Staff Contributors
Guest Contributors

The New Jesus Project

Somewhere in a parallel universe ...

Posted by Ken Ward (Guest Contributor) at 8:39 AM on 26 Dec 2007

Read more about: religion and spirituality

Jerry Falwell, President
Moral Majority
Lynchburg, VA

December 25, 1978

Dear Jerry,

It is altogether fitting and proper that we should be meeting at this holy time of year. Attached is the final version of the focus group analysis. Nothing new in the numbers, but we have added several recommendations since the last draft. What we are proposing is controversial, and we expect a lively discussion at the Executive Committee meeting.

Also enclosed please find our fourth quarter bill. Note that we have yet to receive payment for the first three quarters. As you know better than we, miracles are infrequent and the rent must still be paid!

Sincerely,

Ted Nordhaus
Michael Shellenberger

-----

TO: Executive Committee, Moral Majority
FROM: Ted Nordhaus, Michael Shellenberger
DATE: December 25, 1978
CC: Howard Phillips, Richard Viguerie

RE: THE NEW JESUS PROJECT

The focus groups we have conducted in our Strategic Values Project have surfaced problematic reactions to the tone, language and narrative of the Moral Majority test materials. Here we summarize the most troublesome areas, consider their meaning and suggest a response. It is our firm conviction that the Moral Majority can transcend its narrow boundaries and become the dominant force on the national political stage. The yawning chasm of depravity opened in the loins of our nation by the Godless beatnik-hippies of the 60's generation must and will be healed. This can only be achieved, however, if outmoded foundational tenets are discarded and negative, dispiriting approaches are replaced with an inclusive, aspirational story.

FROM NIGHTMARE TO DREAM. The concept of religion has been thoroughly deconstructed. The politics we propose breaks from several widely accepted, but intellectually discredited religious distinctions, such as that between human and God, sin and redemption, and heaven and hell. Few things have hampered Christianity more than its exclusivity and emphasis on the Apocalypse. We argue that Moral Majority must break with both archaic beliefs and espouse an inclusive approach (either a pan-theology or, better yet, neo-Platonic philosophy), and substitute a realistic vision of heaven on earth in place of the fictive (and terrifying) heaven/hell dichotomy. Desire, not fear is productive

THE PREJUDICE OF SOUL. In an all-to-familiar story, a certain Mr. Bernardone listened to a directive from the pulpit and immediately threw down his money, cloak and shoes and walked barefoot into the snow.* He did this for fear of his "soul," a thing without form or substance, for which no proof has ever been offered. Moral Majority campaigns make no direct reference to "the soul," but the organization's very name is a subtle dig at non-believers. Appeals based on "my soul is purer than your soul" (MSPTYP) are spiritual elitism. We no longer believe that it is justified to confine our enmity to a particular sect. Why then do we believe that we are justified in exalting our souls over the souls of others? (*February 24, 1208, Assisi, Italy)

THE GOD PARADIGM. Toward the beginning of the shared Jewish-Christian foundational text, the Supreme Being addresses the character Noah, saying: "Whoever sheds the blood of a human, by a human shall that person's blood be shed." (NSRV Gen. 9:6). In the Christen-only edition, Jesus says to his disciples, "... the one who has no sword should sell his cloak and buy one." (NSRV Luke 22:36). The written record of every major religion is replete with this sort of confusing cross-indication, but the Judeo-Christian tradition, with its centuries of Talmudic hair-spitting and weird Apocrypha is particularly rich in contradiction. What sufficed for nomads and medieval peoples, however, is dysfunctional in postmodern society. In a time of Court TV and hyper-contractual awareness, it is essential that religio-commitments, commandments, etc. be consistent, coherent and enforceable on both parties. Flip-flopping Supreme Beings are stumbling blocks in the superhighway of global progress and this sort of behavior is difficult to justify in an infallible being.

THE DEATH OF CHRISTIANITY. We have become convinced that Christianity -- its modes of thought, its beliefs and its very institutions -- is outmoded and must die so that a new, postmodern, California-esque form of consciousness may emerge. Thomas Aquinas famously wrote ... "Hold firmly that our faith is identical with that of the ancients." This trim sentence neatly sums up all that is limiting, cramped and exclusive in our narrative. We ask our followers to look back, to think alike, to submerge their creativity and individuality, and to accept life on faith.

The terrible narrative of John the Revelator, with its Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Whore of Babylon,and lakes of fire best exemplifies the negative, limiting vision that we believe must be discarded in order that Moral Majority may fulfill its promise. We cannot expect to gain influence in the general public with a message of sin, moral superiority and damnation for all who are not born-again Evangelical Christians.

GREATNESS. In 1977, working with a small group of foundation officers and pastors, we conceived an experimental approach called the "New Jesus Project." We believed that by shedding the outmoded interpretations and horse blinders of an antiquated religious past, we might unearth a more robust and forward looking religio-political model. We proposed a major investment in Biblically based construction projects, service work, transportation, communications and justice systems. The political thinking was that this agenda would win over Jewish voters, particularly the proposal to assist the State of Israel in reclaiming all of Jerusalem and rebuilding the Temple (in strict accordance with Ezekiel 40, etc.). Negative reactions from the small, but growing US Muslin population would be ameliorated by funding "Peoples of the Book" community centers in major cities. Our focus groups found that the "Counselor Jesus," portrayed in the "Jesus Files a Restraining Order Against the Moneylenders" 30 and 60 sec. spots, connected very strongly with fears over street crime and anger at high bank fees.

We received many denominational endorsements, but were baffled by what happened next. In the spring 1976, we called on pastors to replace traditional Palm Sunday services with "New Jesus" ceremonies, dispensing with frivolous "donkey, fronds & kids" theme to refocus on the more important issue of institutional change and preaching ... "Why Die Hard?: Steps to Win/Win for JC & Ciaphas" sermons. Privately, many pastors told us that they supported the idea, but deacons and major tithers put in the kibosh.

On September 22, 2002, Oprah Winfrey accepted the first Bob Hope Humanitarian Award. In her acceptance speech, Oprah dwelt on common bonds ... "we all are just regular people seeking the same thing. The guy on the street, the woman in the classroom, the Israeli, the Afghani, the Zuni, the Apache, the Irish, the Protestant, the Catholic, the gay, the straight, you, me -- we all just want to know that we matter."

Instead of inspiring her audience with a vision of the essential American promise -- you too can be uplifted above the poor peoples of the world! -- the very aspiration she herself embodies, she muffed it.

Imagine how electrifying if Oprah had preached... "You do not have to be as poor as an Afghani, you too can be as rich as an Apache with a casino! You do not have to wait for wings, anyone can be an angel! You do not have to wait for heaven, America is heaven!"

Carmen Appice: Devil's Drummer


The yawning chasm of depravity opened in the loins of our nation by the Godless beatnik-hippies of the 60's generation must and will be healed.

Wow.  

And I here I was happily enjoying listening to the "The Best of Vanilla Fudge" on Rhapsody.

"The Death of Christianity"

If only Falwell had listened, we'd all have been better off, huh? :-) Nice parody, if a little unfair... thanks Ken for a post-Christmas laugh!

Who, what, why?

I can't figure how this piece relates to environmental issues.  Grist should really focus its writers on environmental issues, not on anti-Christian rhetoric.  Falwell and his kin are easy to poke fun at and its easy to stereotypically lump all Christians into one massive, bible-thumping mob bent on destroying the earth.  This is far from the truth.

Many Christians cherish the beautiful planet that God created for us as I do.  We see that man's actions can and have altered our environment in unspeakable ways.  We believe that it is our responsibility to protect the earth and make right the nasty things that have been done.  We want to end poverty, disease, environmental destruction, and war just as many people of this earth do.

Please retract this article or give the readers a reason that this deserves the attention of persons concerned about environmental issues.  Please don't lead your Christian readers to the assumption that this is just a unprovoked stab at religion.  


Most times for evil to win it doesn't take a large, horrible event; it just takes a lot of people each doing just a little bad. AOOOOOOooooooooo.........

explanation

Wolfy - the key names in this post for us were not Falwell and Robertson, but Shellenberger and Nordhaus. Their article "The Death of Environmentalism", and their recent book "Break Through", claim to offer a middle way for those who want to solve global warming etc. without hearkening to the rabid alarmist rhetoric of us "environmental" folks.

So Ken Ward here simply projected the same arguments back a few decades to a different situation. My take on the translation:

Jerry Falwell = Al Gore
Christianity = Environmentalism
New Jesus = Apollo
denominational leaders = environmental leaders
pastors = congress?
Ok, the analogy gets a little hazy at that point. But it made sense in a sort of holiday haze way...

breaks the ice, sort of

Hello.

While the tie to environmental issues might not be clear here, there is definitely a connection between religion and protection of our natural environment.

Another thread suggest population control is one of those issue everyone knows is a problem, but is a afraid to discuss. I think faith-based religion, especially Jewish, Christian, and Islamic fundamentalism, is another one of those topics. Consider a few  events -- not exactly recent -- that have driven foreign policy to this day and have prevented the nations of the world from focusing on preserving biodiversity. There is Christian and Muslim persecution of Jews. There was the Crusade against Islam. There is the Muslim retaliation against the West (9/11, 9 9/11, 9/11, 9/11...). There is the new Crusade against Islam. There is the re-election of George W. Bush because of a bunch of homophobes more concerned about an activity that harm no one, rather than worrying about jobs, our environment, healthcare and REAL national security. I won't bother going into the hazards of believing Jesus is going to arrive any minute, so we don't need to preserve our environment. Religious fundamentalism is, if nothing else, an ENORMOUS distraction from dealing with real problems.

Now, you can say that the majority of faith-based religious people are fine individuals who care about the environment. Okay, I'll believe you for  now. Then PLEASE, for the love of God and Jesus, PLEASE STEP FORWARD AND TAKE BACK YOUR RELIGION! Put up a few billboards in the Bible Belt correcting those who are lost and distracted by "moral" issues. Bring down the mega-churches. Advertise during the Super Bowl... why are liberal Christians correct and the far right incorrect... give us some strong irresistable arguments.

While perhaps not very effective, I appreciate this official Grist bit of humor... especially if it starts a very important and serious discussion. There is a time to politely disagree and a time to ask people to defend their faith-based religion. The rate of degradation of the environment rules out polite dialogue. The fundamentalists had an opportunity to embrace environmentalism and chose, instead to ridicule it and focus on perpetuating a culture of greed (violating one commandment), violence (violating another commandment), and idolatory (violating another of their commandments). It is time to ask difficult questions.

I invite all Christians -- liberal, moderate, and conservative -- to tell me whether their faith-based religion supports protection of the environment or supports exploitation of the environment, the protection of our fellow creatures or abuse of them, supports clean air even if it impairs economic growth or supports using the air and water as an open sewer. Please provide a precise reference to the Holy Scripture and indicate why the passage you rely on supercedes all passages that are contradictory.

Wolfy concluded with...

"Please don't lead your Christian readers to the assumption that this is just a unprovoked stab at religion."

Unprovoked???!!!

You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have an account, log in. If you don't have an account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.
sign in
Search Gristmill
Subscribe
  • subscribe via RSSStay updated with the Gristmill RSS feed.
  • Add to My Yahoo!
  • Subscribe with Bloglines
  • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
  • Subscribe in Netvibes
  • Subscribe in Google
Using Gristmill
  • What is Gristmill?
  • Posting rules
The comments of Gristmill users reflect the opinions of those individuals only, and do not necessarily reflect the viewpoints of Grist, its staff, its board members, their psychotherapists, or their aestheticians. Got it?

Gristmill is powered by Scoop.

ADVERTISING POLICY


About Grist | Support Grist | Job Board | Archives | Grist by Email | RSS | Podcast
Gristmill Blog | In the News | Ask Umbra | Muckraker | Victual Reality | 'Tis the Season | The Grist List | The Bottom Line



Grist: Environmental News and Commentary
a beacon in the smog (tm) ©2008. Grist Magazine, Inc. All rights reserved. Gloom and doom with a sense of humor®.
Webmaster | Sitemap | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Trademarks