"The Armageddon of the Culture War"
The Right's Campaign Against Marriage Equality in California
July 30, 2008
"One of the dumbest things the devil ever did was
attack the institution of marriage."
— Dr. Jim Garlow,
Skyline Church, San Diego
"We must be consumed with a
holy anger…this is the time to fight... Isn’t it time that we the church
come out of the closet? Everyone else has."
— Rev. Jim
Franklin, Cornerstone Church, Fresno
For two hours on Wednesday afternoon, July 30, pastors gathered at
215 sites in California, Arizona, and Florida were exhorted by
national Religious Right leaders and local anti-gay pastors to spare
nothing in the cultural and spiritual war against Satan and his
allies who support marriage equality for gay and lesbian couples.
National figures included Tony Perkins, Harry Jackson, Maggie
Gallagher, and Chuck Colson.
"The Armageddon of the Culture War"
The
primary focus of the call was Proposition 8 in California, described by
Colson as “the Armageddon of the culture war.” Many
speakers invoked the language of warfare, raising up an army of
believers, putting soldiers in the streets, being on the front lines
of a battle. Lou Engle actually described a massive rally planned in
Qualcomm stadium on November 1 as a “blitzkrieg moment.”
While speaker after speaker spoke of the dire threats same-sex
married couples pose to “traditional” marriage, religious freedom,
and civilization itself, the overall tone of the call was confidence
that victory would be won with God’s help, 40 days of prayer
and fasting before the election, teams of intercessors and prayer
warriors around the country, and a massive highly organized
deployment of volunteers in a systematic voter identification and
turnout campaign.
Don’t let the Right’s extremism go unanswered. Support
People For the American Way.
Pastors from around the state, and those representing African
American, Latino, and Chinese congregations, reported on their
mobilization efforts. Bishop Salvatore Cordileone, auxiliary bishop of
the diocese of San Diego, pledge the support of the Catholic
Church and said the state conference of bishops would be providing
congregations with organizing resources and urging parishioners
to take part in the broader campaign. Organizers said that they are
“blessed to have the full support of the LDS church” — which
will help identify anti-equality voters in 21,000 precincts in August.
Individual activists will be encouraged to write letters to
the editor, call in to radio shows, comment on blogs, and be as visible
as possible to overcome the expected media effort to
“discourage” Proposition 8 proponents.
Funding the
Campaign
While complaining about opponents of the
proposition “raising millions of dollars from wealthy gay Americans,”
campaign
organizers said they have already raised $15 million of their minimum
$23 million budget and have plans for special offerings to be
taken in churches around the country. In addition to
precinct-by-precinct organizing and deploying thousands of volunteers to
identifying and turn out voters, the plan includes rallies, a “Stand for
Marriage Sunday” on September 21 and a “family voting
weekend” on October 18 and 19, when people will be encourage to vote by
absentee ballot.
Ron Luce from Teen Mania ministries and other organizers talked about
plans to organize 300,000 youth and their families for an
October 1 simulcast, and using them to reach 2.4 million. A
representative of the Church Communication Network, a satellite network
that has downlink equipment in 500 churches in California, 95 in
Arizona, and 321 in Florida, said it would simulcast the youth
event free of charge, and would make a satellite dish available “at
cost” to churches who don’t yet have one. Said one speaker of
the youth organizing, “if we don’t use them, Satan will.”
Another speaker, Rev. Dudley Rutherford, predicted that if Prop. 8
fails, the God-ordained institution of marriage would be destroyed; the
engine of hate crimes legislation would be fueled, ultimately leading to
it being illegal to read some sections of the Bible; the floodgates
would be open to gay couples suing to force churches to marry them; and
the polygamists would be next.
"8 for 8"
The campaign’s volunteer
recruitment is built around an “8 for 8” theme, ie, asking pastors to
recruit eight other pastors for
next month’s call. Among action items for pastors:
- Urge people to pray 8 minutes every morning and evening at 8
for passage of Prop. 8
- Urge people to enlist 8 other
people to join 8 for 8 plan
- Give at least $8 to
protectmarriage.com for each member of the family, or $88, or
$888
- Obey — as we watch and pray, we must decide to
be obedient to God in all that he is directing each one of us to
do
- Starting on 8/8/08, begin to volunteer, offer services
of work 8 hours for the campaign in some capacity — sign up
through protectmarriage.com... we’re going to be offering more
opportunities for volunteer service on Aug. 27 conf. call
- Encourage one another — send a note of encouragement to at
least eight other pastors who are standing for marriage
- Turn out the vote — people need to be registering at least 8
other people to vote — get 8 other people to apply for
permanent vote by mail
- Contact 8 families and ask them to
participate in the family voting weekend, display bumper stickers, put
posters in local
stores.
Speakers urged a primary focus on energizing pastors who are
committed to the anti-marriage proposition, but also discussed
strategies for individuals and pastors to reach out to the “mushy
middle” — people “who need a good common sense rationale to
protect marriage.”
Right-Wing ABC's
One speaker described the ABC’s of the campaign’s outreach to those
undecided and/or secular voters:
- Activist judges hijacked the issue;
- Benefits for gay couples are one thing but marriage
goes too far; and
- Children are
profoundly confused by this whole debate.
Three African American pastors from San Diego
recounted how they mobilized after the city’s mayor changed his position
to support
marriage equality. The call’s host goaded the ministers by asking “how
do you feel when you hear the opposition try to equate
homosexuality with race as an issue.” Dr. Timothy Winters of Bayview
Baptist Church called it “absurd” and “a trick of Satan.”
Another pastor said he was “highly offended... I was born this color. I
have no choice, they have a choice.”
Quoting Dr.
King
Jim Franklin of Fresno made it clear that he has no hesitation in
claiming the civil rights movement for the pro-Prop. 8 forces,
quoting Martin Luther King as saying the church should be “a voice
rather than an echo…a thermostat, not a thermometer” He said a
church should be identified as a “mega church” not by the size of its
budget but by the size of “the enemy” it takes on.
He encouraged pastors not to waste time dealing with liberal
ministers who support marriage equality, but focus on identifying and
engaging pastors who have a “Biblical foundation” but don’t understand
what’s happening or how important it is.
Organizers dismissed as deeply flawed a recent California Field Poll
and cited instead an LA Times survey showing amendment
proponents with a commanding lead.
The next conference call will be held on August 27, with a focus on
training.
Do Something About It
There’s not time for us to waste to:
- Put our organizers on the ground to reach out to voters and
set the record straight on the myths and the facts about the ballot
measure...
- Mobilize our thousands of members to speak
out against this discriminatory initiative...
- Run phone banks
to reach our members in target communities urge them to vote
for fairness...
- And aggressively identify pro-equality
voters and get them to the polls in major California cities...
With your help, People For the American Way can meet the challenge.
But every step of this plan is going to take big money. And with $15
million of their minimum $23 million budget, already in the bank, the
right-wing groups have a huge head start.
Donate to People For the American Way now to stop the Right’s
well-planned and well-funded campaign.
