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Home Current Affairs

Why The South May Turn Rightward

by Dana Blankenhorn
October 16, 2006
in Current Affairs, politics, Religion
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Liberty_sunday_speakersjs3
In all the bloviating over this weekend’s "Liberty Sunday" event in Boston, one fact that was not noted enough was that nearly half the featured speakers were black.

This was not accidental. Tony Perkins, whose "Family Research Council" puts on these shows, is a savvy pol. He knows his market.

And the one fact liberals have yet to grasp hold of is the rise of the Black Megachurch.

Atlanta has a number of these. Bishop Eddie Long runs one. Creflo Dollar runs another. They are run much like any white mega-church. That is, they provide social services designed to keep parishioners occupied, to keep them out of the hands of the government.

These churches provide an important service for the black middle class, which is growing across the South. They validate. They also segregate. They separate congregants from the pathologies of poverty. They preach a gospel of wealth, based on self-discipline. With half of all black kids born without fathers present, with a third either in jail or on probation, with the odds so stacked against those born in poverty, this is a powerful message.

To empower these people, everything becomes a choice. Graduating from school is a choice. Avoiding drugs is a choice. Avoiding sex out of wedlock is a choice. And thus, inevitably, being gay is a choice. If you have money, a big house and a fine car, you have made the right choices. If you don’t have these things, it’s your own fault.

It’s a conservative message.

Tj_jakes
In my experience, black Democrats are far more socially-conservative
than white Democrats. They are new to the middle class. They feel they
have earned their status. They fear losing their status. They relate
their own success to their personal habits. They are far more likely to
be violently anti-abortion (it kills black babies) and anti-gay (think
being black is hard — try being black and gay) than white liberals.

They are ready, Perkins feels, to be weaned away. And the way to do it
is through gay issues.  These people feel personally insulted at the
very idea that denying the humanity of a gay man is the same as denying
their own humanity.  They see sexuality and all forms of behavior as a
choice, and are quite ready to cut off any black person who engages in
what they see as bad behavior.

Note the picture at the top of this entry. Note the black faces. Now note that the
black faces are C-list celebrities. (In the Christian political sphere,
the whites are all A-listers.)

  • Alveda King is, indeed, a niece of Dr. MLK, but she’s based in California.
     
  • Wellington Boone runs his ministry from an office park outside Technology Park in Norcross.
     
  • Andy Lusk runs a Philadelphia ministry whose chief public ally is a white man, Eagle Coach Andy Reid.
     

These people are all ambitious. They are entrepreneurs. They are
wannabes. And what they wannabe is Creflo Dollar, Eddie Long or (better
yet) T.J. Jakes. Perkins hopes that by building-up these people, he can persuade B-list or A-list preachers to "come out" on his side.

In many ways, however, those people already are on his side. Were it
not for the continuing, overt racism of white southerners, these black
southern megachurches would have told their flocks to switch sides
long ago. Even despite that racism, preachers like Long have detached
themselves from the Democratic Party, and wish to be considered
independent, hopeful of being wooed rather than taken for granted.

This movement is stronger in the South than in the North, and my point
today is to note that the social conservatism of the black middle
class is likely to keep the South conservative no matter how high the
liberal tide runs elsewhere, for a long time to come.

Tags: 2006 election2008 electionAlveda KingAndy Luskblack megachurchesgay issuesJerry FalwellLiberty Sundaysocial issuesTJ JakesTony PerkinsWellington Boone
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. James T. Bass says:
    19 years ago

    It is interesting that those conservatives of color do not remember what much of the conservative base were advocating in the 1940’s, 1950’s, and 1960’s ad still advocate in the backrooms of the American Political Cathedrals. Those religious leaders who want a theocracy in America do not seem to realize that when the political party that they associate themselves to closely with looses power then their religion will go down the tubes too. When you preach politics from the pulpit you will reap the whirlwind and religion rather than being eternal then becomes a victim of the times.
    tbass

    Reply
  2. James T. Bass says:
    19 years ago

    It is interesting that those conservatives of color do not remember what much of the conservative base were advocating in the 1940’s, 1950’s, and 1960’s ad still advocate in the backrooms of the American Political Cathedrals. Those religious leaders who want a theocracy in America do not seem to realize that when the political party that they associate themselves to closely with looses power then their religion will go down the tubes too. When you preach politics from the pulpit you will reap the whirlwind and religion rather than being eternal then becomes a victim of the times.
    tbass

    Reply

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