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In case you missed this Washington Post article over the holidays, BuzzFlash is 
forwarding it to you.  In essence, as Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson sputter, they 
are being replaced by the new head of the Christian Coalition: George W. Bush.  Good 
Lord!

Religious Right Finds Its Center in Oval Office
Bush Emerges as Movement's Leader After Robertson Leaves Christian Coalition

By Dana Milbank
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 24, 2001; Page A02

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A19253-2001Dec23?language=printer

Pat Robertson's resignation this month as president of the Christian Coalition 
confirmed the ascendance of a new leader of the religious right in America: George W. 
Bush.

For the first time since religious conservatives became a modern political movement, 
the president of the United States has become the movement's de facto leader -- a 
status even Ronald Reagan, though admired by religious conservatives, never earned. 
Christian publications, radio and television shower Bush with praise, while preachers 
from the pulpit treat his leadership as an act of providence. A procession of 
religious leaders who have met with him testify to his faith, while Web sites 
encourage people to fast and pray for the president.

There are several reasons for the adulation. Religious conservatives have regarded 
Bush as one of their own since the presidential campaign, when he spoke during a 
debate of the guidance of Jesus. At the same time, key figures in the religious right 
-- Robertson, Jerry Falwell, James Dobson, Billy Graham and Franklin Graham -- have 
receded in political prominence or influence, in part because they are no longer 
mobilized by their opposition to a president. Bush's handling of the anti-terrorism 
campaign since Sept. 11 has solidified his standing by painting him in stark terms as 
the leader in a fight of good against evil.

"I think Robertson stepped down because the position has already been filled," said 
Gary Bauer, a religious conservative who challenged Bush in the Republican primary. 
Bush "is that leader right now. There was already a great deal of identification with 
the president before 9-11 in the world of the Christian right, and the nature of this 
war is such that it's heightened the sense that a man of God is in the White House."

Ralph Reed, who once led the Christian Coalition and now is chairman of the Georgia 
GOP, notes that the religious conservative movement "no longer plays the institutional 
role it once did," in part because it succeeded in electing Bush and other friendly 
leaders. "You're no longer throwing rocks at the building; you're in the building."

Conservative Christians tend to view Bush's recent success as part of a divine plan. 
"I've heard a lot of 'God knew something we didn't,' " Reed said. "In the evangelical 
mind, the notion of an omniscient God is central to their theology. He had a knowledge 
nobody else had: He knew George Bush had the ability to lead in this compelling way."

Bush himself dismisses the notion that he is part of some divine plan. "He does not 
believe he was chosen for this moment," a senior aide said. "He just views himself as 
governing on his beliefs and his promises. He doesn't look at himself as a leader of 
any particular movement."

Still, some of those around Bush say they have a sense that a higher purpose is 
involved. "I think President Bush is God's man at this hour, and I say this with a 
great sense of humility," Bush aide Tim Goeglein, described as a "strong evangelical," 
told World magazine, a Christian publication.

Partially a victim of their own success, groups such as the Christian Coalition are 
finding fundraising difficult. Some leaders, such as Focus on the Family's Dobson, 
have retreated from political involvement.

Some religious conservative leaders have inflicted wounds on themselves. Falwell was 
roundly criticized, even by supporters, for saying on television, with Robertson's 
agreement, that "abortionists and the feminists, and the gays and lesbians" and civil 
libertarians were to blame in part for the Sept. 11 attacks. Franklin Graham produced 
a furor by declaring Islam a "very evil and wicked religion."

Voting patterns also show a declining religious right. Karl Rove, Bush's top political 
strategist, said that only 15 million of the 19 million religious conservatives who 
should have voted went to the polls in 2000. "We may be seeing to some degree some 
return to the sidelines of previously involved religious conservatives," he said.

And Bush, his advisers acknowledge, deliberately circumvented the power of the leaders 
of the religious right, appealing to conservatives himself rather than paying homage 
to the Christian Coalition during the campaign. "In the old days, Republican 
presidential candidates went to religious conservative leaders to seek their 
imprimatur," said a Bush adviser. "George W. Bush was able to go directly to those who 
sat in the pews."

Bush's effort succeeded. "He is the leader of the Christian right," said Marshall 
Wittmann, a former Christian Coalition figure now with the Hudson Institute, a think 
tank. "As their institutions peel away, he can go over the heads" of religious 
conservative leaders.

Bush, aided by speechwriter Michael Gerson, himself a religious conservative, speaks 
the language of religion better than any president since Jimmy Carter, religious 
leaders say, and Bush's policies appeal more to conservatives. To many outside the 
religious conservative movement, Bush's faith-infused words may sound sanctimonious; 
to those within it, the words sound familiar and comforting. Across the country, 
churchgoers share Bush's "testimony," his discovery of God 15 years ago with the help 
of Billy Graham. "Reverend Graham planted a mustard seed in my soul, a seed that grew 
over the next year," Bush's memoir recounts. "He led me to the path, and I began 
walking. It was the beginning of a change in my life."

As Bush had embraced religious conservatism, religious conservatives have openly 
embraced him. The Internet has several sites offering prayers for the president's 
success. One example: "Call on the name of the Lord to hedge him in from terrorists 
and violent people. Psalm 91:11-12; 1 Corinthians 1:10-11."

World magazine, which is edited by one-time Bush adviser Marvin Olasky, named Bush's 
attorney general, John D. Ashcroft, its "Daniel of the Year." Ashcroft himself 
considered running for president in 2000 as the candidate of the religious right. 
"Just as the biblical Daniel faced an established idol-worshiping religion in Babylon, 
so our Dans must not back down in the face of deadly persecution abroad or the scorn 
and harassment that comes domestically from the academic and media high priests of our 
established religion, secular liberalism," Olasky wrote.

The top Daniel, of course, is Bush himself, a view liberally offered by the many 
religious figures who pass through the White House. In an account of one such meeting, 
Jean Bethke Elshtain, a professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School, wrote 
of a "powerful and moving moment" with Bush and an ecumenical group of religious 
leaders. "One of our group asked, 'Mr. President, what can we do for you?' He 
indicated that we could 'pray for me, for our country, for my family.' He believes in 
the efficacy of prayer and needs wisdom and guidance and grace, he said. A Greek 
Orthodox archbishop was invited to lead us in prayer. We all joined hands in a prayer 
circle, including the president."


� 2001 The Washington Post Company

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