White House clearing national policy with apocalyptic fundamentalists
Politics, Religion 05/18/2004 |This Village Voice article is enough to have me seeing red: Bush White House checked with rapture Christians before latest Israel move.
It was an e-mail we weren’t meant to see. Not for our eyes were the notes that showed White House staffers taking two-hour meetings with Christian fundamentalists, where they passed off bogus social science on gay marriage as if it were holy writ and issued fiery warnings that “the Presidents [sic] Administration and current Government is engaged in cultural, economical, and social struggle on every level”—this to a group whose representative in Israel believed herself to have been attacked by witchcraft unleashed by proximity to a volume of Harry Potter. Most of all, apparently, we’re not supposed to know the National Security Council’s top Middle East aide consults with apocalyptic Christians eager to ensure American policy on Israel conforms with their sectarian doomsday scenarios.
But now we know. […] The Apostolic Congress dates its origins to 1981, when, according to its website, “Brother Stan Wachtstetter was able to open the door to Apostolic Christians into the White House.” Apostolics, a sect of Pentecostals, claim legitimacy as the heirs of the original church because they, as the 12 apostles supposedly did, baptize converts in the name of Jesus, not in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Ronald Reagan bore theological affinities with such Christians because of his belief that the world would end in a fiery Armageddon. Reagan himself referenced this belief explicitly a half-dozen times during his presidency. While the language of apocalyptic Christianity is absent from George W. Bush’s speeches, he has proven eager to work with apocalyptics—a point of pride for Upton. “We’re in constant contact with the White House,” he boasts. “I’m briefed at least once a week via telephone briefings… . I was there about two weeks ago … At that time we met with the president.” […] When Pastor Upton was asked to explain why the group’s website describes the Apostolic Congress as “the Christian Voice in the nation’s capital,” instead of simply a Christian voice in the nation’s capital, he responded, “There has been a real lack of leadership in having someone emerge as a Christian voice, someone who doesn’t speak for the right, someone who doesn’t speak for the left, but someone who speaks for the people, and someone who speaks from a theocratical perspective.” When his words were repeated back to him to make sure he had said a “theocratical” perspective, not a “theological” perspective, he said, “Exactly. Exactly. We want to know what God would have us say or what God would have us do in every issue.”
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p>(via Atrios)
[See also: Christianity and the ACLU | NYT interview with Ron P. Reagan | ERA still in limbo | What if…? | On your knees, part II ]
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5 Responses to “White House clearing national policy with apocalyptic fundamentalists”
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May 18th, 2004 at 8:56 pm
So, essentially Bush is asking, “What would Jesus do?” about everything? Never mind that Jesus is non-existant anymore. Why not ask, “What would Jimmy Buffett do?” (Alan Jackson quote) At least JB is alive and able to give an answer. But letting people pick and choose what they want to portray Jesus as is just plain wrong. Let alone that there shouldn’t be religious influence upon presidential policy. I’m just neglecting that because it’s farking blatantly obvious from the get-go.
May 18th, 2004 at 9:44 pm
This slate article talks about his relationship with God. Check this out:
“During a televised debate in the 1999 presidential primary in Iowa, the three Republican contenders, Steve Forbes, Alan Keyes, and George Bush, were asked what “political philosopher or thinker” had most influenced them and why.
Forbes cited John Locke; Keyes, the Founding Fathers; and Bush, “Christ, because he changed my heart.”
May 18th, 2004 at 11:30 pm
Firas: Did you forget that he’s on a mission from God?
May 19th, 2004 at 6:28 pm
Robert: I must have missed the memo
You know, after four years—first his administration’s refusal to sign Kyoto, then withdrawal from the International Criminal Court, followed by testing/breaking dozens of international laws and agreements (pulling funding from global family planning clinics and pouring it into faith-based initiatives?!?!), and then the snapping-point of Iraq—I still haven’t decided whether he is a fumbling moron, a pawn of the people around him, or genuinely someone with the most ridiculous beliefs. (I’m not American so my list of priorities is skewed, but he messed up the nation itself pretty badly too (patriot act, no child left behind, etc.))
But one thing that’s been dawning on me is that what he says is hardly what people who support him believe in.
For example, during the whole SaddamBad+Nucular to WeTheLiberators period, I wonder how many people who followed along actually believed in either—how many instead just wanted to deliver a punch to Arabs in bigoted response to 9/11? You know, that Crusade-talk sure gets many excited.
May 19th, 2004 at 10:49 pm
Oh wait. I could’ve sworn I saw the “On a mission from god” quote attributed to Bush somewhere, but I can only seem to find it attributed to Bob Woodward (sp?). Him and Tom DeLay, who I remember was specifically mentioned when the quote was attributed to Bush. Woodward belives Bush is on a mission from God and DeLay believes he (himself) is on a mission from god.