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Dominion Theology: The Truth About the Christian Right's Bid for
Power
by Sara Diamond


The Christian Right's recent role in delivering Congress to the
Republicans raises the question of just how much power the movement
hopes to amass. Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition says
repeatedly that his organization wants nothing more than a
representative voice in government, "a place at the table," as he
puts its. Other movement leaders are more sweeping in their calls
to make ours a Christian nation, a Kingdom of God on earth.

As we assess the Christian Right's future prospects, the movement's
political theology is one big piece of the puzzle. Included in the
movement are people with diverse viewpoints on the degree and means
through which Christians ought to "take dominion" over every aspect
of society. The motto of the secular Heritage Foundation, taken
from the title of an influential conservative book of the 1940s, is
"ideas have consequences." Yet in the past few years, with the
growth in public awareness of the Christian Right, the movement's
variant forms of dominion theology have attracted only scant
attention.

Most of the attention has come from a new crop of researchers
working on the Christian Right. Most of these people are political
liberals who seek to shore up the prevailing "two-party" system by
portraying their opponents--in this case, those of the Right--as
aberrations on the U.S. political landscape. Liberals' writing
about the Christian Right's take-over plans has generally taken the
form of conspiracy theory. Instead of analyzing the subtle ways in
which political ideas take hold within movements and why, the
liberal conspiracy theorists use a guilt-by-association technique
that goes like this: We know that a particular Christian Right
author or activist has advocated bad ideas, like killing queers or
forming armed militias. Then we look to see who else appears in
proximity to the offender on organizational letterhead stationary
or on the speakers list at movement conferences. This approach may
indicate the degree of tolerance of extremist views within a given
network of the broader Christian Right movement. But the approach
implies that ideas are somehow contagious: If someone serves on a
board of advisors with someone else, they must think similarly and
therefore be likely to behave similarly. This is the approach the
Right has used to red-bait the civil rights movement, the New Left
and, recently, the environmental movement.

Conspiracy theorizing about the Christian Right's supposedly
"secret" agenda involves highlighting the hate-mongering and
bizarre ideas of a handful of Christian Right players while
neglecting the broad popularity of dominion theology. There are a
variety of ideological tendencies within the Christian Right. At
the truly extreme end of the spectrum is a set of ideas proponents
call reconstructionism, associated with only a small number of
think tanks and book publishers. Many Christian Right activists
have never even heard of reconstructionism, whose advocates call
for the imposition of an Old Testament style theocracy, complete
with capital punishment for offenses including adultery,
homosexuality, and blasphemy.



Sects and Schisms
More prevalent on the Christian Right is the Dominionist idea,
shared by Reconstructionists, that Christians alone are Biblically
mandated to occupy all secular institutions until Christ
returns--and there is no consensus on when that might be.
Dominionist thinking precludes coalitions between believers and
unbelievers, which is why many Christian rightists will have a hard
time compromising with some of the very same Republicans they
recently helped elect. The idea of taking dominion over secular
society gained widespread currency with the 1981 publication of
evangelical philosopher Francis Schaeffer's book A Christian
Manifesto. The book sold 290,000 copies in its first year, and it
remains one of the movement's most frequently cited texts.
Schaeffer, who died of cancer in 1984, was a product of the
internecine conflicts that split the Presbyterian church during the
1930s and 1940s. Schaeffer was allied with the strident
anti-Communist leader Rev. Carl McIntire who headed the
fundamentalist American Council of Christian Churches. Later
Schaeffer joined an anti-McIntire faction that, after several name
changes, merged into the Presbyterian Church in America. (A related
denomination, the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, is the milieu out
of which convicted killer Paul Hill developed his justifications
for killing abortionists.) In the 1960s and 1970s, Schaeffer and
his wife Edith ran a retreat center in Switzerland, where young
American "Jesus freaks" came to study the Bible and learn how to
apply Schaeffer's dominion theology to the political scene back
home.

In A Christian Manifesto, Schaeffer's argument is simple. The
United States began as a nation rooted in Biblical principles. But
as society became more pluralistic, with each new wave of
immigrants, proponents of a new philosophy of secular humanism
gradually came to dominate debate on policy issues. Since humanists
place human progress, not God, at the center of their
considerations, they pushed American culture in all manner of
ungodly directions, the most visible results of which included
legalized abortion and the secularization of the public schools. At
the end of A Christian Manifesto, Schaeffer calls for Christians to
use civil disobedience to restore Biblical morality, which explains
Schaeffer's popularity with groups like Operation Rescue. Randall
Terry has credited Schaeffer as a major influence in his life.

In the 1980s, some of the younger men Schaeffer influenced joined a
group called the Coalition on Revival (COR), founded by Jay
Grimstead. Grimstead, a veteran of the old Young Life missionary
group, had decided that evangelicals were insufficiently literalist
in their reading of the Bible. Grimstead founded COR with two
purposes. One was to unify pastors who differed on questions of
"eschatology," which is the study of the end-times and the question
of when Christ will return. Most evangelicals have held the
pre-millennial belief that Christ will return before a 1,000 year
reign by believers. Grimstead and others in COR are
post-millennialists who believe their job is establish the kingdom
of God on earth now; Christ will return only after Christians have
been in charge for 1,000 years. COR's second purpose, consistent
with post-millennialism, was the development of position papers,
called "world view documents," on how to apply dominion theology to
Christian Right activism in more than a dozen spheres of social
life, including education, economics, law, and even entertainment.

Much of the liberal writing on dominion theology and
Reconstructionism has focused on COR as headquarters for a
conspiracy to take over society. Grimstead and his colleagues
advocated running stealth candidates in selected counties as early
as 1986. But in recent years, COR has served as little more than a
clearinghouse for Grimstead's position papers. As an organization,
COR is largely inactive. Like the Moral Majority of the early
1980s, COR was a network of pastors, all busy with their own
projects.

If COR had any effect, though, it was in reinforcing ideas about
taking dominion. The 100 or so movement leaders in COR each signed
a "covenant" statement affirming their commitment to the idea that
Christians should take dominion over all fields of secular society.
Only a few of COR's steering committee members were hard core
Reconstructionists. Most of the Reconstructionists are too
hair-splittingly sectarian to want to associate with COR's diverse
crew of pentecostal charismatics and fundamental Baptists.

The Reconstructionists are theologically committed to Calvinism.
They shy away from the Baptists' loud preaching and the
Pentecostals' wild practices of speaking in tongues, healing and
delivering prophecies. To secular readers, the minutiae of who
believes what--or which group of characters likes to dance on one
foot--might seem trivial. But some of the details and divisions of
Christian Right theology are politically relevant.



As Above, So Below
Reconstructionism is the most intellectually grounded, though
esoteric, brand of dominion theology. Its leading proponent has
been Rousas John (R.J.) Rushdoony, an obscure figure within the
Christian Right. Born in 1916, the son of Armenian immigrants to
the U.S., Rushdoony looks like an Old Testament patriarch with his
white hair and beard. At a young age Rushdoony was strongly
influenced by Westminster Theological Seminary professor Cornelius
Van Til, a Dutch theologian who emphasized the inerrant authority
of the Bible and the irreconcilability between believers and
unbelievers. A recent issue of Rushdoony's monthly Chalcedon Report
noted his Armenian background. Since the year 320, every generation
of the Rushdoony family has produced a Christian priest or
minister. "There was Armenian royalty in the Rushdoony blood, and a
heritage of defending the faith, often by sword and gun, against
Godless foes bent on destroying a people of faith and works."

With that auspicious heritage, Rushdoony founded the Chalcedon
Foundation in California in the mid-1960s. One of the Foundation's
early associates was Gary North who eventually married Rushdoony's
daughter. North had been active within secular libertarian and
anti-Communist organizations, particularly those with an
anti-statist bent.

Rushdoony and North had a falling out and ceased collaboration
years ago. North started his own think tank, the Institute for
Christian Economics in Tyler, Texas. Rushdoony, North, and about a
half dozen other reconstructionist writers have published countless
books and journals advocating post-millennialism and "theonomy" or
the application of God's law to all spheres of everyday life. In
his rhetorical crusades against secular humanists and against most
other Christians, North is fond of saying "You can't beat something
with nothing."

North has geared his writing for popular audiences; some of his
books are available in Christian book stores. Rushdoony's writing
is more turgid and also more controversial. It was Rushdoony's
seminal 1973 tome The Institutes of Biblical Law that articulated
Reconstructionists' vision of a theocracy in which Old Testament
law would be reinstated in modern society. Old Testament law
classified a wide range of sins as punishable by death; these
included not only murder and rape but also adultery, incest,
homosexuality, witchcraft, incorrigible delinquency by youth, and
even blasphemy. In the Reconstructionists' vision of a millennial
or "kingdom" society, there would be only local governments; there
would be no central administrative state to collect property taxes,
nor to provide education or other welfare services.

Aside from Rushdoony and North, Reconstructionism boasts only a few
other prolific writers. These include Dr. Greg Bahnsen, Rev. Joseph
Morecraft, David Chilton, Gary DeMar, and Kenneth Gentry, none of
whom are major figures within the Christian Right. They are quoted
more often in liberal reports than in the Christian Right's own
literature.

The unabashed advocacy of a Christian theocracy has insured a
limited following for the most explicit of the Reconstructionists,
who have also been sectarian in their sharp criticism of
evangelicals. North, for example, has published a series of attacks
on believers in the pre-millennial version of when Christ will come
back.

Perhaps even more than the punitive legal code they propose, it is
the Reconstructionists' religion of Calvinism that makes them
unlikely to appeal to most evangelicals. Calvinism is the by now
almost archaic belief that God has already preordained every single
thing that happens in the world. Most importantly, even one's own
salvation or condemnation to hell is already a done deal as far as
God is concerned. By this philosophical scheme, human will is not
involved in changing the course of history. All that is left for
the "righteous" to do is to play out their pre- ordained role,
including their God-given right to dominate everyone else.

Calvinism arose in Europe centuries ago in part as a reaction to
Roman Catholicism's heavy emphasis on priestly authority and on
salvation through acts of penance. One of the classic works of
sociology, Max Weber's Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of
Capitalism, links the rise of Calvinism to the needs of budding
capitalists to judge their own economic success as a sign of their
preordained salvation. The rising popularity of Calvinism coincided
with the consolidation of the capitalist economic system.
Calvinists justified their accumulation of wealth, even at the
expense of others, on the grounds that they were somehow destined
to prosper. It is no surprise that such notions still find
resonance within the Christian Right which champions capitalism and
all its attendant inequalities.

The hitch comes in the Calvinists' unyielding predestinarianism,
the cornerstone of Reconstructionism and something at odds with the
world view of evangelical Christians. Last fall in Sacramento some
of the local Reconstructionists held their annual Reformation Bible
Conference, co-sponsored by the Covenant Reformed Church and the
Chalcedon Foundation. The theme of the weekend was Christian
"apologetics," meaning defense of the faith against heretical
enemies of all stripes.

The problem is that evangelicals (a category including pentecostal
charismatics and fundamental Baptists) believe that God's will
works in conjunction with free human will. They believe that
salvation is not by the grace of God only but by the faith of
individual believers who freely choose to surrender to Jesus. In
fact, the cornerstone of the Western religions is the view that
God's will and human will work together. Evangelicals believe
strongly that humans freely choose sin or salvation and that those
already converted have the duty to go out and offer the choice they
have made to others. Calvinism, in contrast, undercuts the whole
motivation for missionary work, and it is the missionary zeal to
redeem sinners that motivates much of the Christian Right's
political activism. Calvinism is an essentially reckless doctrine.
If God has already decided what's going to happen, then the
Dominionists do not have to take responsibility for their actions.
(They can kill abortion doctors "knowing" it is the right thing to
do.) Evangelicals, even those on the Right, still believe they as
individuals are capable of error. Furthermore, the Calvinist
Reconstructionists look askance at the other key draw of
evangelical churches, the experiential dimension. The Calvinists
sing staid songs, read the Bible and weighty theological treatises.
What's going on, especially in the charismatic churche, is
something else. There, Christians by the thousands are flocking to
wild faith healing extravaganzas where people shout and cry and
fall on the floor because they are "slain in the spirit." The
latest trend is called "holy laughter" whereby the Holy Spirit
supposedly leads crowds to roll on the floor laughing
uncontrollably, sometimes for hours. This kind of stuff is
happening in churches all over the country--often televised for the
Christian TV networks--with the backing of prominent evangelical
leaders. Some critics have condemned the eccentric antics but they
miss the point that people go to church not to read books but to
experience something extraordinary. Many get a similar high from
joining a political crusade. Large numbers of politically active
evangelicals are not going to want to sit still for boring
philosophical lectures on how their personal experiences don't
matter in the face of pre-ordained reality.



The Founding Fathers Said So
They do sit still, by the thousands, for David Barton of
WallBuilders, Inc. From a place called Aledo, Texas, Barton has
successfully mass marketed a version of dominion theology that has
made his lectures, books, and tapes among the hottest properties in
the born-again business. With titles like The Myth of Separation
and America: to Pray or Not to Pray, Barton's pitch is that, with
the possible exception of Benjamin Franklin, the Founding Fathers
were all evangelicals who intended to make this a Christian nation.


Crowds of home schoolers and the Christian Coalition go wild with
applause for Barton's performances. With an overhead projector, he
flashes slides of the Founding Fathers and reels off selected
quotes from them saying things like "only the righteous shall
rule." For the years following the Supreme Court's 1962 and 1963
decisions against public school prayer, his charts and graphs show
statistical declines in SAT scores and rising rates of teenage
promiscuity, drug abuse, and other bad behavior. Apparently no one
has ever explained to Barton that a sequence of unrelated events
does not add up to a cause and effect relationship.

Barton's bottom line is that only "the righteous" should occupy
public office. This is music to the ears of Christian Right
audiences. To grasp Barton's brand of dominion theology, unlike
reconstructionism, one does not need a seminary degree. Barton's
pseudo history fills a need most Americans have, to know more about
our country's past. His direct linkage of the deified Founding
Fathers with contemporary social problems cuts through the
evangelicals' theological sectarianism and unites them in a
feasible project. They may not be able to take dominion over the
whole earth or even agree about when Jesus will return, but they
sure can go home and back a godly candidate for city council, or
run themselves. Barton tells his audiences that they personally
have an important role to play in history, and that is what makes
his dominion theology popular.



To Rule and Reign
But Barton's message flies in the face of the Christian Coalition's
public claims about wanting only its fair share of political power.
In his new book Politically Incorrect, Coalition director Ralph
Reed writes: "What do religious conservatives really want? They
want a place at the table in the conversation we call democracy.
Their commitment to pluralism includes a place for faith among the
many other competing interests in society." Yet the Coalition's own
national convention last September opened with a plenary speech by
Rev. D. James Kennedy who echoed the Reconstructionist line when he
said that "true Christian citizenship" includes a cultural mandate
to "take dominion over all things as vice-regents of God."

Who is telling the truth about the Christian Right's bid for power,
Ralph Reed, or the popular Dominionists who speak at Christian
Coalition gatherings? Liberal critics of the Christian Right would
have us believe that Reed and Pat Robertson are just plain lying
when they say they want to work hand-in-hand, like good pluralists,
with non-Christians in government. To bolster the "stealth" thesis,
liberals have to resort to conspiracy theory: Barton and Kennedy
spoke at the conference, so Reed must secretly agree with them.

A better explanation is that the Christian Right, like other mass
movements, is a bundle of internal contradictions which work
themselves out in the course of real political activism. Ideas have
consequences, but ideas also have causes, rooted in interests and
desires. The Christian Right is in a state of tension and flux over
its own mission. Part movement to resist and roll back even
moderate change, part reactionary wing of prevailing Republicanism.
The Christian Right wants to take dominion and collaborate with the
existing political-economic system, at the same time. Liberal
critics, who also endorse the ruling system, can recognize only the
Christian Right's takeover dimension. Radicals can see that the
dominion project is dangerous because it is, in part, business as
usual.



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