Faith-Based Fraud

Jerry Falwell's foul rantings prove you can get away with anything if 
you have "Reverend" in front of your name.

By Christopher Hitchens

(and for Judy:) slate.com

Posted Wednesday, May 16, 2007, at 12:46 PM ET 

The Rev. Jerry Falwell

The discovery of the carcass of Jerry Falwell on the floor of an 
obscure office in Virginia has almost zero significance, except 
perhaps for two categories of the species labeled "credulous idiot." 
The first such category consists of those who expected Falwell (and 
themselves) to be bodily raptured out of the biosphere and assumed 
into the heavens, leaving pilotless planes and driverless trucks and 
taxis to crash with their innocent victims as collateral damage. This 
group is so stupid and uncultured that it may perhaps be forgiven. It 
is so far "left behind" that almost its only pleasure is to gloat at 
the idea of others being abandoned in the same condition.

The second such category is of slightly more importance, because it 
consists of the editors, producers, publicists, and a host of other 
media riffraff who allowed Falwell to prove, almost every week, that 
there is no vileness that cannot be freely uttered by a man whose 
name is prefaced with the word Reverend. Try this: Call a TV station 
and tell them that you know the Antichrist is already on earth and is 
an adult Jewish male. See how far you get. Then try the same thing 
and add that you are the Rev. Jim-Bob Vermin. "Why, Reverend, come 
right on the show!" What a fool Don Imus was. If he had paid the 
paltry few bucks to make himself a certified clergyman, he could be 
jeering and sneering to the present hour.

Falwell went much further than his mad 1999 assertion about the 
Jewish Antichrist. In the time immediately following the assault by 
religious fascism on American civil society in September 2001, he 
used his regular indulgence on the airwaves to commit treason. 
Entirely exculpating the suicide-murderers, he asserted that their 
acts were a divine punishment of the United States. Again, I ask you 
to imagine how such a person would be treated if he were not 
supposedly a man of faith. 


One of his associates, Bailey Smith, once opined that "God does not 
hear the prayers of a Jew." This is one of the few anti-Semitic 
remarks ever made that has a basis in fact, since God does not exist 
and does not attend to any prayers, but Smith was not quite making 
that point. Along with his friend Pat Robertson, who believes in 
secret Jewish control of the world of finance, and Billy Graham, who 
boasted to Richard Nixon that the Jews had never guessed what he 
truly thought of them, Falwell kept alive the dirty innuendo about 
Jews that so many believing Christians seem to need. This would be 
bad enough in itself, and an additional reason to deplore the free 
ride he was given on television, if his trade-off had not been even 
worse.

Seeking to deflect the charge of anti-Jewish prejudice, Falwell 
adopted the cause of the most thuggish and demented Israeli settlers, 
proclaiming that their occupation of the West Bank and Gaza was a 
holy matter and hoping that they might help to bring on Armageddon 
and the return of the Messiah. A detail in this ghastly narrative, as 
adepts of the "Left Behind" series will know, is that the return of 
the risen Christ will require the mass slaughter or mass conversion 
of all Jews. This consideration did not prevent Menachem Begin from 
awarding Falwell the Jabotinsky Centennial Medal in 1980 and has not 
inhibited other Israeli extremists from embracing him and his co-
thinkers ever since. All bigots and frauds are brothers under the 
skin. Trying to interrupt the fiesta of piety on national television 
on the night of Falwell's death, I found myself waiting while Ralph 
Reed went all moist about the role of the departed in 
empowering "people of faith." Here was the hypocritical casino-based 
Christian who sought and received the kosher stamp from Jack 
Abramoff. Perfect. 

Like many fanatical preachers, Falwell was especially disgusting in 
exuding an almost sexless personality while railing from dawn to dusk 
about the sex lives of others. His obsession with homosexuality was 
on a par with his lip-smacking evocations of hellfire. From his 
wobbly base of opportunist fund raising and degree-mill money-
spinning in Lynchburg, Va., he set out to puddle his sausage-sized 
fingers into the intimate arrangements of people who had done no 
harm. Men of this type, if they cannot persuade enough foolish people 
to part with their savings, usually end up raving on the street and 
waving placards about the coming day of judgment. But Falwell, 
improving on the other Chaucerian frauds from Oral Roberts to Jim 
Bakker to Ted Haggard, not only had a TV show of his own but was also 
regularly invited onto mainstream ones. 

The evil that he did will live after him. This is not just because of 
the wickedness that he actually preached, but because of the hole 
that he made in the "wall of separation" that ought to divide 
religion from politics. In his dingy racist past, Falwell attacked 
those churchmen who mixed the two worlds of faith and politics and 
called for civil rights. Then he realized that two could play at this 
game and learned to play it himself. Then he won the Republican Party 
over to the idea of religious voters and faith-based fund raising. 
And now, by example at least, he has inspired emulation in many 
Democrats and liberals who would like to borrow the formula. His 
place on the cable shows will be amply filled by Al Sharpton: another 
person who can get away with anything under the rubric of Reverend. 
It's a shame that there is no hell for Falwell to go to, and it's 
extraordinary that not even such a scandalous career is enough to 
shake our dumb addiction to the "faith-based."


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