Why is it Important What Sarah Palin’s Churches & Pastors Preach?
By Michael Lang on Sep 13, 2008 in Political Commentary
Sarah Palin…..…..…..God’s Will…….…….”God Speaks to Me and Told Me…….”
Sarah Palin’s religious view, beliefs and/or practices have created a avalanche of controversy stirring people on all sides of the debate. The Lang Report has been inundated with passionate comments and response to comments with no apparent end in sight. This should come as no surprise as wars have been started and fought over these very same issues.
The Lang Report does not subscribe to the thinking that everything done in the course of a political campaign can all be justified with the adage that “it’s just politics.” It is our belief that there are lines that should be drawn and not crossed. I was elated to hear that Senator Obama is demanding form “his people, a brief respite from partisanship, stating, "I think people’s families are off limits and people’s children are especially off limits."
Having said that it is important to put the whole affair in order and remember that is vying to be a “heartbeat” away from being the most powerful person on earth. With that in mind, is it not our business to know her mind, heart and thoughts. We did not impose this situation on her….she volunteered!
Sarah Palin herself insisted on making her religion an issue so the sermons and teachings of her church, Wasilla Assembly of God can’t be ignored. If politicians are going
to present their religion and religious beliefs to the voting public as part of their qualifications for office, then we should dissect everything taught by their religion and in their churches to see what constitutes the foundations of their worldview.
This will make some politicians uncomfortable, but I think that’s only because they would rather tell the public only the good things they can find in their religious background in order to make themselves look better. They don’t want to talk about anything too negative or unpleasant and they certainly don’t us asking uncomfortable questions about those beliefs, but that’s precisely what we should do until politicians are willing to set aside religion completely as a political matter, both the bits they like and the bits they don’t.
Even religious believers themselves sometimes seem to recognize the need to scrutinize a candidate’s religious background and community, at least when it comes to their political opponents. Conservatives were vociferous in their attacks on Barack Obama’s church, so why shouldn’t their own churches be looked at with a more critical eye? It’s not too hard to find unpleasant religious teachings in conservative churches where pastors attack science, church/state separation, liberty, and modernity.
Nico Pitney and Sam Stein detail some of the things preached by Ed Kalnins, senior pastor of Wasilla Assembly of God where Sarah Palin and her family worshipped for several years:
- critics of President Bush will be banished to hell
- questioned whether people who voted for Sen. John Kerry in 2004 would be accepted to heaven
- charged that the 9/11 terrorist attacks and war in Iraq were part of a war "contending for your faith"
- Jesus "operated from that position of war mode."
- "I believe Alaska is one of the refuge states in the last days, and hundreds of thousands of people are going to come to the state to seek refuge and the church has to be ready to minister to them."
- He also claims to have received direct "words of knowledge" from God, providing him information about past events in other people’s lives.
Video of Kalnins and Palin from June 8, 2008 (via wasillaag.net):
What does it say about a church’s politics when they consign to eternal torture and damnation anyone who dares criticize a mere political leader? This fuses politics and religion to a degree rarely seen even among Christian Nationalists. It’s hardly surprising that such a church would also teach that Jesus — supposedly the "prince of peace" — would adopt a perspective of war and violence against brown foreigners.
Ken Silverstein and Sebastian Jones quote some of the ideas preached by David Pepper, senior pastor at Church on the Rock in Palin’s hometown of Wasilla:
- From an November 25, 2007 sermon: “The purpose for the United States is… to glorify God. This nation is a Christian nation.”
- From an October 28, 2007 sermon: “God will not be mocked. I don’t care what the ACLU says. God will not be mocked. I don’t care what atheists say. God will not be mocked. I don’t care what’s going on in the nation today with so much horrific rebellion and sin and things that take place. God will not be mocked. Judgment Day is coming. Where do you stand?”
- From an October 28, 2007 sermon: “Just giving in a little bit is a disastrous thing…You can’t serve both man and God. It is one or the other.”
If the purpose of America is to "glorify God," then it can’t be to secure liberty or freedom — and it’s hardly necessary for leaders to worry about liberty and freedom. So long as America’s leaders are "glorifying" God, then they are doing their job and that’s OK. Is this what we really want from the people we elect? It’s what Sarah Palin has been taught.
They also quote Mike Rose, senior pastor of the Juneau Christian Center where Palin and her family have worshipped since 2006:
- From a July 8, 2007 sermon: “Those that die without Christ have a horrible, horrible surprise.”
- From a July 28, 2007 sermon: “Do you believe we’re in the last days? After listening to Newt Gingrich and the prime minister of Israel and a number of others at our gathering, I became convinced, and I have been convinced for some time. We are living in the last days. These are incredible times to live in.”
The first quote should remind us that orthodox Christianity denies any real legitimacy to other religions: if you aren’t a Christian when you die, you simply have no hope for the afterlife. Liberal Christians have tried to get away from this, but it’s an indelible part of Christian tradition. The second quote, though, is much more of a minority viewpoint in modern Christianity: not that there will be an "end times" at some point, but that the current times are the end times. Lots of Christians have thought this at various points through history and all have been wrong. Mike Rose is wrong as well, just as he is wrong about everything else in his religion.
Simply being wrong isn’t necessarily a big deal because we are all wrong at some point, but when reading his glee about the "last days" we should remember that people like Rose believe that it’s a time when the majority of humanity suffers greatly, civilization is destroyed, and only the lucky few can avoid eternal damnation. Being happy about this on the same moral level as being happy that one is among the lucky few to avoid Auschwitz, and it’s the sort of religious teaching which Sarah Palin has been absorbing for the past couple of years. Do we really want America to be run by people who look forward with happiness to Armageddon?
AROUND THE BLOGOSPHERE:
Democrats criticize Palin’s religion at their peril - Gerson, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, is a columnist for the Washington Post. WASHINGTON — There are reasons to question the choice of the commander of the Alaska National Guard as a prospective commander in…
Assessing Palin’s Religion - Overall, I’m pretty much in accord with Steve Waldman’s assessment of what is and is not "scary" (as he puts it) about Palin’s religion, as it may affect her governing style. One religious question about Palin that Waldman leaves out, …
Palin, Religion, and how Secularism is out of touch - When Palin says such things, it is speaking the language of her audience but is also a call to weed out corruption. For Khamenei, he’s speaking from a context outside of freedom of conscience and refers to a specific religion. …
Palin, religion, the 2008 election - Although Sarah Palin’s entry into the 2008 presidential race has energized the religious right within the Republican Party, don’t expect religion to be a major issue in this year’s election, says University of Alabama at Birmingham …
Sarah Palin, religion and the Pentecostals — when CNN attacks - CNN has a story on its website about Sarah Palin and religion. Here’s the headline:. Pastor: GOP may be downplaying Palin’s religious beliefs. And here’s a nugget:. McGraw says Palin’s Pentecostal roots may be being downplayed for a …
Sarah Palin Is the Most Dangerous Woman in America - The issue of Sarah Palin’s religion has become the topic of the week in the mainstream media. To their credit they have uncovered a host of facts, both interesting, and frankly a bit scary. But as is often is the case with the …



16 Comment(s)
By P Alfonso on Sep 18, 2008 | Reply
This subject should not even be up for discussion.
First of all the VP choice of one party does not run against the Presidential choice of the other party.
On one side there is a hard working religious and country loving person that would enjoy being given the opportunity to work and represent all of the hard working citizens of our country. Of course the working people are the one who pay taxes and keep our country going.
On the other side there is an opportunist that has had relationships with and received favors from felons and terrorists. A person that bragged about having a twenty years mentor who has said that God damn America and that his government infected its citizens with the AIDS virus. A person who has made clear his intentions of not representing our hard working taxpaying citizens but only certain groups in our society while excluding the rest.
The choice should be easy. http://www.readwhatisee.com
By Linda Perry on Oct 19, 2008 | Reply
When Americans vote in fear or out of fear, then they have simply forgotten where they are or what America is all about.
We are run by a group of individuals, not by one person; We are not run by a President or Vice President, so vote without fear, for the proper candidate.
When you decide not to vote for Palin because of her religious or church affiliation or beliefs, you are voting or not voting out of fear. This is America, not Germany of the past. So, vote from your heart, without fear.
I have enough confidence in the American system of government that I am not worried about someone being elected as Vice President or President. Bottom line is that neither of them “run” the country, and they always have the options of being voted out in the future.
So put your fears away, and vote confidently, vote intelligently, and vote without fear.
My view on the matter:
http://www.ehow.com/how_4552401_president-how-elect-sarah-palin.html?loggedout=1
http://www.ehow.com/how_4552401_president-how-elect-sarah-palin.html?loggedout=1
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