Crabgrass Piety: the Rise of Megachurches and the Suburban Social Religion, 1960-2000 Nathan Joseph Saunders University of South Carolina - Columbia

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Crabgrass Piety: the Rise of Megachurches and the Suburban Social Religion, 1960-2000 Nathan Joseph Saunders University of South Carolina - Columbia University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Theses and Dissertations 2015 Crabgrass Piety: The Rise of Megachurches and the Suburban Social Religion, 1960-2000 Nathan Joseph Saunders University of South Carolina - Columbia Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd Recommended Citation Saunders, N. J.(2015). Crabgrass Piety: The Rise of Megachurches and the Suburban Social Religion, 1960-2000. (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/3091 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CRABGRASS PIETY: THE RISE OF MEGACHURCHES AND THE SUBURBAN SOCIAL RELIGION, 1960-2000 by Nathan Joseph Saunders Bachelor of Arts University of South Carolina, 2002 Master of Arts in Teaching Duke University, 2003 Master of Divinity Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2008 Master of Arts University of South Carolina, 2012 Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History College of Arts and Sciences University of South Carolina 2015 Accepted by: Lawrence B. Glickman, Major Professor Bobby J. Donaldson, Committee Member Paul H. Harvey, Committee Member Lauren Rebecca Sklaroff, Committee Member Lacy Ford, Vice Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! © Copyright by Nathan Joseph Saunders, 2015 All Rights Reserved. ii ! ! ! ! Dedication To Ruthanne, Lillian, and Abraham, my treasures and To Roger, Kathy, and Matthew Saunders, and Elsie Granger (1916-2013), the reasons I became an historian iii Acknowledgements I loved Ruthanne from the beginning, and even though it took her awhile to come around, when she did she was committed all the way. She married me even though she knew I wanted to go to graduate school. She was even bragged on me to her friends. She is obviously very special, and although she probably deserves to be married to a megachurch pastor, she always lets me know she is glad she said yes when I asked. Lillian had no say in whether or not her dad started graduate school in a city two hours away when she was only four months old, but she went with it. Some people say they cannot imagine having children in graduate school. I cannot imagine not having one. Nothing helps the writing process like when your four-year-old grabs one of your books, pulls a chair up next to your desk, and tells Mommy she is going to study with Daddy. When I was in the third grade, Roger and Kathy Saunders refused to take me back to school to get a book I forgot I needed to study for a test. I got a D on the test, and that day changed my study habits forever. What also changed my study habits forever was having a brother like Matthew. I never knew anything other than working hard and striving for excellence were options, because Matthew was my example. High expectations and lots of love have gone a long way. Speaking of love, his wife Lara has never shown me anything but that. I look forward to spending the next several decades hanging out with them and watching Maddie and Luke and Lillian and Abraham grow up together. ! iv One of the best things about graduate school was getting to reconnect with my old friend George Cooper and making a new friend in his wife, Lauren. They certainly did not have to let me stay at their house one or two nights each week while I was in graduate school, but there is no way I would have finished had they not. Little do they know I actually finished two years ago, but I just kept coming to Columbia because I wanted to keeping spending time with them. At his own doctoral defense Clint Page called me his brother, and the feeling is mutual. We have been through a lot together since 1994, and his brilliance deserves much more recognition than it has yet received. But the best things in life usually have little to do with others recognizing our brilliance and much to do with eating buffalo wings while watching a Ric Flair match from 1987. Clint provides times like those in abundance. Lauren Sklaroff has encouraged and challenged me to tighten up my writing and arguments since my first semester in graduate school, and I will always be grateful. Larry Glickman is the one who challenged me to expand my study to include all megachurches. His office was open when I needed to talk, and his willingness to advise me even after moving to a new university speaks to his commitment and his generous spirit. Bobby Donaldson is always good for a lengthy conversation about church, race, South Carolina history, or whatever else. I also appreciate his kindness in giving me work during graduate school and in shepherding me through the interview process that got me my current job. Paul Harvey took time out of his busy schedule to serve on the committee of a doctoral student he had never met two thousand miles away. All four of these committee members provided valuable encouragement at critical times, and for that I am very, very thankful. ! v Ron Atkinson was not on my committee, but he was instrumental in my growth as a scholar. A great teacher and mentor, he has become a great friend too. He has helped me in countless ways, including my golf swing. Speaking of which, now that the dissertation is complete, we can look forward to a few rounds together. I used to think I did not have that many friends, but a number of people who have encouraged me come to mind as I write this. Bartges and Brett helped me through some tough times, and made me interact with others when I wanted to hide. My nephews Cody and Cameron brightened my days, and in the process gave me a crash course in being a dad. Rod has become great friend, and I am proud to call him my brother-in-law. Sheila welcomed me into her family, and has always been supportive. The Granger clan, especially my aunts and uncles (Judy and Ben, Mary and Billy, Scarlett and Dale) were always interested, encouraging, and most importantly, loving. Granny Saunders’ love was always there, too, and her courage, strength, and gentleness continue to be an inspiration. Thank you all. ! vi Abstract Although there were less than twenty megachurches (churches averaging over two thousand in weekly attendance) in the United States before 1960, by 2010 there were approximately fifteen hundred. Megachurches are not a homogenous group, but they exist in all parts of the country and they have enough in common to warrant their identification as part of a coherent trend in American evangelical culture. Specifically, most megachurches appeal to an ethos that emerged in the 1970s and 1980s known as the suburban social religion. The suburban social religion combined to differing degrees the American civil religion described by Robert Bellah, meritocratic consumerism, the Therapeutic Moralistic Deism described by Christian Smith, and a faith in managerial science. With respect to church structure, the suburban social religion placed a high value on running the church as a business and giving worshippers what they wanted. These values meshed well with those of the Church Growth Movement. The suburban social religion helped engender the celebration and emulation of entrepreneurial pastors, entertaining worship services, and therapeutic messages. It also fit well with the center- right political discourse of the national Republican Party. Megachurch growth provoked a number of critics, who in the early 1990s severely chastised large churches for catering to consumerism. Finally, American megachurches connected with large churches in other parts of the world. These large churches in many cases predate the rise of American vii megachurches, and have become important centers in an emerging global evangelical megachurch culture. Although new megachurches will continue to appear, and existing ones will remain strong for many years to come, they have not managed to arrest the secularization of American society. Megachurches are in fact a prime example of the church’s loss of influence over other social spheres. Furthermore, in most communities megachurches have failed to stop the overall decline of religious adherence rates among Protestants. They have nevertheless become the most visible evangelical cultural institutions in most metropolitan areas. An understanding of megachurches therefore deepens an understanding of how American communities have changed more generally since 1970. viii ! ! Table of Contents Dedication .......................................................................................................................... iii Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................ iv Abstract ............................................................................................................................. vii List of Tables ...................................................................................................................... x List of Figures .................................................................................................................... xi Chapter 1: Megachurches ................................................................................................... 1 Chapter 2: Entrepreneurs .................................................................................................. 39 Chapter 3: Entertainers
Recommended publications
  • Ew Kenyon and the Twelve
    CHRISTIAN RESEARCH INSTITUTE PO Box 8500, Charlotte, NC 28271 Feature Article: JAW755-1 WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE FAITH MOVEMENT (PART ONE): E. W. KENYON AND THE TWELVE APOSTLES OF ANOTHER GOSPEL by Hank Hanegraaff This article first appeared in the Christian Research Journal, volume 15, number 3 (1993). For further information or to subscribe to the Christian Research Journal go to: http://www.equip.org SYNOPSIS What's wrong with the "Faith" movement? Its leaders include many of the most popular television evangelists. Its adherents compose a large percentage of charismatic evangelical Christians. Its emphases on faith, the authority of the believer, and the absolute veracity of Scripture could appear to be just what today's church needs. And yet, I am convinced that this movement poses one of the greatest contemporary threats to orthodox Christianity from within. Through it, cultic theology is being increasingly accepted as true Christianity. This article will highlight several serious problems with the Faith movement by providing an overview of its major sources and leaders. Part Two will focus on the movement's doctrinal deviations as represented by one of its leading proponents.1 ITS DEBT TO NEW THOUGHT It is important to note at the outset that the bulk of Faith theology can be traced directly to the cultic teachings of New Thought metaphysics. Thus, much of the theology of the Faith movement can also be found in such clearly pseudo-Christian cults as Religious Science, Christian Science, and the Unity School of Christianity. Over a
    [Show full text]
  • How the U.S. Christian Right Is Transforming Sexual Politics in Africa
    Colonizing African Values How the U.S. Christian Right is Transforming Sexual Politics in Africa A PUBLICATION OF POLITICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATES BY KAPYA JOHN KAOMA Political Research Associates (PRA) is a progressive think tank devoted to supporting movements that build a more just and inclusive democratic society. We expose movements, institutions, and ideologies that undermine human rights. PRA seeks to advance progressive thinking and action by providing research-based information, analysis, and referrals. Copyright ©2012 Political Research Associates Kaoma, Kapya John. ISBN-10: 0-915987-26-0 ISBN-13: 978-0-915987-26-9 Design by: Mindflash Advertising Photographs by: Religion Dispatches, Michele Siblioni/AFP/Getty Images, Mark Taylor/markn3tel/Flickr This research was made possible by the generous support of the Arcus Foundation and the Wallace Global Fund. Political Research Associates 1310 Broadway, Suite 201 Somerville, MA 02144-1837 www.publiceye.org Colonizing African Values How the U.S. Christian Right is Transforming Sexual Politics in Africa A PUBLICATION OF POLITICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATES BY KAPYA KAOMA POLITICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATES i Colonizing African Values - How the U.S. Christian Right is Transforming Sexual Politics in Africa Foreword ganda’s infamous 2009 Anti-Homosexuality Bill, onstrates in Colonizing African Values that the Ameri- which would institute the death penalty for a can culture wars in Africa are growing hotter. Tracing U new and surreal category of offenses dubbed conflicts over homosexuality and women’s repro- “aggravated homosexuality,” captured international ductive autonomy back to their sources, Kaoma has headlines for months. The human rights community uncovered the expanding influence of an interde- and the Obama administration responded forcefully, nominational cast of conservative American inter- the bill was tabled, and the story largely receded ests.
    [Show full text]
  • The BG News September 16, 1997
    Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 9-16-1997 The BG News September 16, 1997 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News September 16, 1997" (1997). BG News (Student Newspaper). 6205. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/6205 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. Directory SPORTS 6 OPINION 2 TODAY *<™^^™s Switchboard 372-2601 Tom searches for the elusive Lunatic Fringe Classified Ads 372-6977 Display Ads 372-2605 Volleyball Editorial 372-6966 Sports 372-2602 Falcons return from 1 -3 4 Entertainment 372-2603 3 California trip with heads NATION 4 Story Idea? Give us a call hazy weekdays from I p/n. lo 5 pm., or held high National diet drugs recalled e-mail: "[email protected]" High 83 Low: 57 TUESDAY September 16,1997 Volume 84, Issue 14 The BG News Bowling Green, Ohio "Serving the Bowling Green community for over 75 years # Lecture series committed to cultural topics □ The fourth annual La during the 1970s. Francisco CabaniUas, assistant Mesa Oblicua Lecture professor in Romance Lan- Series promotes multi- guages, said he will discuss the cultural diversity history of salsa music, how it draws from different Latin through education, dia- American traditions and how it logue and interaction.
    [Show full text]
  • Preface to the Jack Hyles Story
    Introduction to the Hyles Story Preface to the Jack Hyles Story Jack Hyles was an enigma most of his life. Born in the little town of Italy, Texas (about 30 miles south of Dallas, just off I-35E today) on September 25, 1926, he departed this world on February 6, 2001 at Chicago University Hospital, the victim of a failed heart operation. He was 74 at the time of his decease. As far as "numbers" in the ministry, his start was very inauspicious. He attended the East Texas Baptist College (SBC) in Marshall and was a student pastor while there. His first three churches – all small ones in Texas – were Marris Chapel Baptist in Bogata, Grange Hall Baptist in Marshall, and Southside Baptist in Henderson. He next went to the Miller Road Baptist in Garland, where his success was not only hailed by fellow Southern Baptists, it came to the attention of Dr. John R. Rice through his advertising manager at the time, Miss Fairy Shappard. I was present when she returned from a business trip to Texas and heard her report with great enthusiasm her visit to his church. Dr. Rice started using him in Sword Conferences and, as a result, he eventually became nationally known. I had known him from my own ministry in Texas. After Garland, he held a long pastorate at the First Baptist Church in Hammond, Indiana – starting his ministry there in August of 1959 and remaining until his decease. In the latter two churches thousands professed faith and were baptized. In Hammond he had a huge Sunday school and church attendance, reputedly the largest in the world at the time.
    [Show full text]
  • Conference Report
    40th Annual Conference on Neighborhood Concerns Neighborhoods, USA Conference Report Table of Contents Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................................................................ 3 Overall Conference Evaluation .......................................................................................................................................................... 3 Workshop Evaluations .......................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Workshop Tracks .................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Conference at a Glance .......................................................................................................................................................................... 5 Conference Workshop Titles & Descriptions and Evaluation Scores ................................................................................ 6 Neighborhood Pride Tours ................................................................................................................................................................ 24 2015 Neighborhood of the Year Award Recipients ................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Special Report: Tilton's Tottering TV Empire
    STATEMENT DT030 Special Report: Tilton’s Tottering TV Empire Only months ago Robert Tilton, “Pastor to America,” was a rising star in the crowded con stellation of prosperity-preaching televangelists. His bustling Word of Faith Family Church in a Dallas suburb boasted 8,000 members and local real estate appraised at over $40 million. Tilton’s Success-N-Life TV show ranked twelfth in the national Arbitron ratings for syndicated religious television programs, viewed by an estimated 199,000 households — and his cable audience was larger still. Televangelist watcher Ole Anthony calls him “the biggest TV preacher ever.” At his peak Tilton reportedly bought more than 5,000 hours of air time per month in all 235 U.S. markets and maintained a staff of over 800, many just to answer phones and take names and addresses 24 hours a day. Most impressive of all was the way “Pastor Bob” made the cash roll in. Using prepos terous scriptural pretexts, Tilton bullied and cajoled his followers into making “vows of faith” (typically $1,000) to get their miracle — even if they didn’t have the money. “Oh, I know you probably don’t have a thousand dollars, but vow it.” (In a 1990 inter view he admitted drawing inspiration for his approach from TV real-estate pitchman Dave Del Dotto’s “infomercials.”) In the process Tilton built a mailing list of several million current and potential donors, pulling in around 10,000 letters each business day and between $65 -$l00 million a year, tax- free. According to ABC’s Prime Time Live, “Although the ministry is a corporation, Tilton personally has access to all its wealth, almost as if it were a sole proprietorship.” The minister and his wife, Marte, reportedly earn over $1 mil lion per year.
    [Show full text]
  • 08-17-1979 (The Journal Champion Volume 2, Issue 6)
    Liberty University DigitalCommons@Liberty University 1978 -- 1980 Liberty University School Newspaper Summer 8-17-1979 08-17-1979 (The ourJ nal Champion Volume 2, Issue 6) Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/paper_78_80 Recommended Citation "08-17-1979 (The ourJ nal Champion Volume 2, Issue 6)" (1979). 1978 -- 1980. Paper 8. http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/paper_78_80/8 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Liberty University School Newspaper at DigitalCommons@Liberty University. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1978 -- 1980 by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Liberty University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ;.'.•• A ..' A Chronicle For The Preservation Of The American Heritage VOL.2 NO. 6 AUGUST 17,1979 25 CENTS STATEWIDE RALLIES i Love America' Scheduled At Virginia By C. CHRISTOPHER ROSS for the loosening of moral values, the Ethics. Principles. Integrity. desire for love of country, a strong Patriotism. Conviction. stand against abortion on demand, a These are the words that strike at strong stand against government in­ the heart of every American and these terference in our Christian private basic virtues of life, the foundations for schools, a strong concern for a return living and the prices of liberty and to the values that made this nation freedom are being undermined instead great." of undergirded. "For the more than 25 years of my More than 15,000 private school ministry, I have been concerned with students, parents, pastors, school the souls of men and women," said Dr. administrators and political leaders Jerry Falwell.
    [Show full text]
  • COLLECTION 0076: Papers of Alex V. Bills, 1906-1999
    Fuller Theological Seminary Digital Commons @ Fuller List of Archival Collections Archives and Special Collections 2018 COLLECTION 0076: Papers of Alex V. BIlls, 1906-1999 Fuller Seminary Archives and Special Collections Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.fuller.edu/findingaids Part of the Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, and the Missions and World Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Fuller Seminary Archives and Special Collections, "COLLECTION 0076: Papers of Alex V. BIlls, 1906-1999" (2018). List of Archival Collections. 29. https://digitalcommons.fuller.edu/findingaids/29 This Finding Aid is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives and Special Collections at Digital Commons @ Fuller. It has been accepted for inclusion in List of Archival Collections by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Fuller. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Archives, Rare Books and Special Collections David Allan Hubbard Library Fuller Theological Seminary COLLECTION 76: Papers of Alex V. Bills, 1906-1999 Table of Contents Administrative Information ..........................................................................................................2 Biography ........................................................................................................................................3 Scope and Content ..........................................................................................................................4 Arrangement ...................................................................................................................................5
    [Show full text]
  • Nov10trib.Pdf
    VBS 2011 Order your 2011 VBS Introductory Kit today! 1.800.727.4440 www.rbpVBS.org O N THE T ABLE William Tyndale, pioneer Bible translator NOVEMBER 2010 VOL. 61 NO. 3 and reformer by Keith Bassham | Editor Fall Fellowship Meeting Report he last Sunday of October is traditionally Reformation Day From Sauk Trail Baptist Temple in Richton Park, IL 6 Tamong Protestant churches. We Baptists ordinarily take little note of the day, but we should not overlook the importance of the With Good Reason: Apologetics Reformation, and the events preceding and following. In fact, two The truth about suffering 10 events that made the Reformation a reality were the translation and printing of non-Latin Bibles. John Wycliffe, among the first of the English translators, had Soaking it up begun translating in the 1300s and earned the title the Morningstar Special BBC Alumni Association Feature 12 of the Reformation. William Tyndale, born about a century after VBS 2011 Wycliffe’s death, became acquainted with the Greek New Testa- ment as a student at Cambridge and Oxford in the early 1500s, and he saw with his own eyes that the church-sanctioned Latin version distorted the gospel. He illegally obtained a copy of Martin Luther’s German Bible in 1522, and was thereafter committed to taking the Bible directly to the people of England. Defying the law (but only after he had been refused official per- mission), he began translating from the Greek, just as Luther had. By August 1525 his translation of the New Testament was complete. Printing began at Cologne, Germany, but authorities destroyed nearly all known copies (I think only one is known today).
    [Show full text]
  • Lexical Innovation on the Internet - Neologisms in Blogs
    Zurich Open Repository and Archive University of Zurich Main Library Strickhofstrasse 39 CH-8057 Zurich www.zora.uzh.ch Year: 2009 Lexical innovation on the internet - neologisms in blogs Smyk-Bhattacharjee, Dorota Abstract: Studien im Bereich des Sprachwandels beschreiben traditionellerweise diachronische Verän- derungen in den Kernsubsystemen der Sprache und versuchen, diese zu erklären. Obwohl ein Grossteil der Sprachwissenschaftler sich darüber einig ist, dass die aktuellen Entwicklungen in einer Sprache am klarsten im Wortschatz reflektiert werden, lassen die lexikographischen und morphologischen Zugänge zur Beobachtung des lexikalischen Wandels wichtige Fragen offen. So beschäftigen sich letztere typischer- weise mit Veränderungen, die schon stattgefunden haben, statt sich dem sich zum aktuellen Zeitpunkt vollziehenden Wandel zu widmen. Die vorliegende Dissertation bietet eine innovative Lösung zur Un- tersuchung des sich vollziehenden lexikalischen Wandels sowohl in Bezug auf die Datenquelle als auch bzgl. der verwendeten Methodologie. In den vergangenen 20 Jahren hat das Internet unsere Art zu leben, zu arbeiten und zu kommunizieren drastisch beeinflusst. Das Internet bietet aber auch eine Masse an frei zugänglichen Sprachdaten und damit neue Möglichkeiten für die Sprachforschung. Die in dieser Arbeit verwendeten Daten stammen aus einem Korpus englischsprachiger Blogs, eine Art Computer gestützte Kommunikation (computer-mediated communication, CMC). Blogs bieten eine neue, beispiel- lose Möglichkeit, Wörtern nachzuspüren zum Zeitpunkt, in der sie Eingang in die Sprache finden. Um die Untersuchung des Korpus zu vereinfachen, wurde eine Software mit dem Namen Indiana entwickelt. Dieses Instrument verbindet den Korpus basierten Zugang mit einer lexikographischen Analyse. Indiana verwendet eine Kombination von HTML-to-text converter, eine kumulative Datenbank und verschiede Filter, um potentielle Neologismen im Korpus identifizieren zu können.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Signers
    American Christian Leaders for Israel 650 Petition Signers September 3, 2015 Susan Michael US Director, International Christian Embassy Jerusalem Earl Cox President, Israel Always Roberta Combs President, Christian Coalition of America Kay Arthur Co-Founder, Precept Ministries Ted Baehr President, Movie Guide Gary L. Bauer Executive Board, Christians United for Israel Dr. John Benefiel Sr. Pastor, Church on the Rock/Heartland Apostolic Prayer Network Rich Bott President, Bott Radio Network Pastor Mario Bramnick Hispanic Israel Leadership Coalition, President Dr. Billye Brim President , Billye Brim Ministries Dr. Kenneth Copeland Kenneth Copeland Ministries Jerry Dirmann Senior Pastor, The Rock Anaheim, CA Dr. James Dobson President, Family Talk Mark Dreistadt President/CEO, Infinity Concepts Joseph Farah Editor & CEO, WND.com Jane Hansen Hoyt President & CEO, Aglow International Bishop Jackson Harry Jackson Bishop, International Communion of Evang. Churches ICEC Jerry Johnson President & CEO, National Religious Broadcasters Ben Kinchlow Founder , Americans for Israel David Kubal President/CEO, Intercessors for America Carmen Fowler LaBerge President, The Presbyterian Layman Andrea Lafferty President, Traditional Values Coalition Michael Little President and COO, Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN) Laurie Cardoza-Moore President & Producer, Proclaiming Justice to The Nations, Inc. Penny Nance CEO, Concerned Women for America Dr. Paul Nyquist President, Moody Bible Institute Ms. Star Parker President, Center for Urban Renewal and Educ. Janet Parshall Host, In the Market with Janet Parshall Tony Perkins President, Family Research Council Dr. Rev. Dr. Samuel Rodriguez President NHCLC/CONELA David Ruleman Vice President of Operations/Salem Media Group Rev. Rev. Lou Sheldon Chairman and Founder, Traditional Values Coalition Dr. Jim Showers Executive Director, The Friends of Israel Linda W.
    [Show full text]
  • Bush, Obama and a Faith-Based US Foreign Policy
    Bush, Obama and a faith-based US foreign policy LEE MARSDEN US foreign policy in the first decade of the twenty-first century has been dominated by religion in a way that would not have seemed possible for most of the second half of the twentieth. Al-Qaeda’s attack on the United States in September 2001, the subsequent US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, the upsurge in Islamist militancy and the populist overthrow of despotic US allies in the Middle East all focus atten- tion on the importance of religious actors. For much of this period academic interest has centred on radical Islam and the attempts by western governments, and the United States in particular, to contain Islamism through embarking on the global ‘war on terror’ in its various manifestations, and supporting pro-western despots in the Middle East. While there has also been much interest in the emergence of elements of the Christian right as foreign policy actors,1 until recently insufficient attention has been paid to the increasing role played by religious organizations in the delivery of US foreign policy objectives. American faith-based Inter- national Relations (IR) scholars and political scientists have successfully agitated for an increased religious dimension to foreign policy, in particular in the areas of diplomacy and overseas assistance and development.2 While such an emphasis is designed to further US foreign policy interests, this article argues that such a policy can be counterproductive where these religious actors pursue sectarian rather than secular objectives. Using faith-based initiatives supported by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) as a case-study, the article highlights the potential dangers of faith-based foreign policy approaches.
    [Show full text]