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By John Stackhouse
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Jerry Falwell 1933 - 2007 |
THE REVEREND Jerry Falwell has gone to his reward. He
departs this life with a significant resume in public life.
And if it weren’t for him, people like him
wouldn’t have such resumes.
For in the 1970s Jerry Falwell led American
fundamentalists out of their self-imposed seclusion from the mainstream of
American culture. Since the 1925 Scopes evolution trial, fundamentalists
had withdrawn from major American institutions, or lost battles over them,
and devoted their considerable energies henceforth to forming their own
parallel institutions: schools, colleges, seminaries, missionary societies,
magazines, publishing houses, congregations, denominations and more.
Opened doors
Jerry Falwell changed all that. Much as the indubitably
right-wing politician Richard Nixon could open doors to China, the
indubitably right-wing clergyman Falwell could open doors to American
public life. And fundamentalists have surged through those doors ever
since. They have done so, furthermore, in strange company.
Since the Scopes debacle, fundamentalists had not just
withdrawn from public life, but from everybody else. They came to make a
virtue, in fact, of separation, and many fundamentalists excoriated Billy
Graham for failing to keep himself properly isolated from those of other
religious stripes. When Graham hosted mainline Protestants and even Roman
Catholics on his crusade platforms, fundamentalists believed he showed his
true colours as a compromiser. The various Bob Joneses called him one of
the two greatest threats, in fact, to true, safe Christianity in the world
– the other being the Pope, of course.
Moral Majority
But Falwell formed the Moral (not
‘Christian’) Majority, an alliance of what we now would call
‘social conservatives’ – as well as political
conservatives that included not only non-fundamentalist Protestants and
Roman Catholics, but also Jews, Mormons and others beyond the Christian
orbit.
The last three decades of American public life have
arguably been dominated by those carrying forward his legacy and those
fighting against it. The ‘culture wars’ motif has been
overdrawn, of course, just as the red/blue maps of the United States
exaggerate American polarization and understate consensus. Nonetheless,
there simply was no significant voice in American politics and culture for
the concerns of Falwell and the millions of Americans who have since fallen
in behind such leaders as Pat Robertson, Ralph Reed, James Dobson and
Charles Colson – and George W. Bush.
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Ironically, however, just as Billy Graham and the
‘neo-evangelicals’ of the 1940s (who gave us the National
Association of Evangelicals, Christianity Today, World Vision and Fuller Theological Seminary) distanced
themselves from fundamentalism for 30 years, with the ascendancy of Jerry
Falwell and the Religious Right, many evangelicals have been desperately
trying to distinguish themselves from this new kind of fundamentalism for
the last 30 years.
Seamless garment
Falwell and Co. skillfully wove together a seamless
garment of causes, such that if you said you were pro-life, you were
presumed to be against evolution, for the death penalty, against condoms in
schools, for the Republican Party and so on.
This ‘package’ became identified with
orthodox Christianity, even though many traditional Protestants and
Catholics disagreed with many parts of it.
Here in Canada, this situation was worse.
Falwell’s kind of Christianity and politics was demonstrably
unattractive to most evangelicals, let alone the country at large. Yet
because Canada has grown no evangelical celebrities and power players like
Falwell, into this vacuum of readily-recognizable figures was easily put
Americans such as Falwell.
Indeed, Falwell was one of those fundamentalists whom
Canadian liberals (and Liberals) loved to hate. They conjured up his
spectre to frighten Canadian voters against the Reform Party, the Canadian
Alliance and the Conservatives.
“Give any attention to evangelicals,” the
received wisdom went, “and you’ll have to deal with the likes
of Jerry Falwell.”
So in a country in which he exerted almost no direct
influence (epigones of Falwell’s such as Charles McVety lack standing
even among most evangelicals), Jerry Falwell exerted considerable indirect
influence as a political and cultural bogeyman.
But in his own country, the country that influences the
rest of the world as none other does, Jerry Falwell deserves to be numbered
among the most important Americans of the last 50 years.
John Stackhouse is the Sangwoo Youtong Chee Professor
of Theology and Culture at Regent College. This comment first appeared
June 2007
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