THE FAMILY
On August 12, Jeff Sharlet, author of THE FAMILY, appeared as guest on THE DAILY SHOW. Sharlet painted a picture of a cultish, almost conspiratorial group that was mainly concerned with power, an apparently loose-knit organization to which many members of America's political elite belong, especially, but not exclusively those on the right. Could this be "the vast right-wing conspiracy" that I had heard of? I bought the book and read it.
The book was not what I had expected! It was informative; I learned a great deal about the history of The Family, also known as The Fellowship, but I had a hard time with the thesis of the book and its proofs.
Mr. Sharlet wants to demonstrate that religion, especially fundamentalist religion and politics are hopelessly intertwined. "This is a story," he tells us, "about that imaginary place, so real in the minds of those for whom religion, politics, and the mythologies of America are one singular story and how that vision has shaped America's projection of power onto the rest of the world." The imaginary place is America as the "shining city upon a hill."
Values of the book. It reveals the history of a movement that began with 1930s union busting and anti-New Deal crusading, based on a vision of Abraham Vereide, an itinerant preacher and Norwegian immigrant, and carries through the anti-Communism crusades of the 50s, down to present day right-wing power politics. It shows ties between members of The Family and many political movements. Its present leader is Doug Coe, a well-known, but rather secretive person. Secrecy or invisibility is the first rule and personal morality is not at the top of their list of requirements for membership. While biblical doctrine seems relatively unimportant, Jesus is, but as a sort of undefined idea, not the Jesus of the New Testament. Power is important. They hold to Romans 13:1: "The powers that be are ordained of God," making it mean that those in power are more important to God than those without power. Win those in power to "Jesus" and those below will be blessed - "trickle-down" evangelism. This is in total contrast to Jesus' example and teachings.
What's wrong with the book? To prove his thesis, the author gives a sketchy, selective outline of American church history, tying The Family, or at least its philosophy, back to a select string of individuals showing little, if any real connections between them: Jonathan Edwards, Charles G. Finney, Billy Sunday, etc.
He paints with a broad brush. Well-known Christian leaders get splattered, whether or not connected with The Family. Political leaders on the right professing faith in Christ get splattered. The impression is given that all well-known American Christians are tainted.
The sketch of Hillary Clinton is ironic. Though she had connections with many in The Family, we are assured that "she's not a member of Coe's Family." So liberal readers can be relieved, assured that she's not part of the vast right-wing conspiracy.
What is sad about the book is that the picture painted of American evangelicalism is accurate. It pictures us as concerned more with political power than with the teachings of the lowly Jesus. It shows a "fundamentalism" unconcerned about the fundamental truths of the gospel, a moralistic politics unconcerned about personal morality, and a picture of Christianity that is held by many today.
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