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Why Does Corporate Media Ignore That Palin Wants Extreme Christian Government?

BILL BERKOWITZ FOR BUZZFLASH

The New Apostolic Movement uncovered … and un-covered.

The mainstream media has plenty of time and space to devote to Sarah Palin’s Hollywood hi-jinks, but apparently has little interest in delving into her fantastic religious connections. 

A few weeks back, I interviewed Rachel Tabachnick about a movement of religious conservatives called the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR). The story, which appeared at Alternet on Monday, March 1, was given the rather tantalizing title, “Heads Up: Prayer Warriors and Sarah Palin Are Organizing Spiritual Warfare to Take Over America”. The subhead was also a juicy tease, advising that the NAR was likely “the largest religious movement you’ve never heard of.”

All-in-all, the piece was probably the most extensive article/interview yet published on this movement. While the piece didn’t go “viral,” it did provoke an interesting response. Within a few days, it became one of the “Most READ,” “Most EMAILED” and “Most DISCUSSED” articles at Alternet.

It is safe to assume that before the publication of the piece, most readers had little to no familiarity with the New Apostolic Reformation. This, despite the fact that according to Tabachnick, the New Apostolic Reformation is more than merely another strange conservative religious operation in a crowded universe of strange and unusual conservative religious movements; it is a fully operational political/social/economic movement.  

Reactions to the piece varied from readers that added interesting observations and “thanks for the research,” to the piece “made me puke,” and “what’s so new?” 

A number of websites and blogs linked to the story, including such popular sites at The Huffington Post, Daily Kos, TruthOut, and Beliefnet. A host of lesser-trafficked blogs including God’s Poetry Factory, God Discussion, End Bigotry in Venango County [Pennsylvania], The Oread Daily, and “The Christian Radical,” also linked to – or ran --  the story.  

There were tweets, Reddits, and Diggs.

The mainstream media, however, didn’t pay it any mind.

Neither I nor Tabachnick expected producers of CNN’s “The Situation Room” or the staff at the New York Times would come running. But we hoped it might spark an investigative blaze or two. It still may, but as of this writing (March 16), it hasn’t.

I asked Rachel Tabachnick why she thought the mainstream media wasn’t paying attention to the New Apostolic Reformation. Is it too complex a movement to get a grip on?

“There are a number of reasons that the New Apostolic Reformation hasn’t garnered much attention from the mainstream media,” Tabachnick told me in a series of emails. “I think that in part it’s a question of branding; the movement escapes notice because they don’t have a recognizable name.  If they had a label that was used every time there was a news story about an apostle or other leaders, they probably would have drawn more attention by now.”

She pointed out that “Nondenominational churches don’t get the press that Southern Baptists might receive, for example, because the SBC is a well known entity, and nondenominationals are not identified as a group. 

“There are advantages to claiming to be simply ‘Christian’ with no other label, something that Sarah Palin did during the elections.”  

“We need more and better descriptions for our conversations about religion. For instance, the word evangelical covers many millions of people and a broad array of beliefs just as in found in the broad spectrum of Roman Catholicism or in Judaism. Both Roman Catholicism and Judaism include people with many diverse religious and political views, and so does evangelicalism.  I cringe every time I see writers refer to evangelicals as if they are all the same. Christian Zionist leader John Hagee, for instance, does not represent all evangelicals and neither does C. Peter Wagner, the Presiding Apostle of the NAR.  In fact both are quite controversial in many sectors of the evangelical world.”

Tabachnick also noted that “the NAR structure is different from what we expect from a religious denomination and there has been no quick or easy way for journalists to get information about them.” During the election, Tabachnick spent time on the telephone “with journalists who had questions about the NAR and Palin, but it was difficult for them to accept that there could be a religious movement on this scale that they could not identify or recognize the leadership.”

Interestingly enough, “One of the curious outcomes of that work was that conservative Christian groups who oppose the NAR were posting our articles [which appeared at the Talk2Action blog], while the mainstream media did not get it,” she added.

“I remember reading an article by a writer from a major paper that was very condescending about the attention given to the video of Thomas Muthee anointing Palin. She claimed that it was understandable that he would talk about witchcraft, since he is Kenyan, and therefore there was no story. This journalist totally missed the more important point that Muthee was a well-known religious figure, a leader in the NAR, and a superstar in a series of movies shown to churches around the globe."

Tabachnick posited that getting information in the mainstream press might “continue to be a problem.” Since “journalists can not access a textbook description of the NAR it basically doesn’t really exist for many of them. And this is also increasingly difficult with many denominational churches. For example, during the campaign many journalists assumed that Wasilla Assembly of God, where Sarah Palin was raised, would have specific beliefs because they are a member of the Assemblies of God.  But this particular church had openly embraced NAR ideology years ago and no longer fit the stock description of AOG.”  

But there is another reason that might provide a clue as to why the NAR escapes notice; “they don’t fit the stereotypical picture of religious fundamentalists.” With the “Religious Right constantly reinventing themselves, it appears that it is taking considerable time for this new facade to be recognized.”

That may be because the “NAR welcome women leaders, are truly multi-racial, and are gaining access through extensive involvement in charities and faith-based programming,” Tabachnick pointed out. ”It takes a lot of time to dig into their ideology and find that their so-called openness is not necessarily a matter of altruism, but a well planned assault on religious pluralism and a strategy for taking ‘dominion.’”

Another problem that Tabachnick said she has encountered while trying to publicize information about the NAR is accusations by some that she sounds like a conspiracy theorist. “My primary area of work has been in End Times narratives which are the source of many of the ‘New World Order’ conspiracy theories percolating through our society,” Tabachnick pointed out.

While she “share[s] the concern of those who are careful not to be taken in by irrational and paranoid narratives,” she recognizes that “some traditional fundamentalists actually do view the NAR as the apostate church of the end times and a conspiracy of the anti-Christ. “Since the NAR is poaching on a lot of other people’s churches, their animosity is understandable. However, my problem with the NAR is that the movement is a very real and human assault on separation of church and state.”

Tabachnick maintained that “Those of us who do this research and writing are fighting for religious pluralism which allows Baptists to be Baptists, Jews to be Jews, Presbyterians to be Presbyterians, and so forth. There is nothing anti-religious about our work.   However, in the progressive world I think we often allow the Religious Right to bully us into thinking this means we can’t speak out without being anti-religious. 

“Gary North, one of the leaders of the openly theocratic Reconstructionist movement, has explained how they take advantage of “the dilemma of democratic pluralism” because pluralists must by definition tolerate the agendas of those who would eliminate pluralism. True, but we also have the right and the responsibility to educate the public on threats to religious pluralism, and I believe that one of the great threats at the moment is the dominionist agenda of the New Apostolic Reformation.”




Roaches

The palins of this world are like roaches. Eliminate one, and there's always another one to take her place.

The problem with the palins, bachmans, and coulters of our nation is the free press and public exposure they get, despite their hysterical rants.

Another Reason

 Perhaps the biggest reason that Palin and her NAR are all but ignored by the corporate media is the fact that by ANY measure Palin is too bonkers to stand a chance of aquiring any real power. Therefore any bunch she runs with is in the same sinking boat. As long as reasonably normal people can agree she's a ditz, she'll be ignored into social and political oblivian. So the rest of us can get on with the business of making our lot better.

Anti Religion?

It's easier for people to be taken in by New World Order and black helicopter scares than it is for them to consider how dangerous the dominionists can be. The dominionists want to impose a white Anglo-Saxon Christian "caliphate", and use any allies they can find.

what's wrong with anti-religious?

I am so disgusted with the corporate/religious complex. Anyone who believes any of the crap being peddled by any religion is STUPID! STUPID! Ignorant sheep being led by the nose by greedy predators. The first thing that needs to go is respect for people's religion. I have no respect whatsoever for idiots who believe a huge invisible man in the sky is watching everything and making the rules. Tell me you've talked to God, I'll point you to the nearest mental hospital. Society can only progress when people recognize this scam for what it is. Religion is divisive, illusory, and used as a cover by the most evil people on the planet. With all the real problems we face, the last thing we need is religious dogma (which always somehow excuses the behavior of our venal leaders) mucking everything up. Non-believers are the largest and most marginalized and vilified minority in this country.

the creation of religion

Religion was created to keep poor people from slaughtering the rich.

opiate of the masses

Very simple and not yet said better than this: "Religion is the opiate of the masses".

Right on, leadfoot

I was anti-religious BEFORE it was cool. My mother dragged me into a Welsh babtist church when I  was three or four. I couldn't believe how adults could debase themselves before a charlatan, self-described as a "man of god". They sang his hymns, said "amen" on cue, agreed with his rants about what worms they were, about being "born in sin", and that the ONLY way out of their dire straights was to do and think what the witch doctor said.

To add insult to injury, the fools there actually PAID the charlatan for his performance.

If one ounce of mental energy was employed in critical or analytical thinking, it certainly wasn't in evidence then or there, and that's what's WRONG with organized religion everywhere. It's the assumption that the religious creed (take your pick) somehow exists on a higher plane than ordinary, everyday concerns, and it and its proponents are somehow unassailable, and immune to the very same scrutiny and criticism of a used car salesman or politician.

What REALLY galls me about this racket is their tax-free status.