The
Christianity of George WMD Bush
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
Everybody
talkin’ ’bout heaven ain’t a goin’ there. ~ Johnny Cash, "I
Got Shoes"
F**k Saddam.
We’re taking him out! ~ George W. Bush
Wherefore
by their fruits ye shall know them. ~ Matthew 7:20
It
would be presumptuous on the part of any man to pass judgment on
the genuineness of President Bush’s Christianity: "For man
looketh on the outward appearance, but the LORD looketh on the heart"
(1 Samuel 16:7). But as a Christian, I would be remiss if I did
not point out the seriously defective nature of the president’s
Christianity.
It
is not just that the Christianity of George Bush is very ecumenical
and inclusive that is characteristic of much of what passes
for Christianity nowadays. The Christianity of George WMD Bush is
warped and unorthodox.
I
am not condemning Bush’s Christianity because of the manifold inconsistencies
that exist between his words and his actions. Thus, I am not going
to criticize the president for preaching "family values"
and then using foul
language, inviting rocker
Ozzy Osbourne to the White House, having a wife who delivers
off-color
jokes, and raising daughters who have used fake
IDs so they could get a drink. And neither am I going to criticize
the president for saying he is "pro-family" and then appointing
an openly homosexual ambassador to Romania, Michael Guest, who
moved into the U.S. Embassy compound in Bucharest with his "partner."
I am not even going to criticize the president for claiming to be
"anti-abortion" and "pro-life" and then demonstrating
that he
is neither. I am condemning Bush’s Christianity because of his
theology.
There
is no question that Bush is the darling of the Religious Right;
however, his spiritual journey to that position is somewhat convoluted.
He was born in New Haven, Connecticut, as an Episcopalian. When
his parents moved to Midland, Texas, they attended the First Presbyterian
Church. But when they moved to Houston, the family switched to St.
Martin’s Episcopal Church, returning to "the denomination my
dad was raised in." It was here that young George served communion
as an altar boy and "felt the first stirrings of a faith that
would be years in the shaping." When he was sent to school
in Andover at the age of fifteen, Bush was required to attend a
Congregationalist-style chapel service five times a week. After
his graduation from Harvard in 1975, he returned to Midland, Texas,
and attended the Presbyterian church of his youth. Although he taught
Sunday School and served on the finance committee, Bush smoked,
drank heavily, chewed tobacco, and "cursed harder than a grease-stained
roustabout." In 1977, Bush met a member of the First United
Methodist Church in Midland and married Laura at that church just
a few months later. He thereafter became a Methodist, teaching Sunday
School at the church and serving on the finance committee. Bush
and his family would later attend Highland Park Methodist Church
in Dallas and, when he became governor of Texas, Tarrytown United
Methodist Church in Austin.
Enter
Evangelist Arthur Blessitt.
Blessitt is listed in The
Guinness Book of World Records as taking the world’s longest
walk. Since 1969, he has carried a twelve-foot cross as he walked
around every nation in the world, logging over 36,000 miles. In
1984, the evangelist came to Midland, Texas, the home of George
W. Bush. Blessitt and Bush met in a hotel room where, according
to Blessitt, Bush accepted Jesus Christ as his Savior. The two
would not meet again until 1999, when, during his first presidential
campaign, Bush spoke to and was photographed with Blessitt at a
political fundraiser.
But
Bush has never spoken publicly about his first meeting with Blessitt.
He never told any of his close political acquaintances. And he never
wrote about it in his autobiography, A
Charge to Keep. What Bush has mentioned is his meeting in
1985 with Evangelist Billy
Graham on a beach in Kennebunkport, Maine. According to Bush:
Graham planted
a mustard seed in my soul, a seed that grew over the next year.
He led me to the path, and I began walking. And it was the beginning
of a change in my life. I had always been a religious person,
had regularly attended church, even taught Sunday school and served
as an altar boy. But that weekend my faith took on a new meaning.
It was the beginning of a new walk where I would recommit my heart
to Jesus Christ.
In
1986, after waking up with a hangover and trying to perform his
"usual run," Bush abruptly quit drinking. Sometime in
the early 1990s, he also gave up smoking and tobacco chewing, but,
in the words of one of his biographers, "his language could
still be what is charitably called ‘colorful,’ and even on the presidential
campaign trail, he sometimes let out expletives when someone displeased
him."
During
his second gubernatorial inauguration in 1999, Bush attended a special
service at the First United Methodist Church in Austin, Texas, led
by his old friend, Mark Craig, from Highland Park United Methodist
Church in Dallas. Bush claims it was through Craig’s sermon that
God called him to run for president. He then sought guidance from
Texas evangelist James Robison.
Bush told the evangelist: "I can’t explain it, but I sense
my country is going to need me. Something is going to happen, and,
at that time, my country is going to need me. I know it won’t be
easy, on me or my family, but God wants me to do it."
In
addition to Graham, Craig, and Robison, Bush counts among his friends
Tony Evans of Oak Cliff
Bible Fellowship Church in Dallas, Texas; Kirbyjon
Caldwell of Windsor Village United Methodist Church in Houston,
Texas; and Ed Young of Houston’s
Second Baptist Church. He supposedly reads his Bible every day along
with daily passages from devotional books. His favorite authors
are said to be Oswald
Chambers, Charles
Stanley, and Charles
Spurgeon, although Bush obviously does not heed Spurgeon’s
advice when it comes to war.
So
what could possibly be wrong with Bush’s theology?
Since
the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Bush has gone out of
his way to maintain that Islam is a religion of peace that is not
much different than other religions. Indeed, our "Christian"
president has gone overboard, not just in his tolerance of, but
in his promotion of Islam.
On
November 19, 2001, Bush
hosted a Ramadan fast-breaking dinner (an Iftar) at the White
House for fifty Muslim ambassadors. The
president said in his opening remarks that the United States
is "made better by millions of Muslim citizens."
On
October 11, 2002, when commenting on U.S. humanitarian aid to Afghanistan,
Bush stated
about Islam: "Islam is a vibrant faith. Millions of our
fellow citizens are Muslim. We respect the faith. We honor its traditions."
On
November 7, 2002, Bush
hosted another Iftar at the White House "to help usher
in the holy month of Ramadan."
On
October 24, 2003, Bush
released an official presidential message on Ramadan in which
he said that "people who practice the Islamic faith have made
great contributions to our Nation and the world."
On
October 28, 2003, Bush
hosted yet another Iftar at the White House with ambassadors
and Muslim leaders. During this dinner he had a Muslim Imam lead
in prayer.
On
October 15, 2004, Bush
released another official presidential message on Ramadan in
which he said that "Americans who practice the Islamic faith
enrich our society and help our Nation build a better future."
Some
Christians will excuse Bush’s attempts to placate Muslims by saying
that since Bush is the president he has to participate in certain
functions as the head of state. True, but when did Nixon, Reagan,
or even Bush’s father promote Ramadan? Ah, we are told, this is
necessary because the world is different since the September 11th
attacks! I wonder how many years will have to pass before we cease
to hear that trite cliché? Other Christians will dismiss
Bush’s actions by saying that, after all, he is just a politician,
and politicians say and do a lot of things that they really don’t
believe and don’t want to do. But I thought Bush was a Christian?
Aren’t Christians supposed to "provide things honest in the
sight of all men" (Romans 12:17)? Okay, still other Christians
say, Bush means well, he is just naïve about Islam but
his Christianity is genuine. The first part of that statement is
certainly true, but what of the second?
The
disturbing thing about Bush’s Christianity is not his naïveté,
his hosting of Ramadan dinners, or his statements about Islam. What
is so troubling about Bush’s Christianity is his anti-Christian
theology. He told the leader of Turkey (a Muslim) that they both
believe in "the Almighty." When questioned by a British
reporter about the God of Islam being the same as the God of Christianity,
Bush replied: "I believe we worship the same God." In
an October 26, 2004, Good
Morning American interview with Charles Gibson, Bush was asked:
"Do we all worship the same God, Christian and Muslim?"
His reply: "I think we do."
It
is impossible that Christians and Muslims worship the same God,
and for one simple reason: Allah had no son. The
Koran teaches that Allah had no son (4:171, 6:101, 9:30, 10:68,
17:111, 18:4,19:35, 19:88-92, 23:91, 25:2, 39:4, 72:3, 112:1-3);
the Bible
teaches that God had a son, Jesus Christ (Matthew 27:54, Mark 1:1,
Luke 1:35, John 3:18, Acts 9:20, Romans 1:4, 2 Corinthians 1:19,
Galatians 2:20, Ephesians 4:13, Hebrews 4:14, 1 John 5:20, Revelation
2:18). It doesn’t matter if you believe that the Koran is right
and the Bible is wrong or that the Bible is right and the Koran
is wrong; the result is still the same: Christians and Muslims couldn’t
possibly worship the same God.
But
it is not just Islam that Bush is confused about. Evangelical Christians
who rejoice when they hear Bush talk about faith ought to do a little
investigating before they get so ecstatic. When I talk about faith,
says the president:
I don’t talk
about a particular faith. I believe the Lord can work through
many faiths, whether it be the Christian faith, the Jewish faith,
Muslim faith, Hindu faith. When I speak of faith, I speak of all
faiths, because there is a universal call, and that main universal
call is to love your neighbor. It extends throughout all faith.
So,
it is not just Christians and Muslims that Bush thinks worship the
same God. The god worshipped by any "faith" and the God
of Christianity are one and the same. How can "the Lord work
through many faiths" unless he is the God of all faiths?
In
his Good
Morning American interview, Bush was also asked by Charles Gibson:
"Do Christians and non-Christians and Muslims go to heaven
in your mind?" His reply: "Yes, they do. We have different
routes of getting there. But I will, I, I want you to understand,
I want your listeners to understand, I don’t get to decide who goes
to heaven. The almighty God decides who goes to heaven. And I am
on my personal walk."
So
according to President Bush, one religion is just as good as another.
It doesn’t matter what "faith" a person holds to
Christian, Jewish, Muslim, or Hindu as long as you have "faith."
But even that is probably saying too much, for the question put
to Bush about who is going to heaven included "non-Christians."
That could mean adherents of any non-Christian religion Judaism,
Buddhism, Taoism, Animism, Confucianism, Shintoism, Zoroastrianism,
Sikhism, Scientology, Rosicrucianism, Islam, or Hinduism
or adherents of no religion atheists and agnostics.
According
to the Bible that Bush professes to read and believe, one religion
is not just as good as another. Christianity is an exclusive
religion:
I said therefore
unto you, that ye shall die in your sins: for if ye believe not
that I am he, ye shall die in your sins (John 8:24).
Jesus saith
unto him, I am the way, the truth and the life; no man cometh
unto the Father but by me (John 14:6).
Neither is
there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under
heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved (Acts 4:12).
It
doesn’t matter if you are an atheist, an agnostic, or an adherent
of some Eastern religion and object vehemently to the truth of these
statements from the New Testament. A Christian is supposed to believe
that salvation is through the Lord Jesus Christ only and the Lord
Jesus Christ alone.
To
reject the uniqueness of Christianity is to question the purpose
of the Incarnation and Atonement of Christ. It was widely
reported during Bush’s first campaign for the presidency that
when the six Republican Party presidential candidates met for a
debate in Des Moines, Iowa, on December 13, 1999, the then Governor
Bush stunned the audience by answering "Christ, because he
changed my heart" when the local news anchor asked each of
the aspirants to name the political philosopher they most identified
with and why. Bush’s denial of the uniqueness of Christianity means
that Christ was just that a philosopher not "the
Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world" (John
1:29).
Because
of the defective view of his Christianity, Bush would not be qualified
to teach a Sunday School class or even a Vacation Bible School class
in an orthodox Christian church. And yet, Bush has on at least one
occasion delivered a sermon in a church. On March 6, 1999, Bush
"preached" the sermon, "Faith Can Change Lives,"
at the Second Baptist Church of Houston, Texas. He talks a lot about
faith in his sermon, but it rings hollow in light of his statement
about God working through many faiths. And the strangest thing about
Bush’s "sermon" and something that the congregation
should have picked up on immediately is its total absence
of any Scripture. It is not based on any text of Scripture. There
are no quotations from Scripture. The only specific reference to
the Scripture is when Bush recounted to the congregation about his
trip to Israel with three other governors. As his party was standing
beside the Sea of Galilee, someone suggested that the four governors
each read a portion of Scripture. According to Bush, "Three
governors went first. And, that finally finished, I decided not
to read Scripture. I decided to read ‘Amazing Grace,’ which is my
favorite hymn."
If
one is looking for a president to serve as a Christian role model,
there are other examples besides President Bush. Jimmy Carter, who
professed to be "born again" and taught Sunday School
at a Baptist church, is one such individual, although I certainly
don’t agree with his Democratic Party politics (not that I agree
with Bush’s Republican Party politics either). In an interview
for the History Channel, former president Carter succinctly
stated his differences with the current president over the war in
Iraq: "I worship the prince of peace, not the prince of war.
And to launch a war that might take 50,000 Iraqi lives and so forth,
I think 1,300 American lives, unnecessarily, I believe still unnecessarily,
based completely on false premises, does contradict my own standard
of religious faith." Carter
also realized that Christian "just war" principles
prohibited such a war: "As a Christian and as a president who
was severely provoked by international crises, I became thoroughly
familiar with the principles of a just war, and it is clear that
a substantially unilateral attack on Iraq does not meet these standards."
So
why doesn’t the Religious Right follow Carter on the war issue instead
of Bush? Simple: Carter is a Democrat and Bush is a Republican.
The Religious Right is in bed with the Republican Party, and is
enjoying the affair. But what is this but a case of spiritual adultery?
God
deliver us from the defective Christianity of George WMD Bush!
[Unless
stated otherwise, all quotations by the president are from Stephen
Mansfield’s The
Faith of George Bush, David Aikman’s A
Man Of Faith: The Spiritual Journey of George W. Bush, or
the president’s own book, A
Charge to Keep. For another look at Bush that is not so favorable,
see Kitty Kelley’s The
Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty.]
May
23, 2005
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
is a freelance writer and an adjunct instructor in accounting and
economics at Pensacola Junior College in Pensacola, FL. His new
book is Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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M. Vance Archives
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