I came across this article in my web browsing and thought it was interesting. In my defense, I do not know much about the Gadflyer or their stances, but I thought this might be worth a look. Or at least start a discussion.
http://gadflyer.com/articles/?ArticleID=258
Tear Down the Cross
Why is President Bush supporting a group trying to convince African-American churches to literally throw their crosses in the trash?
by John Gorenfeld, Contributor
12.21.04
This wintry season, as the faithful continue to receive alarming reports from the news that Republicans are all that stand between them and the outlawing of Christmas itself by hordes of secular humanists, the two presidents Bush have endorsed a powerful conservative interest group specializing in removing the cross – not from schools or courthouses, but from churches.
Rather than the traditional egg hunt, this group, calling itself the American Clergy Leadership Conference, sponsored a nationwide “Tear Down The Cross” day for Easter, 2003. Last week, leaders in this radical cause presided over a Washington prayer breakfast featuring messages of thanks from the presidents. Former Senator Bob Dole came in person.
Mostly African-American, pastors who joined in 2003’s ACLC-sponsored “Tear Down The Cross” won gold watches from the wealthy group, which unabashedly claims in its publications to have stripped churches of over a hundred crosses over the Easter holiday alone. This, movement leaders said, cleared the way for a new age and second messiah.
Speaking of messiahs, make a quick stop at the web site of the ACLC, and it’s clear there’s more to it than the “rapidly growing movement of clergy committed to the endeavor of making this nation the best that it can be,” as the ACLC described itself in a December 8 Washington Times op-ed. It’s actually a vehicle for Sun Myung Moon, the billionaire conservative donor who calls himself the True Father.
Though the breakfast boasted two other “co-sponsors,” both are easily identifiable as projects of the self-declared Messiah: the International and Interreligious Federation of World Peace and the American Family Coalition, which Moon founded in 1984. How much more eminent these names sound than “the Moonies”! In the 1970s, that was the shorthand on the evening news for Moon’s followers, whose frank call for crushing Western democracy, combined with success in recruiting teenagers, made them a popular nightmare on the evening news.
On Wednesday, a video file containing the elder President Bush’s message to the ACLC disappeared from the movement’s web site, though both Bush endorsements were reported in the Washington Times. Neither the White House nor the ACLC returned requests for comment on the breakfast and President Bush’s participation.
Taking out the trash
One series of photos found on Moon’s web site, but purged after receiving unfavorable attention earlier this year from evangelicals, shows Massachusetts preacher John Kingara taking down the cross from his church, hauling it behind the old brick building and hoisting it into a dumpster. Another shows a ritual in Israel disposing of the cross in the earth.
Kingara, embracing the ACLC’s new gospel, declared in remarks found in the Unification News, “The fact that the cross is a symbol of division, shame, suffering and bloodshed prove that it is not of God but Satan.” He continued, “On this 18th day of April 2003, we are beginning a new history. Pastors, please, help me to bring the cross down, because it is not of God but the devil.”
Cheerfully pitched to pastors as “trade your cross for a crown,” Moon’s rebate plan takes its name from a 1913 hymn with a somewhat different slant. Whereas “The Old Rugged Cross” pines for salvation in heaven, Moon offered the pastors the possibility to cash in here on earth, at a taxpayer-funded Senate building. At a secret March 23, 2004 ceremony, he declared he was erecting heaven on earth. That evening, the elderly Korean eminence behind the ACLC was brought the twinkling crown by bowing Congressman Danny K. Davis (D-Illinois).
Moon was no accidental VIP that night. Far from being on the fringes of Washington, he’s the supermogul behind a political and media empire that includes the Washington Times and United Press International, as well as being a longtime friend of the Bush family.
In Moon’s teachings, God himself is shedding tears over mankind’s obsession with the cross, which prevents us from recognizing the real “returning lord”: Moon himself. It’s no secret. This is something he’s patiently explained to many audiences of Congressmen and former Republican presidents over the years, in Washington pageants that hardly ever make the news.
Moon was keynote speaker last week, declaring in remarks reprinted by the Times that “God’s heart is under confinement.” In some ways it was a repeat performance of the Senate coronation ceremony, which the New York Times editorial page compared to an act of the mad emperor Caligula.
You may remember that Senator John Warner and other Congressmen unloaded on Moon’s entourage for “deceiving” them into sponsoring a ceremony where America “surrendered to [Moon] in the king’s role,” according to an internal church memo. “America is saying to Father, 'please become my king,” claimed Moon minister Chung Kwak. The versatile Kwak is currently wearing a second hat as head of the UPI news agency, added to Moon’s collection of media properties in 2000.
Strangely enough, last week the hosts of the “surrender” ceremony weren’t blasted but blessed by two presidents of the United States. The same faces were there: George Stallings, Jr., the flamboyant ex-archbishop who bellowed at the March dinner for America to open up its heart to Moon; Michael Jenkins and Chang Shik Yang, hosts of past “Tear Down The Cross” rituals; and former Democratic D.C. representative Walter Fauntroy, who shares the Moonies’ opposition to gay civil unions (Moon calls gays “dung-eating dogs”; Fauntroy calls same-sex marriage “an abomination”). Congressman Davis did not attend.
Like the Senate party, this conference climaxed with a new Crown of Peace awarded to Moon by his own organization, though in this case they held off on the royal treatment until the following evening. The award was reported by UPI.
According to a report in the Washington Times as well as video found on the Moon-affiliated Web site FamilyFed.org, the elder Bush made a taped appearance before the ACLC’s 3,000-strong crowd, which he thanked for their work. “I thought about parachuting into the building,” he joked about wishing he could make it. And he paid lip service to Moon’s unwieldy religious jargon, using phrases like “peace centered on God,” a goal that he called “right on target.”
His son, George W. Bush, wrote a warm letter of support presented at the event by a state senator, in which the president and his wife Laura sent his best wishes to the sponsors – and thanked them for rallying his “armies of compassion.” It is unclear what the ACLC has done for society’s problems, though its Web site is selling a video called “Beyond The Cross,” and an affiliated Moon front group, Free Teens USA, has received almost half a million dollars under Bush’s Abstinence-Only program.
Last year, as word seeped out of a movement with billions in the bank, exchanging gifts and promises of financial security for the rejection of Protestant beliefs, more mainstream, born-again Christians, like radio host Vic Eliason, were horrified. He warned on his nationally-syndicated program CrossTalk that the ACLC was ushering a false teacher into the houses of belief. Others speculated Moon was the Antichrist. But how many listeners knew that the false teacher’s phone number might as well be programmed into George H.W. Bush’s mobile phone?
Wouldn’t be prudent
The elder Bush once explained his cooperation with Moon’s Unification Church to the Washington Post, through a spokesman, as follows: “this group is about strengthening the family and that’s what President and Mrs. Bush are deeply focused on.” Well, after a fashion. Moon preaches that Jesus failed to start a family, which is why God is “confined,” as he said Tuesday – grieved by his son’s having blown it for mankind, with the Nazi Holocaust a punishment for the Jews’ failure to unite behind the King of the Jews.
And so Moon says he’s building a new kingdom centered on “absolute family-ism,” referring to his True Family of sworn followers. In the past, his new sons and daughters have rejected their own families to join Moon, who handpicks mates for them to marry at his mass weddings. One ex-member is Cathryn Mazer, whose grieving family was filmed in 1993 by the “Today Show” as they tried without success to enter a Moon dormitory where Cathryn was staying. She says photos of Moon with Bush played a major role in the seminar that indoctrinated her into the cult – used to sell potential converts on the legitimacy of Moon.
“If someone told you about it, it would seem too far fetched to be plausible,” she says.
Yet the friendship is well-documented. Reuters reported in the mid-'90s that the elder Bush trekked to Argentina as a paid spokesman for Moon, whom he introduced as “the man with the vision.” During the Clinton years, Bush also tagged along with Moon’s speaking tour in Japan, where the former president had kind words for his strange bedfellow, an ex-convict. Bush is estimated to have received upwards of $1 million for these appearances. Moon also gave $1 million to Bush’s presidential library. And when Bush was Vice President, it was a generous check from Moon that opened Oliver North’s Contra Freedom Fund.
But Washington conservatives are most thankful to Moon for lavishing more than $2 billion on the money-losing Washington Times. The paper was an important building block in the construction of an alternative, Republican media machine as we know it today. But many conservatives were quietly uneasy – fretting that a pact was being made with the devil. At a 1997 Washington Times anniversary dinner, the elder Bush made a video appearance similar to Monday’s, crediting the paper with winning the Cold War, and similarly sharing a stage with Moon, who claimed then that he had founded the Times to save the world.
In Monday’s video, Bush declared: “I want to salute a man I respect: Wes Pruden,” referring to the Times editor, whose paper frequently publicizes Moon projects that most newspapers would ignore. On December 7 he ran a piece by ACLC Rev. Donnie McLeod, who has argued for the removal of the cross in sermons covered by Unification Church publications.
The cross-disposal theologian wrote: “as the president is now free from the election concerns and can never be reelected, he can now build a legacy for America and the world.” ACLC leaders, he said, “are ready to see the president as I see him, a man to God who is truly ready to make the sacrifices and commitments to create a legacy of faith and family that will guide our nation for the next 200 years.”
The Washington Times Foundation is slippery to define, an organization with multiple public faces that morphs when convenient into the ACLC and other religious organizations. The Senate coronation, for example, was booked under the name of the foundation, though it was treated as a photo opportunity for the South Korean religious arm of the church, which trumpeted it as the U.S. government’s official stamp of approval on plans for the future of Christianity.
A former Times editor, James Whalen, told me that the protean nature of the group makes it easy to involve national-level figures in “showcasing” Moon – yet conveniently allows politicians to claim, for example, that they only dropped by to lift a glass to the awesome investigative reporting of Times reporter Bill Gertz.
And meanwhile, at the other end of the invisible line between mainstream and eldrich, there is the ACLC and its persistence in seeing the Christian cross disposed of like nuclear waste. A month after Easter last year, the group flew holy men from all over the world to a graveside in Israel, where undertakers had draped a cross beneath the blue and yellow flag of Reverend Moon, and buried the cross forever – another casualty at the hands of the armies of compassion.
Spurred on by the likes of Bill O’Reilly, conservatives are outraged at the war against Christianity supposedly declared in department stores’ “Happy Holidays” signs. But secularism is one thing, and sacrilege is something else, especially coming from Sun Myung Moon’s cult, which indulges dreams of becoming the state religion. The president has built his reputation on being a good Methodist, but he rarely attends church, come to think of it. And he has cozied up to a desecration spree that Tim LaHaye couldn’t make up in his Left Behind books. Is he what he pretends to be?