Francis Schaeffer
The Huffington Post
When Senator Obama's preacher thundered about racism and
injustice Obama suffered smear-by-association. But when my
late father -- Religious Right leader Francis Schaeffer --
denounced America and even called for the violent overthrow
of the US government, he was invited to lunch with
presidents Ford, Reagan and Bush, Sr.
Every Sunday thousands of right wing white preachers
(following in my father's footsteps) rail against America's
sins from tens of thousands of pulpits. They tell us that
America is complicit in the "murder of the unborn," has
become "Sodom" by coddling gays, and that our public schools
are sinful places full of evolutionists and sex educators
hell-bent on corrupting children. They say, as my dad often
did, that we are, "under the judgment of God." They call
America evil and warn of immanent destruction. By comparison
Obama's minister's shouted "controversial" comments were
mild. All he said was that God should damn America for our
racism and violence and that no one had ever used the N-word
about Hillary Clinton.
Dad and I were amongst the founders of the Religious right. In the 1970s and 1980s, while Dad and I crisscrossed America denouncing our nation's sins instead of getting in trouble we became darlings of the Republican Party. (This was while I was my father's sidekick before I dropped out of the evangelical movement altogether.) We were rewarded for our "stand" by people such as Congressman Jack Kemp, the Fords, Reagan and the Bush family. The top Republican leadership depended on preachers and agitators like us to energize their rank and file. No one called us un-American.
consider a few passages from my father's immensely
influential America-bashing book A Christian Manifesto. It
sailed under the radar of the major media who, back when it
was published in 1980, were not paying particular attention
to best-selling religious books. Nevertheless it sold more
than a million copies.
Here's Dad writing in his chapter on civil disobedience:
If there is a legitimate reason for the use of force [against the US government]... then at a certain point force is justifiable.
And this:
In the United States the materialistic, humanistic world view is being taught exclusively in most state schools... There is an obvious parallel between this and the situation in Russia [the USSR]. And we really must not be blind to the fact that indeed in the public schools in the United States all religious influence is as forcibly forbidden as in the Soviet Union....
Then this:
There does come a time when force, even physical force, is appropriate... A true Christian in Hitler's Germany and in the occupied countries should have defied the false and counterfeit state. This brings us to a current issue that is crucial for the future of the church in the United States, the issue of abortion... It is time we consciously realize that when any office commands what is contrary to God's law it abrogates it's authority. And our loyalty to the God who gave this law then requires that we make the appropriate response in that situation...
Was any conservative political leader associated with Dad
running for cover? Far from it. Dad was a frequent guest of
the Kemps, had lunch with the Fords, stayed in the White
House as their guest, he met with Reagan, helped Dr. C.
Everett Koop become Surgeon General. (I went on the 700 Club
several times to generate support for Koop).
Dad became a hero to the evangelical community and a leading
political instigator. When Dad died in 1984 everyone from
Reagan to Kemp to Billy Graham lamented his passing publicly
as the loss of a great American. Not one Republican leader
was ever asked to denounce my dad or distanced himself from
Dad's statements.
Take Dad's words and put them in the mouth of Obama's preacher (or in the mouth of any black American preacher) and people would be accusing that preacher of treason. Yet when we of the white Religious Right denounced America white conservative Americans and top political leaders, called our words "godly" and "prophetic" and a "call to repentance."
We Republican agitators of the mid 1970s to the late
1980s were genuinely anti-American in the same spirit that
later Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson (both followers of my
father) were anti-American when they said God had removed
his blessing from America on 9/11, because America accepted
gays. Falwell and Robertson recanted but we never did.
My dad's books denouncing America and comparing the USA to
Hitler are still best sellers in the "respectable"
evangelical community and he's still hailed as a prophet by
many Republican leaders. When Mike Huckabee was recently
asked by Katie Couric to name one book he'd take with him to
a desert island, besides the Bible, he named Dad's Whatever
Happened to the Human Race? a book where Dad also compared
America to Hitler's Germany.
The hypocrisy of the right denouncing Obama, because of his minister's words, is staggering. They are the same people who argue for the right to "bear arms" as "insurance" to limit government power. They are the same people that (in the early 1980s roared and cheered when I called down damnation on America as "fallen away from God" at their national meetings where I was keynote speaker, including the annual meeting of the ultraconservative Southern Baptist convention, and the religious broadcasters that I addressed.
Today we have a marriage of convenience between the right
wing fundamentalists who hate Obama, and the "progressive"
Clintons who are playing the race card through their own
smear machine. As Jane Smiley writes in the Huffington Post
"[The Clinton's] are, indeed, now part of the 'vast right
wing conspiracy.' (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jane-smiley/im-already-against-the-n_b_90628.html
Both the far right Republicans and the stop-at-nothing
Clintons are using the "scandal" of Obama's preacher to
undermine the first black American candidate with a serious
shot at the presidency. Funny thing is, the racist
Clinton/Far Right smear machine proves that Obama's minister
had a valid point. There is plenty to yell about these days.
Frank Schaeffer is a writer and author of "CRAZY FOR GOD-How I Grew Up As One Of The Elect, Helped Found The Religious Right, And Lived To Take All (Or Almost All) Of It Back
