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Richard Cohen's columns have appeared on the op-ed page of The Washington Post since 1984. He joined The Post in 1968 after attending the Columbia ...
Read more about Richard Cohen.
Richard Cohen's columns have appeared on the op-ed page of The Washington Post since 1984. He joined The Post in 1968 after attending the Columbia ...
Read more about Richard Cohen.
McCain's Pastors of Intolerance
Richard Cohen
The pilgrim is making little progress. In a futile effort to convince
faith-voters that he is one of them, John McCain paid a visit to the
Grahams of North Carolina -- -- father Billy and son Franklin. After
the meeting, not a word was said about the Grahams' past indiscretions
concerning Muslims or Jews and neither, for that matter, was an
endorsement proffered. The next guest was country singer Ricky Skaggs.
He did better. He got lunch.
McCain plods a cruel treadmill. He has thus far sought the endorsement of the extremely purple Rev. John Hagee and the equally purple Rev. Rod Parsley. Both of them were later asked to unendorse on account of the offensive things they've said. But to paraphrase Hyman Roth in "The Godfather," this is the business they're in.
Billy Graham's observations about Jews were made a long time ago and were imparted in confidence to Richard Nixon and his secret White House tape recorder. The two ruminated about the power and influence of Jews, with Graham adding a bit of original investigative reporting: "They're the ones putting out the pornographic stuff." Had he peeked?
Graham apologized for such remarks and said he no longer held such views and everyone, including me, takes him at his word. His lasting damage, I offer as an aside, was to convince the young George W. Bush to abandon his wastrel ways, where he excelled, and instead seek the path that has led him to where he is now, a calamity for the nation and the world. Graham's burden is heavy indeed.
But the transgressions of Franklin Graham are much more recent and more to the point. Following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Franklin Graham called Islam a "very evil and wicked religion." As preachers are wont to do, he amplified his remarks to include "mainstream" Islam, alleging that the Koran preaches violence. He is renowned throughout the Muslim world for these remarks and therefore hardly a figure a presidential candidate should visit.
Erich Segal's line from "Love Story" -- "love means not ever having to say you're sorry" -- really applies to faith. If you proclaim it, you are forgiven almost anything. In Franklin Graham's case, his piety excuses his ignorance and intolerance -- his slap at a worldwide religion of almost 2 billion because of the horrendous acts of a few. What could a Muslim say about the massacres of the Crusades? What could anyone say about the wars between Catholics and Protestants, culminating in the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre of 1572 when possibly 100,000 French Huguenots were slaughtered? France is Catholic today partly because of the sword.
It would have been very McCain of McCain to have skipped this meeting in the cause of religious tolerance. It would be very McCain of McCain to forcefully denounce the persistent rumor that Barack Obama is a Muslim -- whenever it comes up. (It would also have been wonderful of Obama to have excluded Franklin Graham from a minister's meeting he convened in Chicago last month.) Both presidential candidates are over-pastored.
For too long now, the term "faith-based" has been synonymous with dumb. It's dumb to talk of Islam as if the terrorists are its true representatives (F. Graham). It's dumb to think the Holocaust was God's way of getting the Jews to return to Israel (Hagee) or that Catholics are not true Christians (Hagee, again) or that "Islam is an anti-Christ religion that intends through violence to conquer the world" (Parsley).
It's dumb to reject evolution when all of science thinks the opposite and it's dumb to oppose sex education, as if knowledge was a sin by itself. It was beyond dumb for the Rev. Pat Robertson to predict a natural calamity for Orlando, Fla., because of Disney World's policy regarding gays. Yet, the endorsement of such men has been sought by virtually every Republican presidential candidate of our times. To pass this kind of muster is very disquieting.
The liberal clergy in this country is a faded force. Gone are the days when ministers led the civil rights movement and marched to end the Vietnam War. Now, the ones with political clout are too often small-minded men who swaddle their bigotry and ignorance in the soothing word "faith." And John McCain, like a spiritual beggar, goes from one right-wing minister to another, ignoring their previous statements of intolerance and hoping for an endorsement. The other day, he didn't even get lunch. He deserved humble pie.
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Richard Cohen's e-mail address is cohenr@washpost.com
(c) 2008, Washington Post Writers Group
This news arrived on: 07/01/2008
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Posted Comments:
07-02-2008 10:23
truth-teller wrote:
There are no issues here!
We have forgotten that God will speak for Him-
self. He did it with our founding fathers, even
thru there are those today who would cahnge
history. Everyone needs to be careful when dealing
with what God says and what He wants man to know.
Man's religions are just that, but God coming down
to speak to man is very different indeed. Let God
come to man with the message of forgiveness and
love, and it will change a man's heart and life.
His truth is marching on--Glory, Glory.
self. He did it with our founding fathers, even
thru there are those today who would cahnge
history. Everyone needs to be careful when dealing
with what God says and what He wants man to know.
Man's religions are just that, but God coming down
to speak to man is very different indeed. Let God
come to man with the message of forgiveness and
love, and it will change a man's heart and life.
His truth is marching on--Glory, Glory.
07-02-2008 05:55
crone wrote:
religion
All this flap over religion. Why? The entire world is a godless place, none of the religions are sincere, there has been fighting over religion for thousands of years. Clearly, SOMETHING is wrong if there is no standardization among religions. Obviously, they all can't possibly be the word of god. So why throw religion into the equation? We see what it did in the case of Bush. That unstable man came out of his contact with religion (Graham) thinking he was some kind of Messiah, someone whom "God wanted to be president" as he stated on TV. Delusion. Obama isn't going to divorce himself from decades of teaching at the hands of his pastor. He embraced that racists mind set for much of his life. Mc Cain: who knows what he professes to believe? It is all clap trap. Where is religion in all of the out of control crime in our cities?
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