion.
Americans are arguably the most fair--minded citizens of any
country in the world. They have an intuitive sense of what seems
fair at the social and political level. They get carried away by
fashions and trends from time to time, but sooner or later they
come back to their senses. The Religious Right alienated many
Americans in its early years by a tone of speech and action whose
vindictiveness seemed to outweigh the social worthiness of the
causes it adopted. Reed and others have repaired some of the
damage, but more repair work is needed.
Perhaps one way to start would be for culturally conservative
religious groups, whether Christian, Jewish, or Islamic, to cease
thinking of themselves as "right" in the political
sense. What the Religious Right really ought to be, even if it
dare not call itself this, is the "Religious Center"--a
genuine "moral majority" of Americans who agree
strongly on "pro--family" issues, but agree to differ
on a whole lot else. Christian Coalition supporters may indeed
campaign for specific GOP candidates, but they should realize
that their partisanship in the political arena may undercut their
other efforts in the social and cultural ones.
The new Religious Center ought to capitalize on the widespread
grass roots unhappiness with America's cultural and moral
condition. Massive and careful polling by the University of
Virginia's Post--Modernity Project in 1996 showed that Americans
are deeply pessimistic, not so much about the specific policies
of the White House or the Congress, as about the nation's overall
political culture. Fifty--five percent of Americans
believe our nation is in strong--to--moderate decline, and about
two--thirds believe there is a clear decline in standards in
family, education, ethics, and popular entertainment. Americans
may have a short--term confidence in their economic future, but
they remain unhappy over many of the hidden diseases infecting
their culture.
The
movement's greatest challenge is to persuade the public that its
ultimate goal is not the Christianization of America.
The new Religious Center faces a stiff challenge: Identify
this sickness in terms that are not religiously exclusive, and
suggest remedies that are effective without seeming intolerant. A
major spiritual re-awakening among evangelical and mainstream
American Christians is undoubtedly vital to this effort. So, too,
are broad--based programs on family issues that appeal to
mainstream groups. Nor is there anything wrong with vigorous
political activism and campaigning for candidates of either
political party who seem friendly to the pro-family programs of
this new Religious Center. In fact, the Christian Coalition has
campaigned occasionally on behalf of culturally conservative
Democrats, part of Reed's own vision of "casting a wider
net."
Political advocacy for national social change is a healthy
tradition of the American polity. So are movements of evangelism
and spiritual renewal, both within Christendom and in other
segments of the American faith community. But the two traditions
should be kept zealously--I dare say religiously--apart.
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