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Explaining Southern Christian
(Baptist) Views
by an anonymous ex-Southern conservative
I get very antsy when I see this entire election outcome
being blamed on radical conservatism or on ignorance or stupidity.
Because really when people talk about "radical"
conservativism, what they really mean is Southern conservativism,
specifically the kind that originated in the Southern Baptist
church in the late 70's/early 80's. And that makes me unhappy.
I am an ex-Southern conservative. You can say, 'oh, Aja,
you're nothing like them,' but I am. I see my Southern
Baptist upbringing in myself in countless ways every day.
All the things that people claim to love about me are things
that spring directly from a very strong Christian, faith-based
childhood. I may not have read the bible every day but I know
my sunday school stories, and I never ever doubted as a child
that, yes, Jesus loved me. I seek forgiveness everywhere,
forgive whenever I can, and still struggle with not having
forgiveness from certain people for things I have done, because
forgiveness is a cornerstone of my backgroundas
are a really detrimental leaning towards submissiveness, a
penchant for fried chicken, and a really annoying reflex tendency
to see bad things and think 'ack, end of the world!'
I've already said all I can ever say about Southern culture
and Southern life here and here. But there seems to be a need
to say more about Southern conservativism and why it
has spread through the country the way it has.
It starts with the fact that we as conservative Christians
are taught to see America as our land. I mean, you
guys in Europe and the loonies on the East and West Coasts
think the Founding Fathers died to bring us religious freedom.
They so did not. They died to give new Christianity a place
where it could flourish. And if you think that Catholicism
was flourishing perfectly fine before that, thank you, then
you don't understand conservative Christianity. See, I grew
up being taught that Catholicism was almost-sort-of-not-quite-but-we-won't-talk-about-it
cult. Really. Lots of Southern Baptists believe Catholicism
is a cult, despite the fact that it is the largest
practiced religion in the world. If you understand that we
can believe that about Catholicism then maybe you can understand
that American Conservative Christian values don't necessarily
fit into any kind of historical, cultural, or anthropological
perspective. They never really have.
Conservative Christians are taught all our lives that we
are constantly engaged in spiritual warfare. When I was in
6th grade I read a book called This Present Darkness
by novelist Frank Peretti, who really kicked off the Christian
fantasy genre and preceded those awful Left Behind
guys by like 10 years. I read this book and went around fancying
that I saw angels around me, fighting demons everywhere, a
great heavenly host doing battle with unseen forces of darkness.
And I can't really explain to anybody who isn't familiar with
conservative Christianity, but we are taught that this is
real. Demons? Real. Angelic warfare? Real. That passage
in Ephesians about putting on the full armor of God? We take
that seriously. We take everything Paul said seriously, actually.
Way, way, way too seriously, but the reason we take it so
seriously is because Paul has this way of delineating Christianity
as a practice so that you can live it out very easily. He
basically teaches Christians that they are to live every day
as though they are battling persecution. Paul is the classic
propagator of the Us/Them mentality. Them is the World. The
World is evil and sinful and wants to persecute Us. It is
Our job as Conservative Christians to don our armor and wage
war against the World.
When you grow up being raised in this environment, whether
you give it any credence or not, what starts to happen is
that you see things very easily in terms of whether they fit
into the "Us" category or the "World"
category. Since, um, most things fall into the World category,
it gets very easy to compartmentalize in your head, and to,
for example, start thinking, "the media is a tool of
Satan, I shouldn't believe what people are telling me."
And even if you don't think "TOOL OF SATAN!!!!"
every time you hear the media, if you've heard other people
around you and in your church say it enough, even subconsciously
you start doubting the media. How this plays out is that you
begin to filter your environment as a conservative christian
based on what you can easily categorize. Once you have identified,
say, George Bush, as one of Us, it's much easier to disregard
negative news about him because the Media is one of Them,
and the two things can be easily canceled out in your mind.
In the South, the tendency to categorize things, combined
with the fact that we are taught to expect persecution as
a Christian people, has led us to segregate, commit acts of
racism and intolerance, and to be very, very suspicious of
anyone from the North or the West, because all of you are
part of the World.
Conservative beliefs do not spread because of ignorance.
You must understand this. Conservative beliefs spread because
of a need in the conservative church to emphasize that if
you are not fighting, you are losing the battle
for spiritual warfare. And until you have been out there
battling the forces of evil you don't really understand
how every day events can be magnified to fit into a larger
picture of a tapestry of events being orchestrated by Jesus
to lead us on to a higher victory.
I did this, for a year. I joined Campus Crusade in college.
I surrounded myself with Christians who were On Fire for Christ.
I shoved down all my doubts about the church and tried to
really live the life of a true Christian, the life
I had been taught was the life I should be living, all throughout
my childhood. I battled a cult and kept several people from
joining it who were close to me, and it was frightening and
exhilarating and scary and really terrifying at moments, because
fuck if true cult members aren't really scary. I could
use bible verses to argue scripture, toss out verse numbers
like bullets. I was, in Christian-speak, a true warrior for
Christ.
That's what they call us, you know. Warriors for Christ.
The Southern Baptist church is the largest demonination of
any religion in America. We're bigger than the Catholics now.
(Edit: mauvais_minet has pointed out that this is not
in fact true. Poor Baptists, still second-best.) And the single
defining characteristic of the Southern Baptist church for
the last 25 years has been that it has been fighting valiantly
to wage the spiritual warfare on a political level. Frank
Peretti's sequel, Piercing the Darkness, is about takin
the spiritual battle from a personal level to a political
level. If you really want to get into the mind of a conservative
christian than you should really read those two books
because you really need to understand: this is how we think.
I think it's wrong to call Bush a radical. That New Conservative
magazine or whatever it's called should know better. Bush
has never claimed to be a traditional conservative. He doesn't
care about conservative economics, conservative spending and
conservative government. He cares about conservative christian
spiritual warfare.
If I were still a conservative Christian I can tell you exactly
how this election would look to me right now. Kerry is an
immoral man of the World, and I thank God that Bush, a man
of clear moral integrity who is out to defeat Satan regardless
of the forces that stand in his way, has been blessed with
victory. He didn't win the electionGod chose him as
the leader of this nation.
That is how I would view this election. And that is not a
stance that would make me ignorant, stupid, bigoted, or homophobic.
Because I read just as many newspapers then as now. I was
valedictorian of my high school. I was open-minded and tolerant.
And I was always pro-gay rights from the time I made my first
gay friend at age 9.
I was trying to be the best Christian I could be. And I cast
everything in a structured world, where everything was a question
of what I was doing in my walk with Christ, and whether I
was being persecuted.
In fact, I just remembered: a key mantra of Campus Crusade
was this: If you're not being persecuted for your Christianity,
then you're doing something wrong.
I said in my previous post that it was reprehensible to me
that someone could vote for Bush knowing that he went to war
on a lie. And yet, I also understand that by every bit of
education and background I have ever had, I by rights ought
to be voting for Bush because as far as Aja the Conservative
is concerned, he didn't lie, he merely told the truth
from a spiritual perspective, from the perspective of a man
committed to God's work, which involves bringing freedom to
the rest of the world and stamping out the influence of Satan.
That is not an easy or a simplistic rationale.
It took me, from the moment I began questioning the principles
of the Southern Baptist church to the moment I absolutely
decided to leave the church forever, 8 years. 8 years of constant
questioning during which I was the conservative who
was living by all those principles. And the issue that both
initially and ultimately made me leave was the same: gay rights.
Had I not felt that the Southern Baptist church was wrong
on gay rights initially, I would not have really questioned
anything about my belief system or my values. And as long
as eight years is to me from the standpoint of my personal
journey, I know without a doubt that there are millions of
Americans who struggle on one particular issue where they
disagree with their church, but continue to frame their lives
in that outlook of spiritual warfare and constant battling
against persecution.
When you blame the voters who chose Bush, you are completely
mistaking what is happening in our country today. Bush did
not win the election based on ignorance and stupidity. He
won the election based on a belief system that has
been determinedly advancing across the country because Christians
believe it is their spiritual duty to bring people to Christ.
And you cannot be successfully brought to Christ until you
also commit to serving Christ. You cannot successfully
serve Christ unless you do his will. And it is Christ's
will that Bush win re-election. Do you see the pattern at
work here???
You guys, you democrats and liberals, have a tendency to
blame the people rather than the ideologies they represent.
It is my belief that people's lives are shaped by ideologies.
But people's lives are changed by other people. My
life was shaped by the ideology of the Southern Baptist church.
My life was changed when I met Jerry Boles, who died
of AIDS in 1994. My life was changed when my best friend
came out to me 5 years later.
I grew up in a place and in an environment that makes it
impossible for me to accept the idea that Bush voters are
all stupid and ignorant and simply uneducated about the facts.
Out of all the many comments of support on my post from this
afternoon, far and away the most comforting and unexpected
comfort for me today came from my mom. She had emailed me
on Monday to say she'd gotten my letter but hadn't had a chance
to read it yet. And today she wrote me, and this is a part
of what she said:
I just wanted to drop you a note to say hello and hope you
are surviving the day. I know you are very disappointed about
the election, and I wish I were there to comfort you, though
I'd probably wind up just upsetting you more. Your daddy called
a little while ago we talked about the election a little bit.
He would have voted for Kerry. I told him you remind me of
Aunt Gingy the way you and she are/were strong in your political
convictions. All I can say about what you wrote the other
day and about the vote is this. George W is not the first
one to lie, cheat , or whatever. Politics has been a crooked,
shady business since it began. Republicans are not worse than
Democrats in any way. The reason most of the country voted
republican (in my opinion) is because 1) only 17% of young
adults voted and 2) Those of us who are 40+ years old have
lived most of our lives under Democrat rule and have decided
we did not like their policies. As for Granny fussing about
Bush and how much she doesn't like him, she has said the same
thing about every president that has ever held office. She
may be right, but it just shows not many of them are better
than the last or the next one. Any way, try not to live your
life devastated by what goes on in Washington. I don't have
your eloquence with words and I never learned how to argue,
so I can't say much more on the subject. I guess the best
way to put it is get over it and get on with your life. I
need to go. I will be back in touch with you later in the
week. Watch your mail box! Bye! I Love You! MMMMMMNNNNNNHHH!!!!!!!!!!
Love, Mom
That's my mom. That's my conservative right-wing republican
mom. Who thinks my best friend Chris is a great guy and doesn't
want him to get married to his boyfriend. Who is distressed
by my political views but still tries to support me through
an experience she knows is heartbreaking. Who, when I told
her I didn't believe in hell, responded, "well, you'd
better believe in it!" My mom who is the sweetest most
wonderful, giving and gracious woman I know, whose views and
lifestyle represent everything that led Bush to victory. My
mom who fully supports the war her nephew is fighting in.
Is that the face of the Enemy?
I would like to think that my mom, and every mom like her,
is not the face of the enemy. I would like to believe that
she only needs to be brought around by more conversations
and more exposure, a person and a conversation at a time,
to a better understanding of how her own values are being
contradicted by the political spectrum she subscribes to.
That's how I was brought around. A person and a conversation
and an experience at a time. Despite the best efforts of my
church.
I have gone on way too long about this, but I hope that maybe
just maybe this has shed some light on the entire experience
of being a conservative christian, and how it can influence
your vote without any other factors having anything to do
with it. This is not a problem of ignorance and stupidity.
And if you think it is, then I only can offer that maybe you
want to educate yourself a bit more, about how these
types of belief systems are promoted, and spread throughout
America.
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