Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
Advertisement
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

The Lack of a 'Vision Thing'

By Roberto Lovato, AlterNet. Posted July 19, 2004.


Liberals and progressives don't know what they're up against with the militant evangelical movement.

Share and save this post:
Digg iconDelicious iconReddit iconFark iconYahoo! iconNewsvine! iconFacebook iconNewsTrust icon

In Special Coverage

Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
My Depression -- or Ours?
Tom Engelhardt

Democracy and Elections:
GOP Attacks on ACORN Are Based on the Fear of 1.3 Million New Voters

DrugReporter:
As the Violence Soars, Mexico Signals It's Had Enough of America's Stupid War on Drugs
Silja J.A. Talvi

Election 2008:
Too Much Presidential Power -- We've Got to Address the 'Unitary Executive' Question
Dana Nelson

Environment:
Dear Mr. Next President -- Food, Food, Food
Michael Pollan

ForeignPolicy:
Obama Talks Tough About Afghanistan; Here's What He's Really in For
Anand Gopal

Health and Wellness:
McCain's Medicare Cuts Would Mean Hidden Tax Increases for Millions of Americans

Hurricane Katrina:
From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished
Amy Goodman

Immigration:
Mexico Braces for Economic Blow; Immigration Adds to Complexity of the Issue
Diego Cevallos

Media and Technology:
John McCain Sows the Seeds of Hatred
Rory O'Connor

Movie Mix:
The "Battle in Seattle" and Beyond
Stuart Townsend

Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Our Next President Will Transform the Supreme Court
Ellen Goodman

Rights and Liberties:
Former McCain Supporter: McCain Is "Unleashing the Monster of American Prejudice"
Amy Goodman

Sex and Relationships:
Why Everyone Loves Hot, Smart Older Women
Vanessa Richmond

War on Iraq:
In Biggest Oil Sale Ever, Iraqi Government to Put 40 Billion Barrels of Reserves Up For Grabs
Terry Macalister, Nicholas Watt

Water:
Can the People Who Live in Coastal Towns Ever Be Safe From Hurricanes?
Lizzy Ratner

More stories by Roberto Lovato

Get AlterNet in
your mailbox!

 
Advertisement

It would be fair to expect that my recent weekend visit to my parents' pink house on a quiet street in San Francisco was going to be rather tranquil. It wasn't. During my stay, I watched as my 80-year-old mother and father sat forlorn while their wooden house shook to the sounds of the youthful Christian soldiers singing and praying in the storefront church next door.

It is a scenario that plays out for my parents several times a week, and their efforts – pounding on the walls, screaming "Quiet!" at the churchgoers, pleading gently, and then not so gently, with the mustachioed pastor – always end in despondency.

The walls dividing my parents and the Baptist battalion next door shake loudly to a born-again beat from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday – and every Tuesday and Thursday night too. Despite the fact that this church is wrecking the serenity of my parents' remaining golden years, I can relate to the motivation this faithful flock has to meet so often and pray at such heavenly volumes.

A former born-again believer myself, I have seen the capabilities of a religious militancy that believes it can move mountains. I've also witnessed how this same militancy in the thousands of evangelical churches across the United States has swayed the results of presidential elections, silently aligning the cold strategy and tactics of electoral politics with a vision that extends beyond election day and into the next life.

When I looked in on the Sunday sermon next door I felt no surprise that the calls on the faithful to embrace Jesus and the apocalypse were paired with a push for a Bush second coming and the pastor's scintillating defense of the White House-sponsored Federal Marriage Amendment, which the mustachioed shepherd called "muy urgente" – very urgent. The church service brought me back to my experiences of mixing of politics and faith during the Reagan era. At that time, I was unaware of how the exceptionalism embodied by Reagan's vision of the United States as a "shining city on a hill" blended seamlessly with the ancient ideas I was taught about Christianity and the salvation of the earth. Reagan just made sense to me, and I left it at that.

My experiences with the evangelical church started in the early '80s. I was supremely grateful to the leadership of the Open Door Alliance church for helping me escape the unhealthy – even deadly – lifestyle of a 20-year-old living in recession-ridden barrios in Reagan's "shining city." The rocket-fuel combustion of gratitude for being taken in and the apocalyptic faith I grew to adopt – many of us were convinced that the end was nigh – fired me up during bi-weekly bible study sessions, which made clear that I stood on the side of the good, true Christians, and not among the fallen faithful.

Shortly after my conversion experience (I grew up Catholic), I spent all my time participating in discussions, sermons, and mentoring by deacons and pastors. I was introduced to "practical" examples of how to interpret reality – including political reality. At that time, abortion was the filter through which we understood our place in the "worldly" process of elections.

Following training ostensibly designed to bring me closer to the rapture, I found myself transported to new – and radically political – heights in advanced study groups. We spent our time praying for the presidential candidate who was "right" on abortion, the presidential candidate who we heard about in services and on Christian radio, the presidential candidate we saw praying with Christian pastors on the covers of mainstream magazines.

Convinced that I needed to take up spiritual arms in a world slouching towards Satan, I attended mass events where members of various regional churches "volunteered" to register new voters for the 1984 presidential race. Before long, many of us were writing checks to televangelists like our spiritual hero and Reagan supporter, Jimmy Swaggart, one of the pioneers of televangelism whose inspired, working-class message delivered thousands of souls – and more than $500,000 in daily commitments from televised sermons.

Worked into an evangelical frenzy, I believed, truly believed, that the anti-Christ worked through abortion rights advocates and the politicians that supported them. I saw it as a holy battle fought through the ballot box. Though I wasn't told which party to register with at religious events or at sermons, our biblical training made it clear which levers Jesus would pull at the ballot box.

Sacred time and election time were synchronized. Our lives moved to the beat of the Beatitudes – and, increasingly, so did the political process.

Twenty years later, the synchronization has been digitally remastered using new technologies, and distributed by Christian media conglomerates like the Trinity Broadcasting Network. Combined with the overwhelming numbers of politically-driven tax free evangelical organizations found in neighborhoods across the country, the exponential growth of the Message has had a multiplier effect on the spiritual economy of the country. While Protestant politics stretch across the spectrum from the radical right to progressive, the most prominent broadcast pulpits are dominated by fanatical conservatives. The so-called "spiritual revolution" is on a parallel track with the revolution in digital media.


Digg!

Roberto Lovato is a Los Angeles-based writer with Pacific News Service. This article was produced under the auspices of the George Washington Williams Fellowship of the Independent Press Association.

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »

John McCain Sows the Seeds of Hatred
Election 2008: John McCain: You're better than that! Stop the hate speech before it's too late.
By Rory O'Connor, RoryOConnor.org. October 14, 2008.
As the Violence Soars, Mexico Signals It's Had Enough of America's Stupid War on Drugs
DrugReporter: The U.S.-financed War on Drugs has had savage results in Mexico, and now its president wants to decriminalize pot, cocaine and heroin possession.
By Silja J.A. Talvi, AlterNet. October 14, 2008.
Too Much Presidential Power -- We've Got to Address the 'Unitary Executive' Question
Election 2008: What do McCain and Obama think of the concept?
By Dana Nelson, LA Times. October 14, 2008.

Advertisement