http://www.counterpunch.com/jacobs08252005.html
August 24, 2005

Who Would Jesus Assassinate?

Hugo Chavez and the Men Who Claim to Speak for Jesus

By RON JACOBS

You know, when I was growing up as a Catholic, I was given many 
differing views of Jesus Christ. Virtually all of them were 
speculative, of course, and as I grew older, I became aware that most 
of them were based on the teacher's particular political and cultural 
persuasion. The Pallotinian nuns that taught me in the first and 
second grades were always telling us horror stories about the 
communists in the Soviet Union and China and had us pray for the 
souls of their children every morning. The Jesuits I knew in high 
school provided me and my fellow catechism students with a different 
view of Jesus. Indeed, for most of these men Jesus was a 
revolutionary. How much of his revolution was spiritual and how much 
was social depended on their level of social and political 
involvement. Being a very political person, I saw Jesus as a 
revolutionary communist with a small "c." Of course, there were a 
number of men with Roman collars at the time who were taking this 
perception and turning it into the basis for a social movement in 
many parts of the world, especially in Latin America. Many of them 
were Jesuits.

It is this tradition that Hugo Chavez of Venezuela recalls in his 
speeches and social programs. It is also this tradition, known today 
as liberation theology that the late pope John Paul II attacked 
within months of his appointment in 1978. John Paul II's opposition 
to this perception of Jesus and his works were also part of the 
reason for the demotion of the Jesuit order as the pope's protectors 
and the ascension of the right wing Catholic organization Opus Dei 
into that role. The new pope is even less sympathetic to this train 
of thought. The underlying reason for this vehement opposition to 
liberation theology among the Catholic hierarchy stems from its 
alliances with nonreligious leftists and its attacks on the Church's 
role as part of the oppressive structure in the world of the 
peasantry. Nowhere is this role greater than it is in Latin America.

Ever since Chavez began his popular upheaval in Venezuela he has been 
under attack by the Catholic hierarchy in that country. In fact, 
members of Opus Dei were involved in the failed coup of 2000 and have 
been instrumental in the CIA-funded opposition movement since the 
coup, just as they were intimately involved in the murderous 
CIA-sponsored coup in September 1973 in Chile. Last month, Bishop 
Baltazar Porras, president of the Venezuelan bishops' conference, 
said proponents of radical liberation theology are using it to weaken 
and divide the Church. "This is part of a plan to debilitate the 
Church," Porras told The Associated Press in an interview last week. 
He cited a recent forum in which the Church was accused of turning 
her back on the poor, where Chavez garners most of his political 
support. "This is a new program led by a group of theologians like 
the ones in the times of the Sandinista rule in Nicaragua with the 
same arguments," said Porras. "The argument is fundamentally 
anti-Catholic, anti-hierarchy." (Catholic World New, 8/15/2005) It is 
quite interesting to note Porras equating being anti-hierarchy with 
being anti-Catholic. I wonder how the Jesus who threw the 
moneychangers out of the temple and challenged the Scribes and the 
Pharisees would feel about that equation.

Now, in addition to having the Catholic hierarchy opposed to him, Mr. 
Chavez has incurred the wrath of some in the evangelical community. 
Given the generally political conservatism of much of this community, 
this is not surprising. What is surprising, however, is the vehemence 
of this wrath. Pat Robertson, former US presidential candidate and 
head of the multimillion-dollar Christian Broadcast Network, called 
for Chavez's assassination in a broadcast Monday night. Calling 
assassination " a whole lot cheaper than starting a war" Robertson 
went on to say that if Chavez were killed by US covert operatives he 
didn't "think any oil shipments will stop."

Of course, for those who keep their religion close to their heart or 
use it only when necessary to cynically convince the public of the 
rightness of their actions, the comments regarding oil must strike a 
chord. After all, that's the underlying reason for Washington's (and 
the old guard in Venezuela) opposition to Chavez in the first place. 
Not only does he using Venezuelan oil revenues to help the 
perennially poor in Venezuela, he is also selling it to Cuba at cut 
rates and making deals with China, much to the chagrin of Washington. 
Chavez and his supporters understand this. In addition, they also 
understand the Jesus who inspired Father Gutierrez and his liberation 
theology. That was the Jesus who said: "It is easier for a camel to 
go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the 
kingdom of heaven."

Unfortunately, if Mr. Robertson and many others in Washington, 
Caracas and the Vatican have their way, Hugo Chavez may get his 
chance to enter that kingdom well before they do. Although I still 
like to think that if there is a heaven, Mr. Robertson and his ilk 
will be denied admission.

Ron Jacobs is author of The Way the Wind Blew: a history of the 
Weather Underground, which is just republished by Verso. Jacobs' 
essay on Big Bill Broonzy is featured in CounterPunch's new 
collection on music, art and sex, Serpents in the Garden. He can be 
reached at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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