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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary – 
http://www.crosswalk.com/news/weblogs/mohler/


Wednesday, August 25, 2004

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A Culture War Against Christianity

Is America ready for a culture war against Christianity?  The Great
Divide:  Retro vs. Metro America by John Sperling and his co-authors is
an all-out assault upon American conservatives and residents of the
states that voted for George W. Bush in the 2000 election.  Most
pointedly, however, this book and its associated $2-million advertising
campaign are the project of a man who is fanatically determined to reset
America's political equation--and to counter the influence of
evangelical Christians.

Throughout The Great Divide, the authors attack, critique, and seek to
denigrate the beliefs and values of conservative Christians.  Using the
oldest and most unfounded canards ever thrown at evangelicals, John
Sperling and his friends present Christian believers as unintelligent,
uninformed, hate-filled, backward, and dangerous.  

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As the authors divided the fifty states into "Metro" and "Retro"
designations, the link between conservative Christianity and what the
authors describe as Retro values was immediately clear.  "The religious
divide is perhaps the most profound of all the major determinants of
political affiliation," they observed.  "On one side are the observant
Christians, a majority of whom are members of conservative evangelical
and often fundamentalist churches, together with conservative Catholics
and Mormons.  Here, the Southern Baptists have the largest footprint. 
They are joined in their conservative beliefs by evangelicals of other
denominations:  Congregationalist, Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian,
and Assemblies of God.  This group is overwhelmingly Republican.  On the
other side of American religious life are those who are members of
moderate or progressive Catholic and Protestant churches in all the
denominations.  They are joined by Jews, Buddhists, members of other
non-Judeo-Christian faiths, by the less observant of all persuasions,
and finally by the seculars.  Members of this group tend to be
Democrats, but many are moderate Republicans." 

The Great Divide's authors want to sound an alarm that will awaken the
secular left and the Democratic Party to the peril represented by
conservative Christians.  At the same time, the authors recognize the
fact that conservative Christian churches and denominations are growing,
while liberal denominations are quickly fading.  As Sperling and his
coauthors explain, "the more rigorous a church's teaching is and the
more demanding the church is of its adherents, the faster it will grow."
 Furthermore, "This is especially the case when a church demands of its
adherents that they proselytize.  This is evidenced by the worldwide
presence of Southern Baptist and Mormon missionaries.  Conversely, the
more progressive a church's doctrine and the less it demands of its
adherents, the faster it will decline."  That conservative churches are
growing and liberal ones declining is hardly news, but in The Great
Divide, this analysis serves as a dire warning of potential growth in
evangelical influence.

As Sperling sees it, that would be an unmitigated disaster.  After all,
evangelicals--together with all their "Retro" friends--are backward,
uneducated, rural, and unsophisticated.  Theirs "is the land of the
nuclear family and not the land of cohabiting, unmarried, hetero, or
same-sex couples, or of the young seeking cultural excitement in the
large Metro cities."  Retro Americans are "God, Family, and Flag folks,"
who are "retarding" the nation's development.  According to the authors'
fanciful analysis, conservative Christians are unified in rejecting
everything from evolution and the scientific method to public health
services, public parks, and concert halls.  Fundamentalist and
evangelical Christians are to be opposed and seen as dangerous because
they see "the Bible as inerrant and as a guide to both private and
public life."  Taking the argument further, the authors explain: 
"Consequently, they reject the rational, scientific approach to the
development of public policy that has characterized American politics
since the nation's founding.  In place of these Enlightenment values,
they have chosen irrationality and biblical prophecy." 

Do these people actually know any conservative Christians?  Will an
assault like this from the secularist left be condemned by liberals who
claim values of "tolerance" and acceptance?

The condescension demonstrated so graphically in this project is seen
especially in the cultural and scientific put-downs the authors pitch at
conservatives.  According to The Great Divide, Metro America is filled
with sophisticated secular people who have enough common sense to
believe in the scientific method and to settle all questions of public
policy according to simple "rationality."  Meanwhile, we conservatives
might as well be sitting on a stump in rural America, picking our teeth
while trying to figure out which scientific theory we should oppose now.
 Who, ask the authors, could ever doubt this?  Metro America "almost
always excels" in matters of education and science.

This worldview clash, according to Sperling's analysis, explains how
Americans can be so divided over questions such as embryonic stem cell
research, abortion, and same-sex marriage.  Just listen to Sperling and
his colleagues explain the difference between Metro and Retro Americans
on these issues.  Metro Americans are "religious moderates and seculars,
Democrats, and moderate Republicans who are committed to excellence in
education and science; who want the arts to flourish; who are accepting
of differences in ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation; and who
want a clear division between church and state."  How does this play out
in terms of public policy?  "These moderates are in favor of women's,
gay, and workers' rights.  Their congressional representatives support
affirmative action, public education, childcare, and other services
needed by working parents, as well as progressive taxation.  They oppose
tax cuts for the wealthy that undercut progressive taxation, and they
oppose subsidies and tax shelters favoring industry, especially the
extraction and financial industries, whose contributions to [President
George W.] Bush and the Republican Party provide the financial
foundations of Republican power."  Retro Americans, on the other hand,
are blamed for the nation's "high levels of social and economic class
disparities" and virtually every other social ill.  As if such a
statement were necessary, the authors conclude:  "In our opinion, Retro
values, economic organization, and distribution of political power do
not represent what is best for America." 

Even so, Sperling is afraid those Retro values are exactly what America
is getting.  President Bush is blamed for being "one of the most
divisive presidents in our history."  Likewise, "the Radical Right path
of God, Flag, and Family now being blazed by President Bush and the
Republican Party is leading all of America back to Retro rather than
forward to Metro America."

The authors leave no doubt as to where this path will lead.  "Pursuit of
policies based on a fundamentalist God, that use the flag to divide
patriots from traitors, and to present the 'traditional family' under
the guidance of the husband with a stay-at-home mom as the American
ideal can never unite America.  If America is ever to be a true United
States, it will be united with the Metro values of inclusion, respect
for science and rational discourse, and policies designed to provide
physical, economic and social security for all families, both the 20
percent of the 'old traditional families' and the 80 percent of 'new
traditional families.'  These are the values that will undergird a
united America that can provide for all its citizens."

This analysis combines imbecility with audacity in a breathtaking mix of
hatred and class warfare.

The man behind all this is a case study in the intersection of big money
and crackpot politics.  John Sperling, age eighty-three, made billions
in the business world, founding the nation's largest for-profit
educational enterprise, the University of Phoenix.  As he told USA
Today, his real intention is to convince Democrats that they must
abandon any plan to create a coalition that would include cultural
conservatives and mainstream Americans.  Instead, he wants the party to
shift left--far left.  "It seems pretty clear to me that the Democrats
had better stop trying to be all things to all voters and concentrate on
a base for themselves," he concluded.

Sperling has found himself in controversy before.  His University of
Phoenix--no longer under his control--has been controversial from the
start, opposed by various accreditors and the academic mainstream.  He
is also known for funding research into cloning.  Several years ago, he
hired a team of scientists in an unsuccessful attempt to clone his dog,
"Missy."  Even though the so-called "Missyplicity Project" failed, the
researchers were finally successful in cloning a cat.  The resulting
firm, Genetic Savings and Clone of Sausalito, California, now offers to
clone other cats at a charge of fifty thousand dollars per animal.  

Speaking of his current project, Sperling told The New York Times that
his work should be seen as a "position paper" for a "reformation" of the
Democratic Party.  "What we set out to do was produce the first
coffee-table political book that would hope to be widely read by people
who never read political books," he said.

I think Americans can be assured that this book will land on very few
coffee tables and will be read by even fewer people.  John Sperling and
his associates demonstrate throughout this book that they have no idea
where most Americans stand on the issues of the day.  They attempt to
paint all those who defend the sanctity of human life and oppose
same-sex marriage as backward fundamentalists representing some kind of
extremist fringe.  That kind of idea has been thrown around since the
start of this debate, but the landslide vote for a constitutional
amendment defending traditional marriage in Missouri is absolute proof
that the vast majority of Americans will not support same-sex marriage
and will not buy into anything close to John Sperling's liberal utopia. 


Furthermore, The Great Divide is itself marked by a bizarre extremism. 
What in the world are Americans--conservative, liberal, or otherwise--to
make of a sentence like this?  "Biblical inerrancy means the refusal to
accept the fact that humans are animals and, like other animals, will
overcome all barriers to mate and bear offspring, and also that, like
other mammals, a certain percentage of their number will be homosexual"?
 The true nature of the agenda promoted by these authors is clear in
their celebration of what they describe as "our present urban, suburban,
eclectic, multiethnic, multireligious, and multi-gendered society." 
What on earth is a "multi-gendered" society?  The book also presents a
truly radical vision of the separation of church and state--a division
which would strip conservative Christians of any voice at all in
national policy and public debate.  Misreading history, contorting the
law, and offering confused and erroneous analysis, these authors have
put together a perfect babble of confusion even as they address some of
the most significant issues of the day.

John Sperling's Retro vs. Metro analysis is secularism on speed.  His
open antipathy towards grassroots Americans is simultaneously sad and
revealing.  This book represents a true regression from rational
discourse, even as its authors worship what they describe as
rationalism.  The Great Divide, along with John Sperling's Retro/Metro
advertising campaign, may be remembered in the future as nothing more
than an odd and inconsequential blip in the 2004 political season.  On
the other hand, it might represent something far larger and more
ominous.  Time will tell.

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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