Departments
Sarah Palin and the new Apostolic reformation
by Russ Bellant
October 28, 2008
Sarah Palin has been associated all her adult life with churches and political groups that are way out of the theological and political mainstream. Her extreme policy views as Governor reflect this background and raise questions about what kind of vice president John McCain seeks to have voters endorse.
It has been widely reported that McCain barely knew Palin and his team never fully evaluated her to determine her fitness to be vice president.
A recent report in The Anchorage Daily News stated that evangelist Franklin Graham made the Palin connection to McCain, not Republican professionals. Graham, the once-estranged son of Billy Graham, has strong ties to the various strands of the religious rightwing. He met with McCain on June 30 at his headquarters in Boone, North Carolina, after which Graham issued a statement praising McCain’s "personal faith" and prayed for "God’s will to be done in this upcoming election."
The Daily News concluded that "subsequent events suggest that the price of support for McCain by the fundamentalist Christian leadership would be a vice presidential candidate of their liking. Governor Palin was a logical choice for Franklin Graham, whose ties to Alaska include a palatial, by Alaska bush standards, second home in Port Alsworth, a community that has served as a retreat for Christian fundamentalist leaders."
Graham has been the keynote speaker at Palin’s annual prayer breakfasts for the last two years. When she fired the Public Safety Director over what is being investigated as a family matter, few noticed that she hired a local police chief, Chuck Kopp, who was "a rising star in Alaska’s Christian conservative movement," according to the Daily News. He was a frequent speaker at religious and "patriotic" gatherings, but perhaps more significantly he was a director of a Bible training camp in Port Alsworth primarily funded by Graham.
Those and other ties give credence to Graham’s support for Palin. When her nomination was ratified at the Republican convention, Graham called to congratulate her through the cell phone of Rev. Jerry Prevo, a Republican delegate who is considered the leader of Alaska’s evangelical movement, according to the Washington Post. He is also on the board of directors of Graham’s charity, Samaritan’s Purse.
A recent report in the New Yorker stated that conservative writers around the National Review and the Weekly Standard had met with Palin in 2007 and some had advocated for her.
The Nation reported that she had been vetted by the secretive Council for National Policy just before the convention, but that meeting may have been more of a ratification of the McCain selection. The Council is composed of several hundred of the foremost leaders and funders of the ultraconservative right wing, including billionaires from the Amway families, the Prince families ( the Blackwater mercenary operations in Iraq ), as well as Pat Robertson, James Dobson, Phyllis Schlafly and the late Jerry Falwell.
While McCain may have trusted Graham to help him out of the political decline he was experiencing at the time he named Palin as his vice presidential pick, he would have benefited by having a thorough review of her character before he took the plunge with her name.
McCain would have found that she supported Ron Paul, not himself, in the Republican primaries; that she tried to ban books not to her liking; that her amateurish land deals
( building on land that the city did not own ) put Wasilla in deep debt; she also tried to fire people that disagreed with her or crossed her family. He would have found that she was active in churches that are part of a movement that excoriates major Christian denominations while building a movement to take dominion over society. He would have found a Governor who flirts in a fringe rightwing pro militia political party that wants Alaska to secede from the United States.
Until 2002, Palin was a member of the Wasilla Assembly of God. While the name suggests a church of a conservative Pentecostal denomination, it was and is more than that. The background of this and other Palin churches needs more than a thirty second word bite to explain, which is why so little has been written about it.
Palin, since her ascension to Governor in 2006, has been attending the Juneau Christian Center in the state capitol, as well as two nondenominational churches, Wasilla Bible Church and Church on the Rock. All of these churches are in the New Apostolic Reformation ( NAR ), a movement that seeks to sweep away established Christianity, take the reins of governments and purge evil as they see it from the world. These views shape the outlook of their congregants, including those of Sarah Palin.
Once a marginal and condemned campaign, NAR’s foremost leader, C. Peter Wagner, estimates his movement to now have as many churches as the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. They have hundreds of millions of dollars, mass communications networks, political infrastructure and many youth ministries at their disposal.
Origins of movements are always an arbitrary judgment, but many trace this phenomenon to the Latter Rain revival movement of the late 1940’s that began in Saskatchewan and spread across the continent, prophesying end times. In Detroit, the Bethesda Missionary Temple ( now Bethesda Christian Church in Sterling Heights ) became a national beacon for the movement.
Much of the movement was occurring within the Assemblies of God, a Pentecostal denomination. The Assemblies of God Superintendent at the time condemned the Latter Rain as "the reappearance of enthusiastic mysticism common in church history." Many Assemblies churches left the denomination to grow the movement on their own.
Unbridled by no denominational accountability, they developed concepts of sinless, sainted, perfect leaders that would themselves become gods or godlike. Others saw themselves as first century apostles leading a reformation, not for the saving of souls, but for temporal power. Many evolved cultic control over members, demanding deep submission to "anointed" leaders.
Ministries were created to penetrate business, church denominations, governments and political parties. Prayer breakfasts have been held at the Pentagon that won over many generals and admirals, for instance. When Sarah Palin was campaigning for Governor, Wasilla Assembly of God held a special service to outline the need to penetrate government, business, media, education and other social sectors and then laid hands on her for winning the election.
Many recruited to the task of being placed in positions were instructed to keep their affiliations and mission secret so that the true scope of the campaign would not be known until they took power. Others went further underground, organizing cell churches to prepare for apocalyptic battle.
The Latter Rain evolved into the NAR of today with many types of self-anointed apostles and prophets. Some of them travel through Palin’s churches. They promote creationism, antigay justifications, end-times doom and building the end time army, sometimes called Joel’s army, referenced as a terrifying army in the Book of Joel.
The Wasilla Assembly of God, where Palin still comes for special events, has a three-year youth Masters Commission as an alternative to college. NAR leaders are part of the teaching program. Palin spoke at their recent graduation exercise in June, according to the New York Times. Palin has been in a prayer warrior group for 20 years, according to the Times. When she speaks on conservative Christian radio, she refers to support from "prayer warriors."
She appointed an elder of her Wasilla Bible Church to a vacated State Representative seat in 2007. He promptly sought to outlaw late term abortions and is promoting a state mandate that "intelligent design" be taught in public schools.
The Juneau Christian Church that she attends when she is in the estate capitol is affiliated with leaders of the "Toronto Blessing," an ultra-charismatic practice that includes "Holy Laughter" (otherwise known as hysterical laughter), howling, barking like dogs, screaming, spasmodic jerking and rolling on floors as part of, even the substance of, "church" services. This may sound harmless, but it binds members together in perceived antidemonic "power evangelism" to turn their cities into citadels for the righteous. One of these leaders exhorted the congregants to great applause when he claimed their movement is "going to shake this nation to its very foundations, to its very core...its going to shake America like a tsunami" and told them they would have to risk death for the cause.
Palin has to accept many of these beliefs to be in good stead and be upheld as she has been by these churches. Did McCain ask her whether she accepts the creationist dogma that the earth is only 6,000 years old? What does that mean for her policy of science and education? Did her militant antiabortion views cause her to force women who were rape victims in Wasilla to pay for rape kits on their own in order to prove they had been assaulted in order to reduce the number of rape claims and ensuing demands for abortion? Did Palin, as one minister reported, conduct sidewalk harassment outside of a doctor’s office because she performed abortions at the local hospital, in order to intimidate the doctor?
Finally, does she hold views on the Biblical end times that welcomes the long-prophesied war with Russia as a precursor to the Millenium? In her interview with ABC’s Charles Gibson, war with Russia seemed fine with her.
In September 2000, when she was Mayor of Wasilla, Palin asked the City Council to make Wasilla part of Bill Gothard’s City of Character program. Unbeknownst to the Council, Gothard runs secretive Christian paramilitary training camps. His practice of extreme submission of participants in his Institute of Basic Life Principles has been cited for abuse by officials in Indiana and is a source of controversy in evangelical circles. Gothard tries to use his entrée into municipalities to develop training programs in police departments, as well as have government sponsors for his indoctrination practices.
A powerful theme throughout the NAR movement is that the U.S. must become a "Christian nation," which means the truly godly ( NAR leaders ) must rule and reign. Some have backed a small political party, the Constitution Party, ( actually the third largest political party in the U.S. ), which calls for the establishment of "Biblical law," a term used by some party founders to advocate replacing the Constitution with Old Testament law.
With this kind of background, what does it say for McCain’s judgment, for his concern for the leadership of our country, that he would select her to be vice president of the United States, even when she stated that she was unsure what the duties of the VP were? He stated at the time that she was the most qualified person in the United States for this position. He has selected the most extreme elected official holding high office to now be one weak heartbeat from the presidency. Already some of Palin’s NAR supporters are issuing "imprecatory prayers" that God kill McCain so that Palin becomes President. They want his soul saved first, however.
The Republican machinery has responded to McCain’s choice by keeping her away from the media, sending her to safe crowds on a scripted leash. She may be the only VP candidate who does not hold a press conference and allow questions to be asked of her.
Incidentally, the Ron Paul guy that she backed against McCain in the primaries, has not
returned the favor to Palin. He has endorsed the Constitution Party candidate, a Florida megachurch pastor.
And finally, John Hagee, the "spiritual advisor that McCain dumped when researcher Bruce Wilson produced videotapes of Hagee saying God used Hitler to teach Jews a lesson- well, he will be at Palin’s church in Juneau in March 2009.
|
 |
Recent Election Issues Articles
Why Al Franken should NOT be riding private planes December 23, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The suspicious, disturbing death of election rigger Michael Connell December 20, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Last US House seat filled on grave of stolen 2004 election December 9, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
What happened this year in Ohio December 1, 2008 Pete Johnson
Imaginary numbers persist in our presidential elections November 22, 2008 Richard Hayes Phillips, Ph.D.
The GOP attack on democracy continues in Ohio November 19, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The 2008 Presidential election: a preliminary analysis November 19, 2008 Richard Hayes Phillips, Ph.D.
Election protection in Ohio (and America) isn't over November 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Recount fictions in Virginia's Fifth November 9, 2008 David Swanson
The Pits: Georgia's GOP swipes the Peach State November 6, 2008 Greg Palast
Grant Park on Election Night November 5, 2008 Joan Brunwasser
Can the grassroots Internet-based election protection movement win the White House? November 3, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
How and why I just voted November 2, 2008 David Swanson
No time for Nader: A letter to Nader McKinney voters November 2, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
'Vote stealing imperils democracy': former Montague resident charges election manipulation November 2, 2008 Richie Davis
Will this Presidential election be stolen? It didn’t happen by chance... November 2, 2008 Channing Redditt and Amy Maldonado
The time has come October 30, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Beware the Twin Towers of electronic election theft October 30, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Sarah Palin and the new Apostolic reformation October 28, 2008 Russ Bellant
Antidotes to complacency: four reasons to act October 28, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Redesigning democracy October 22, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
A McCain "win" will be theft: resistance is planned October 21, 2008 David Swanson
Critical US Supreme Court ruling against Rovian GOP vote meddling may prove temporary October 20, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Our national juncture October 17, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Suppression October 17, 2008 Joe Rothstein
Cuyahoga's witch hunt October 13, 2008 Victoria Lovegren, Ph.D.
Videos from Ohio Election Protection Conference October 12, 2008 Free Press Staff
The Palin-Biden debate: high time to move beyond clichés October 11, 2008 Ramzy Baroud
Struggle: A Documentary October 10, 2008 Roger Hill
GOP attacks on American voters turn desperate, ugly and dangerous October 10, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Warming to Palin October 8, 2008 David Swanson
Brace yourself October 8, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Cindy, Charlotte, and our Constitution October 8, 2008 David Swanson
Rainbow PUSH Coalition registers 2090 new voters this week October 6, 2008 Lauren Love
Big presidential vote count error found and fixed in New Mexico October 6, 2008 Steven Rosenfeld
Ohio 2008 opens with a subpoena, a surge and calls for election protection October 1, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
North Carolina: The new Ohio? September 30, 2008 Christopher Bifani
Foreign policy debate all about war September 29, 2008 David Swanson
Be a poll worker and save American democracy September 26, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Why hurricane Ike demands paper ballots on November 4 September 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Death becomes her: let's make her our president September 15, 2008 Jason Miller
Ten ways the McCain/Palin GOP is now stealing the Ohio vote September 9, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
John McCain: Morally, mentally, and emotionally unfit September 8, 2008 Jim Fetzer
Logical consequences September 4, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Rovian politics chose Sarah Palin September 3, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Shocking choice by John McCain August 31, 2008 Robert Dewey
Ron Paul endorsement of Don Young "shocking and disappointing" August 27, 2008 Richard A. Viguerie
The DNC platform: belief you can change in August 10, 2008 David Swanson
Obama doesn't sweat. He should. July 29, 2008 Greg Palast
Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. applauds Sen. Obama’s speech before the NAACP July 16, 2008 Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.
Three key ways YOU can help protect the 2008 election July 3, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Colleges, voter registration, and a historic opportunity: a more detailed proposal June 19, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Obama must learn from Kucinich's election theft impeachment June 11, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Clinton only needs 153% of remaining delegates June 1, 2008 David Swanson
The buried Florida story: why campaigning matters May 31, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
The myth of Clinton's popular vote lead May 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Did the Limbaugh effect also flip Michigan? May 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Edwards just put Obama over the top May 15, 2008 David Swanson
Did the Limbaugh effect also flip Michigan? May 14, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Obama-Clinton funny math: Guam update May 4, 2008 David Swanson
Did the US Supreme Court deliver the Indiana Primary to Hillary Clinton? May 2, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Did the US Supreme Court just elect John McCain? April 30, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The 2008 election will be stolen April 19, 2008 David Swanson
The done deal April 18, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Letter to Hillary: remember when John McCain slimed your daughter April 17, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Fire and race April 3, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Keep the Republic March 27, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
What it's all about... March 25, 2008 Sheila Samples
Can SuperDelegates stop the scorched earth campaigning? March 24, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
An election without meaning March 23, 2008 Peter Phillips
We have a dream March 23, 2008 Phil Tajitsu Nash
Hope, change, and pissing in the wind: "Of Obama, Democrats, and the Power Elite" March 19, 2008 Patrice Greanville and Jason Miller
Ohio's voting machines are now an official crime scene March 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Did Republicans give Hillary her victory in Ohio? March 8, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Primary day at the polls in Columbus, Ohio March 5, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
Obama & Clinton: who's more likely to confront global warming? March 4, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
If you think Karl Rove is evil, make phone calls today March 4, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Obama's talking points March 1, 2008 Gregg Gordon
Adventures in inaudible audio with Senator Barack Obama February 27, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
Attention all voters: this is a must-see video February 26, 2008 Free Press staff
On the campaign trail in the Buckeye State stalking the candidates: John McCain February 24, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
Will Clinton's advisors tell her the hard truths? February 22, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
How much damage will Clinton do before she folds? February 22, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
The Hillary nutcracker February 21, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Behind Obama's wave of victories: the more they know him….. February 17, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Hillary's hawks -- How Obama's and Clinton's advisors mirror their stands on the war February 11, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb, introducing a Stephen Zunes article
Poll shows John McCain faces tough road in gaining conservative support February 11, 2008 Richard A. Viguerie
The Obama Factors February 11, 2008 Todd Huffman
Vote against Clinton February 4, 2008 David Swanson
Why this Edwards voter Is now backing Obama February 2, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Liveblogging Obama v. Clinton v. CNN February 1, 2008 David Swanson
It's all about Hillary, not her party January 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
The South Carolina you won't see on CNN - South Carolina primary colors: black and white? January 26, 2008 Greg Palast
The South Carolina you won't see on CNN - South Carolina primary colors: black and white? January 26, 2008 Greg Palast
Conspiracy theorist January 24, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Hillary Clinton's sleaze parade January 20, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Bob & Harvey's 3-Step "Ohio Plan" for fair and reliable voting and vote counts January 16, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Media misses story: Obedwards wins New Hampshire January 11, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Primary concerns January 10, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Clear evidence of widespread vote fraud in New Hampshire January 10, 2008 Paul Joseph Watson
The Kudzu Effect: The Voting-Industrial Complex chokes our democracy January 6, 2008 Sheri Myers, Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Still true to ObEdwards: Why I keep donating to both Edwards and Obama January 6, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Clinton campaign office re-occupied by peace activists on day of Iowa voting January 4, 2008 Mike Ferner
Read Election Issues Articles by Year: 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 |