Katherine Stewart, author of a book about the religious right, wrote a powerful article today in the New York Times about Betsy DeVos’ ties to the fundamentalist strain of Christianity. Her book is titled The Good News Club: The Christian Right’s Stealth Assault on America’s Children. This is the time when everyone should read Stewart’s book to learn what DeVos has in store for our children.
Begin with the article today:
At the rightmost edge of the Christian conservative movement, there are those who dream of turning the United States into a Christian republic subject to “biblical laws.” In the unlikely figure of Donald J. Trump, they hope to have found their greatest champion yet. He wasn’t “our preferred candidate,” the Christian nationalist David Barton said in June, but he could be “God’s candidate.”
His first candidate for Education Secretary was Jerry Falwell, Jr., according to Falwell.
His second choice was billionaire Betsy DeVos.
Betsy DeVos stands at the intersection of two family fortunes that helped to build the Christian right. In 1983, her father, Edgar Prince, who made his money in the auto parts business, contributed to the creation of the Family Research Council, which the Southern Poverty Law Center identifies as extremist because of its anti-L.G.B.T. language.
Her father-in-law, Richard DeVos Sr., the co-founder of Amway, a company built on “multilevel marketing” or what critics call pyramid selling, has been funding groups and causes on the economic and religious right since the 1970s.
Ms. DeVos is a chip off the old block. At a 2001 gathering of conservative Christian philanthropists, she singled out education reform as a way to “advance God’s kingdom.” In an interview, she and her husband, Richard DeVos Jr., said that school choice would lead to “greater kingdom gain.”
And so the family tradition continues, funding the religious right through a network of family foundations — among others, the couple’s own, as well as the Edgar and Elsa Prince Foundation, on whose board Ms. DeVos has served along with her brother, Erik Prince, founder of the military contractor Blackwater. According to Conservative Transparency, a liberal watchdog that tracks donor funding through tax filings, these organizations have funded conservative groups including: the Alliance Defending Freedom, the legal juggernaut of the religious right; the Colorado-based Christian ministry Focus on the Family; and the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.
Like other advocates of school voucher programs, Ms. DeVos presents her plans as a way to improve public education and give families more choice. But the family foundations’ money supports a far more expansive effort.
The evangelical pastor and broadcaster D. James Kennedy, whose Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church is a beneficiary of DeVos largess, said in a 1986 sermon that children in public education were being “brainwashed in Godless secularism.” More recently, in 2005, he told followers to “exercise godly dominion” over “every aspect and institution of human society,” including the government.
Jerry Falwell Sr. outlined the goal in his 1979 book “America Can Be Saved!” He said he hoped to see the day when there wouldn’t be “any public schools — the churches will have taken them over and Christians will be running them….”
Mr. Trump’s senior strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, may not appear to be a religious warrior, but he shares the vision of a threatened Christendom.
“I believe the world, and particularly the Judeo-Christian West, is in a crisis,” he said at a conference in 2014. This was “a crisis both of our church, a crisis of our faith, a crisis of the West, a crisis of capitalism.”
What is distinctive about the Christian right’s response to this perceived crisis is its apocalyptic conviction that extreme measures are needed. There is nothing conservative about this agenda; it is radical. Gutting public education will be just the beginning.
Will the Republican-controlled Senate confirm this religious warrior as Secretary of Education? Very likely, as the DeVos family has been a major donor of the Republican party, and Betsy DeVos was head of the Michigan Republican party. Does the Republican party want to advance the agenda of the Christian right? Does it want to privatize and Christianize public school funding? We will soon enough find out.
Meanwhile, here is what you can do to raise your voice: Send an email to your senators urging them to vote against her confirmation.
Even more important, call and visit their district offices and the offices of your Congressperson. Experienced Congressional staff advise that personal phone calls matter a lot. Personal visits matter even more. If you can’t show up at your representatives’ offices, call them.
Tell them to vote against DeVos. Don’t let Betsy DeVos privatize our schools and shower government funding on religious schools.
Defend public education and the principle of separation of church and state.
The Bible also warns us about False Prophets in 100 Bible verses
Here are three of them:
Matthew 7:15
“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.”
2 Peter 2:1
“But false prophets also arose among the people, just as there will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing upon themselves swift destruction.”
Romans 16:18
“For such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive (the deplorables).”
Warning, clicking the following link and reading all 100 Bible versus about False Prophets might lead to higher blood treasure and cause you to lose sleep.
https://www.openbible.info/topics/false_prophets
I wonder when that “swift destruction” will take place.
Yes, Lloyd, I’ve read most of those Bible verses (and many of the New Testament verses in New Testament Greek, which I can puzzle out, albeit slowly).
It doesn’t cause my blood pressure to rise any more than it already has been, because I’m familiar with these.
There is a quote among many Eastern Orthodox: “The Bible didn’t call forth the Church. The Church called forth the Bible.”
Something that the modern (mostly certain Protestant denominations, those who hold to the literal translations of the Bible) do not believe. It’s almost as if they think that the Bible just dropped down from the sky, word for word, and there it is. (Although it also depends upon which translation they cling to. Some are more “accurate” than others. And some of those translations are not entirely accurate, if you read the Greek.)
Then there’s what was left out of the Bible because it didn’t fit the meme the Council of Nicaea decided to build the foundation of the Church on, that Jesus Christ was God and not human with human flaws and emotions.
Several centuries after Christ, the Council of Nicaea decides what the creed (doctrine of the correct way to believe) will be for the Church, and Christ or his students had no say in that decision.
What did the Church do to those who questioned/challenged that creed, the dogma, isn’t that much different than what Donald Trump wants to do to those who won’t follow his creed of greed.
Of course, Lloyd. Well, the Council of Nicea and the Emperor Constantine.
And the church, regardless of subsequent denominations, has always been extremely ugly to those who disagreed.
It’s going to be really, really unpleasant for those who disagree with Trump. (Although, I doubt that he will tear their limbs apart on the rack or burn them at the stake.)
No, Donald Trump won’t waterboard the victims he Twitter bullies. He’ll let the KKK and/or other white supremacist groups do that for him, and from what I’ve been reading, they are already threatening anyone he bullies on Twitter.
If the KKK does it, Trump can join them incognito, because all he has to do is slip into a KKK uniform with “Make America Great Again” printed on the back. The U.S. company that makes his “make American Great Again” hats could sell the KKK uniforms too.
If skin heads do it, Trump will stay home. He’d never shave his head and get rid of that pink-cotton candy he wears on his head. On second thought, he’d never wear a KKK hood. It would mess up his cotton candy head.
I find it more useful to identify entities like DeVos and Falwell as Christo-Fascists, or in the vernacular, Xto-Fascists.
They are a different variety of religious zealot. They don’t believe in organizing their OWN lives in a specific religious way, which I totally support. They are powerfully rich and active trying to bring the common geopolitical realm under their sway, and diminish the freedom of other. As billionaires with media access in Trumpistan, this agenda is essentially a political column.
What saddens me is that Trump, Devos and James Kennedy are all supposed Presbyterians. But they DO NOT represent The Presbyterian Church USA which is the largest and most liberal of Presbyterianism. We are sick of them as they all claim to be Presbyterian. Trump is not my president and Devos’s support of James Kennedy proves she’s also not my Presbyterian nor is
Kennedy. They have no interest in caring for the needy or anything that doesn’t enhance their personal bottom line. Sadly they all think that we should worship them not God and destroy anyone who is not white and/or rich.
Trump doesn’t care about education. He brags about not reading anything and going with his gut. He spent half his campaign calling other people “stupid” and “dummies”.
He doesn’t care what she does in this position. It was a way to reward a GOP donor and activist and the religious Right.
Too bad for the 50 million kids in public schools though. They’re the big losers in this high stakes political game these wealthy people are playing. It’ll be like a feeding frenzy on public schools, all funded by our federal tax dollars.
Sadly history may regard Trump as a useful tool. For now, I’m going to reread “The Handmaid’s Tale”.
I’ve been thinking about “The Handmaid’s Tale” too. Oy.
Yes, me, too. 😦
God’s plan???
Which god?
Maybe Shiva, the Destroyer.
Or the Flying Spaghetti Monster, R’Amen.
Really!? Not the God I know.
Which god do you supposedly know?
“Even more important, call and visit their district offices and the offices of your Congressperson. Experienced Congressional staff advise that personal phone calls matter a lot. Personal visits matter even more. If you can’t show up at your representatives’ offices, call them.”
It takes about five minutes total to call both your senators, two minutes apiece. It’s very simple, no long waits, and you get to an aide quickly. Start here: http://civilrights.org/action_center/resources/calling-congress.html
Truly scary stuff. Can we safely assume that “Christianizing” our schools would mean no more teaching evolution?
I cannot predict the future. But, there are whole string of court decisions, prohibiting the establishment of religion in public schools.
Start with Abingdon v. Schempp 1963.
see https://www.oyez.org/cases/1962/142
If the public wishes evolution to be taught in the public schools, then the public should influence their elected school boards to make it so. If it is already there, work to keep it on the curriculum.
“Government is like fire, a dangerous servant, and a terrible master” George Washington.
Nice quote by Washington. Thanks!
That’s why they want to kill public schools.
FYI here is a link to an article about DeVos in the National Catholic Register today.
http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/considering-betsy-devos-nominee-for-education-secretary