Jerry Falwell has died, and so the discussion begins.
Usually words about those recently passed are whitewashed to extol every virtue and ignore every vice, but Jerry Falwell’s position and life demand as honest an examination as possible.
Three Sundays ago Jerry Falwell stood up in from of Thomas Road Baptist Church and gave a sermon entitled, “The Indestructibility of God’s Servant.” It was a beautiful sermon about the storms that life brings and the God who is there throughout:
We are to expect storms. Eventually every saint will know the choppy waters of disappointment, the swelling tide of discouragement, the howling wind of defeat and the darkened skies of death. They are to be expected…. But God is in control. He holds not only the saint in His hand, but also the storm.
To the saint, Jesus says, “Peace”.
To the storm, Jesus says, “Be still”.
It was Jerry Falwell at his best – a pastor well versed in the Bible’s words speaking God’s peace and assurance to the biggest problems.
Two Sundays ago, Jerry Falwell, from the same pulpit, began his sermon telling a joke about how Osama Bin Laden had been killed, sent to heaven, and gotten the tar beaten out of him by Madison and Washington and Monroe. It was, Falwell said, the fulfillment of his destiny – eternity with 72 Virginians – not virgins. Then he said this:
Which reminds me of another story from Washington last week reporting that Chelsea Clinton had interviewed some Marines just returning from Iraq. She asked one Marine, “What do you fear most?” He quickly answered, Osama, Obama and your Mama”.
This was the worst of Jerry Falwell, using Jesus’ pulpit for his own angry “Christian” conservatism.
It is ironic and a bit sad that the man who stood on the sidelines during the civil rights movement–saying pastors needed to preach Jesus, not politics–became the leading person marketing Jesus for political ends in the 70s, 80s, and 90s, and that he will be remembered not as a great spiritual leader but a powerful political one.
But that was the choice he made over and over again. Falwell’s Moral Majority became synonymous with Christianity in America, so that today, many people confuse the particular political stance of the Christian Right with the message of Jesus Christ.
The night of Ronald Reagan’s first election to the US presidency, Falwell went on television and made it clear that Reagan owed his victory to the Moral Majority and they were going to make sure he delivered. The next morning at a rally at his Liberty Baptist University, Falwell was introduced to the tunes of “Hail to the Chief,” the theme reserved for the President of the United States.
Politically, Jerry Falwell achieved and failed beyond his wildest dreams. On the one hand, he helped create the Christian conservative movement as we know it today – the single most powerful electoral coalition in American politics, and the movement that made the “Republican Revolution” of 1994 and President Bush’s 2000 and 2004 presidential wins possible. He helped bring Christians who felt they had been cast to the fringes of the American political process front and center. The more voices we have front and center the better.
But he also failed…greatly. Roe v. Wade is still on the books and abortion, despite battles at the fringes, is an entrenched part of American life. I don’t think Falwell could have imagined that thirty years ago. He also failed because the statistics say that he failed. In the last 30 years divorces are up, drug use is up, family formation is down, out-of-wedlock birth is through the roof, and on and on.
Changing politics, Jerry Falwell discovered, didn’t change the soul. Only God can change souls.
And therein lies his complicated spiritual legacy. Jerry Falwell helped heal more people and save more families than anyone in the media has ever reported. He was, after all, the pastor of a church and as such he pastored his flock faithfully.
But he also helped define Jesus for much of America today, and his definition does not do justice to the Jesus of the gospels. When people hear the word “Christian,” too often they think not of Jesus and his teachings but of Jerry Falwell and his politics. I know of a lot of Christians who don’t like to refer to themselves as “Christians” because they are afraid of the Falwellian association.
That’s Jerry Falwell’s mixed legacy. He lived as a Christian, but he also caused confusion about what it means to be Christian.
posted May 15, 2007 at 10:10 pm
May he rest in peace.I disagreed with him on many things, but the disagreement was with his ideas, not his person. He was a man and now he’s passed.For what its worth, divorce rates have been declining since the beginning of the decade.
posted May 15, 2007 at 11:13 pm
Jerry Falwell did not, as you claim, heal families. He hurt millions of families that included gay human beings, made many good Christians to hate or feel ashamed of their gay family members, and then turned around and accused gay human beings of harming their families or ‘family’ – an empty accusation that applied more to him than to innocent gay human beings and their families. He was abusive, a liar, a false prophet and a bigot. Please do not sugarcoat his legacy of blind hatred.
posted May 15, 2007 at 11:15 pm
He even wished we were dead. In his own words: “AIDS is the wrath of a just God against homosexuals. To oppose it would be like an Israelite jumping in the Red Sea to save one of Pharoah’s chariotters.”
posted May 15, 2007 at 11:15 pm
The man was smarmy, smug, oleagenous to the extreme. Even a bit effeminate (and we all know wht “The Bible Says” (TM) about THAT! He bore mean-spirited false witness again and again and again against God’s gay and lesbian children; accused gays, lesbians and feminists of causing 9/11 and hurricanes. I found him vile and will NOT miss him. I only hope God can/will forgive him for his egregious sins against others – all done in the name of politics instead of Christ.
posted May 15, 2007 at 11:40 pm
As a recent college grad and conservative Evangelical, Mr. Falwell will be missed. He was unafraid to speak out on the issues, knowing he would never get a fair hearing. Sure, he made mistakes, but he was only humnan. He apologized which is more than can be said for the other “reverends” on the political scene today. I’m sure he wishes he had done more in the civil rights fight, but hindsight is always 20/20. What matters to me is that he finished well. I have no doubt he heard “Well done good and faithful servant” when he opened his eyes on the other side this morning.
posted May 16, 2007 at 12:02 am
I personally never liked Falwell. To me he represented everything that is negative in American Christianity–the homophobia, the annoying self-righteousness, the ultra-nationalism, etc. To him and his followers you either believed EXACTLY as he believed or you weren’t a “real Christian”. (In other words you had to be a conservative Republican to be Ok in Falwell’s book!)He said many mean-spirited things during the course of his life which made me wonder if he really knew Jesus or was just a charlatan. But that is for God to decide. So now that he is gone I have to say that I will not miss him. Frankly I always thought he gave Christianity a black eye.
posted May 16, 2007 at 12:16 am
I met Dr. Falwell once. I read his biography. I have listened to him preach. The terms “mean-spirited” are typically used by those who are uncomfortable with his condemnation of sin. I understand that. Some of comments claim for the man what he was not. He helped a lot of people: the unborn and unwed mothers, those who needed a helping hand. Yet some of us were uncomfortable with his phrasing, but he gave some liberals colic and dyspepsia. I never doubted his sincerity or honesty. Rather refreshing I thought. May he rest in peace! Longdrycreek Ranch Texas
posted May 16, 2007 at 1:14 am
My heart goes out to his family and all who loved Rev. Falwell. While I really don’t feel it is my place to judge the man, I agree with J-Walking that many of Rev. Falwell’s words and actions did not shine the best light on Christian life. And I do not want my young son to emulate the man’s spiritual expression. But may you RIP, Rev. Falwell.
posted May 16, 2007 at 1:27 am
Falwell was a man who believed what he believed and part of that was Jesus. I hope he’s found favor. Rest in Peace. The best of Americans and the best Christians should be able to discuss Falwell’s legacy without insulting each other or him.
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:12 am
Sometimes people forget that Jesus was a controversial figure. To a large portion of the Jews to whom he spoke he said things that were offensive and incomprehensible. However, he did teach truth. Despite what a majority of the comments posted say, most of Falwell’s stances on social issues ARE in line with historic, orthodox Christianity and traditional exegesis. Whether people disagree or not does not detract from the fact that truth is truth. Sin is still sin and will be judged. Jesus came to bring redemption. If only people would realize that. Grace can only come whem we ALL realize our sinfullness and accept not only God’s pardon but his HELP in battling against sin and evil. Jerry Falwell stood up unashamedly for truth and should be applauded. May God give true Christians the same fortitude.
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:14 am
Jerry Farwell is the type of Christian who turned me off to all Christians. If his witness in their behalf is fine with Christians, it’s fine with me. The world will be more peaceful without Jerry Farwell.
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:25 am
amen, Doug. However, Jesus was controversial because he refused to condemn those that the religion and culture needed to condemn. He did not embrace power, control, and riches. Jesus is the model, I wish to follow. I think of only a few who have done it well – St. Francis did a heck of a job, but that was in the fourteenth century. it’s been awhile and in the meantime, we Christians – left and right – progressive and conservative manage to do Christianity only as well as we can despite our own bigotry, anger, racism, sexism, etc. But somehow, there are still moments when we see Jesus present in the world. The Amish who forgave lasst winter, Brother Roger of Taize, Sister Helen Prejean, Dr. Martin Luther King – we get a glimpse and go on. I’m sure Dr. Falwell got the same glempse as the rest of us and did the best he could. Like all of us he found idols that were not of God (nationalism for him) and scapegoats (gays and lesbians,). Now, if we are Christians, we must look inside and find what it is we make idols and scapegoats. His life was valuable in its brokenness and in its mercy – just like the rest of us. He preached sermons that turned people to good lives, to Christ and he preached sermons that make people feel good about their hatreds and bigotry. Once again, I say in the words of the humble little French saint, “If I am willing to serenely bear the burden of being displeasing to myself, I will be a pleasant place of shelter for Jesus.” We must all keep trying as I am sure Dr. Falwell did every moment of his life.
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:34 am
I found him to be self-righteous and very judgmental. I think he did a fair bit of harm through being instrumental in the creation of the Republican-Evangelical amalgam. Socially he has helped America take a giant step backward. His statements and stand on AIDS have had political effect, and have made the crisis far deeper than it needed to be. Approaching the AIDS crisis and sexual issues from a charitable and loving position would have both mitigated harm and shown the best aspects of Christianity. Instead there is a legacy of death and suffering, and Jerry has a share of the blame for how he used his political and religious influence.
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:13 am
Is this the man that said the tragedy in New Orleans was God’s punishment for the sin he perceived was carried out there? Maybe God punished him with heart problems for his mammoth amounts of intolerance for His children.
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:28 am
One of Jerrys last statement on national TV was that he would accept an atheist for President of USA,than have a weak Christian as President. Can an atheist get a prayer through to God? I am sure he did a lot of good works,but he was more politically incline than promoting the Great commission. May he rest in peace.
posted May 16, 2007 at 4:57 am
Wow, talk about a polarizing figure. While I’d like to be as accomodating as those above who try to emphasize some of Mr Falwell’s “good works”, and that he was indeed true to his beliefs, it’s frankly very, very hard to accept this man’s ultimate mark on the world. As a fellow believer, I can understand how he came to his fundamentalist beliefs, but is there anything truly more depressing than to read of how many people (in the above comments & elsewhere) were “turned off” God & Christianity as a result of Falwell’s politicization of his/our faith? Indeed, I almost feel nauseated at the extreme revulsion perpetrated by his actions — and don’t try to minimize these by saying he was just echoing orthodox Christian views. There *is* a way to love and bring forth change without judgmentalism & condemnation. However, all this said, I actually think his death marks of an era (in a good way) and the birth (hopefully) of a more mature (evangelical) Christianity that will have a positive impact. Maybe Rick Warren’s amazing work portends this, maybe others. But Falwell’s type (Robertson, Dobson, et al) might be less dominant than in the past …
posted May 16, 2007 at 4:58 am
We’ve simply got to call it like it is and Philo does this forthrightly. Nobody should want to desecrate Jerry Falwell but we’re doing ourselves a disservice if we don’t come to grips with these realities. Let’s try to take giant steps forward, this time around.
posted May 16, 2007 at 5:22 am
David — a fair and masterful analysis of Falwell’s legacy. I thought your recent appearance on Larry King was very effective. Sorry you didn’t have more time.
posted May 16, 2007 at 5:35 am
David Kuo,You have no right to blog on this fine man. Your buddies on the Left are rejoicing this very hour that one voice Godly voice against their promotion of abominations is gone. How did Falwell fail for the sins willfully commited by others? Abortions are up because Liberals and progressives have poisoned the minds of the young. to impress on a woman’s mind that the human being within her is just a mass of cells to be flushed away no differently than her mentsrual flow.Divorce is rampant because of the influences like Hollywood elites (hedonists) and the Hippy culture that is now the modern Progressive movement, have encouraged people to be like them. the pitiful cries of children in “broken” familes cry out. But not to God this time. No, those shattered children are crying out to psychologists who give them excuses rather than truth. Pills instead of love. The Gay and Lesbian culture of promoting homosexuality to our youth is not the final harbinger of horror to be visited on a society. It precedes what we are seeing in reality.Jerry Falwell failed no one. He kept to the real Gospel, not the ideology and theolgy of Leftist “anything goes.” Falwell just heard, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” He heard those words just several hours ago. Jerry Falwell kept to the path of Elijah. The one leading to salvation in Christ. He kept to the truth of the Gospel when the world around him embraces the lies he fought. Falwell did not fail the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. That is now exclusively the domain of Liberal theologians and preachers of debauchery and immorality no longer trying to be hidden in Christian garb.Jerry Falwell preached the Gospel no differently than Peter, James, John, Jude and Paul. Falwell joins the list of fine honest Christian men. He preached the words of Christ Jesus no matter the cost.
posted May 16, 2007 at 6:29 am
“Falwell did not fail the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.” Donny Jerry Falwell was a loser – in the same sense that, if you actually read the Old Testament, Abraham (self-centered, immoral liar), Isaac (dysfunctional husband/father) and Jacob (self-serving conspirator and thief) are presented as losers. As with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the only thing Falwell has/had going for him is/was – come to think of it, the very same and only thing any of us have going for us – and that is that our gracious God is loser friendly.
posted May 16, 2007 at 6:37 am
Thank u Donny for confirming what many of us have said for years. The good Rev was NOT the exception, not the way out there , not the overdone preacher many of these apologists now claim. No the good a faithful servant was doing EXACTLY what his religion calls for. Spreading hate, bigotry, intolerance, fear and loathing to all who would listen. His voice is still. Would there were none to take his place. Alas . . .
posted May 16, 2007 at 7:02 am
Jerry Falwell died. And the muckers come out to muck. I’m fighting this. I feel like I’m fighting everyday to try, as Johnny Cash sang, “To keep working out my salvation, trying to get santified.” It’s hard. I get confused. One minute I feel like I get it and get quite prideful about how no one else seems to. And that’s bad. The next, I feel as dumb as a rock and am ashamed that I can’t connect more, live more, the way God wants me to. And that leaves me feeling like a failure. One of the things that has become part of my “work,” so to speak, is to check out David Kuo’s blog. Often I find something helpful, and for that I am appreciative. I generally stay away from the ‘comments’ section. They depress me to no end and literally make my head hurt. (Thinker, you by name are excused from this. Others have made comments that helped, but you stand out, so peace be with you.) But I gave in to temptation on this one. And now I remember why I stay away. The high horses that come to drink the water drive me to exhaustion. And that I stay away isn’t to say that I am above the fray. I’m afraid it means that I’m too weak for it. Run down the list of our lesser angels, and you can generally check each one of them as I read.So I don’t read them and I don’t write on them. But now I am. I’m not sure why. I know this. A man died. He made bold statements meant to divide people. One can only hope, deep down, that he meant to divide the fruitful trees from the non-fruitful. But good intentions do not always lead to good results. Regardless, whether or not he was doing what he did for political reasons, or spiritual reasons, can’t really be known. And it shouldn’t be. Because it’s not our call. It’s simply not our job to say. And it certainly isn’t in good taste to use a man’s death to muck it up. I would say this. If you let someone, whether it be Jerry Falwell, or a disgraced priest, or a inept Sunday school teacher seperate you from God, might I suggest that you re-examine the foundation of the perch from which you were so persuasively knocked? I’ve never been knocked from it. But that’s only because I’m on my hands and knees, knuckles white, hanging on. Because standing on the shoulders of high horses leaves me cold.
posted May 16, 2007 at 7:34 am
I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way, all of them who have tried to secularize America. I point the finger in their face and say ‘you helped this happen’.” – Quote curtsey of Jerry Falwell, in response to the attacks of 9/11 I wonder if the phrase reap what you sow also applies to the afterlife. Gosh I hope so.
posted May 16, 2007 at 7:58 am
You know this is difficult. In some ways I totally agree with David Kuo and yet Falwell is a true hero of mine. People who are only casually familiar with Falwell or the man that is caricatured in the media, sometimes by his poor choice of words, bad timing, or simply wrong views based on a cultural world unfamiliar to most of us, have no idea just how far Jerry has come in his journey. Most don’t realize that there is a fringe element of fundamentalist Christianity from which Jerry came that think Jerry is a “sell out” and I kid you not, “liberal” Jerry walked away from these people some 25 years ago.Jerry was wrong 45 years ago when he said preachers should not be involved in politics during the civil rights marches. Yet two years ago received the NAACP Award of the year in his city.He made a stupid statement about AIDS back in the early 80′s when it appeared only gays were getting the disease. It shouldn’t have mattered. Later in his ministries he reached out to gays and people with AIDS. He never changed his views that homosexuality was wrong because that is his belief based on what he thinks the Bible teaches. Larry Flynt said the most vile things about Jerry having sex with his mom in an outhouse. Yet years later Jerry forgave him and they became friends. Al Sharpton said tonight on Larry King that he and Jerry did not agree on anything yet they were friends. He said that he never saw Jerry trweat anyone hateful or mean. He was someone who always had time for everyone and anyone when they were together. During a personal crisis for Sharpton Jerry would call and check in with him. Larry King said Jerry was so friendly, never mean or hateful, that you could not dislike the guy, When Jesse Jackson Jr.’s wife had a miscarriage several years ago one of his first call THAT day was to Jerry. Does this sound like a man of hate? I’m torn in the sense that I think he got too involved in politics and did equate for many that God was a Republican. Now I am a hard-core Reagan Republican. But I think there is a danger in linking politics to closely to the church, much more than the other way around which most liberals are fearful of. And God is not a partisan pol. I should add BTW that a lot of the remarks that Jerry makes are toungue-in-cheek and jokes, such as the the one Kuo tells about above. When you hear Jerry tell them you know they are in fun, even though there is a bit of “bite” to them.
posted May 16, 2007 at 10:44 am
David – thanks for a thoughtful perspective on a delicate issue. I’m not sure exactly what to make of Falwell’s legacy; I suspect many of us will be sorting it out for awhile.
posted May 16, 2007 at 10:59 am
A mixed legacy it is, that is certain. Falwell and the movement he helped found did all they could to raise up a major neglected group of people in American public life to its full potential. It is mildly ironic that this happened out of opposition to Modernity, yet amounts to a consistency with its aims and ends. Falwell will go down in American political history as a warrior of a movement against Modernity generally and for traditional theism specifically. How Christian and Biblically justified either of the two was will remain controversial, I’m sure. Less disputable is the sequence of growth, empowerment, overreach, overextension, faltering, exhaustion, diminishing, and incremental retreat of this movement as a whole in recent years.
posted May 16, 2007 at 11:36 am
He was a moron who said moronic things.
posted May 16, 2007 at 12:31 pm
To the poster who defended fallwell based on his private friendships and life: sorry, but his public life affected more people than his private life ever will. Falwell demonised lots of innocent groups of people and spread heious lies about them. To the poster who claimed the “horrors” of gays and lesbians teaching kids to accept themselves as they are: Sorry but the reverse is true. Telling innocent kids who happen to be gay that they are hell-bound and responsible for society’s ills just because they are gay or lesbian is a heinous abuse of a child’s innocence. Falwell encouraged this practise among parents who followed him, and many children live their childhoods in fear not only of their parents finding out that they are gay, but also from a “god” that hates them just because of who they are. Such children are often tormented because of what they are and Falwell and his supporters should be ashamed of this, not encouraging it further.
posted May 16, 2007 at 1:49 pm
DannyUK2, Children are also targeted and harmed – because they are innocent – by people and organizations who target them for that reason. Go to massresistance.org and see who and what is after our children “still.” Your post is a perfect example that the GLBT culture and community is a strong and lasting enemy of Christians. Just as it was when Nero and Hadrian were in power in the formative years of the Christian community. It is now legal to go into schools to convince inexperienced children that their strange feelings about sexuality means they should embrace a lifetime. And of course going into schools and trying to tell children about Christ Jesus and a better life lived in moral health, is a crime. Jerry Falwell knew what was coming because he knew the truth about right and wrong and the forces that desire one or the other. Falwell was no prophet, he was just a man that knew who and what the enemies of the Church were and are and what they want and what they are doing. Of course we now have same-sex marriage on the heels of rampnat adultery and divorce. Falwell was just a Christian preaching the truth about sexual immorality. His enemies are the same ones that hated Peter and Paul. GLBT community and its culture of sexuality does not want anything less than what it did when it was pounding on Lot’s door. It wants access to every single person who in turn must pass through it for recognition. Look at the laws being passed in western society and you see the power of Sodom’s politics rising again. I notice with interest that “The Left” which includes the GLBT culture, is very angry when it is dissented of. Christians are now being harrassed even in their schools.Jerry Falwell said what was right, did what was right and lived what was right. Just observe the “kinds” of people that still rant and rave against this man and the Gospel of repentance and salvation that he, the Apostles, and Christ Jesus before them, preached and prayed for without ceasing. Falwell repented of the things he did that were wrong. His enemies and the enemies of the Church will never do what is right.Read Psalm 51 after reading the Gospels. Falwell has passed away. The Gospel and the New Testament truth he lived by and preached will never pass away.
posted May 16, 2007 at 1:52 pm
His messages on everything I hold dear — and everything I believe God wants for us — were appalling. But, his ability to bring his message to the public arena should give all of us progressive religious leaders inspiration and motivation. The Religious Institute on Sexual Morality, Justice, and Healing extends its sympathy to his family, friends, university, church — and even his followers. See my blog at http://debrahaffner.blogspot.com
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:45 pm
Donny has a good point. Just watch the kinds (“kinds”) of people that rejoice at the death of this good man. Rev. Hafner, I wonder what kinds of sexuality you find acceptable and encourage? I’ll bet Donny and Falwell would contend against it. It sounds long winded and typically liberal. I’m starting to see Donny’s points more and more.
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:52 pm
Well Reverend Hafner, It didn’t take long to see that your org is just one of many gay/abortion promoting associations trying to pass itself off as Christian or whatever. Same exact message as the Christian Alliance for progress. See progressive and see the same old sins repackaged in a new name. No one can say that they were not warned about people like you. On that Falwell, like Jesus and his apostles didn’t fail to advise us all.
posted May 16, 2007 at 2:54 pm
Can a good, sane Christian find homosexuality in a purple Teletubbie?
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:01 pm
Jerry Falwell was a despicable human being, and he will most certainly NOT be missed by me or by millions of liberal Christians like me. He perverted the Gospel out of all recognition, all for personal and political gain. I have ZERO respect for Christian fundamentalism, and people like Falwell, Robertson, and Dobson are part of the reason why. They are/were nothing more than modern-day Pharisees, who give Christianity a bad name. Falwell delighted in damning to Hell all those who were not like him, but I’d wager he’s in for an unpleasant surprise as he meets his maker. Lastly, shame on David Kuo for lionizing this pathetic little man.
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:07 pm
Mr Falwell condemnation of sin would not have been so bad had he NOT cherry picked the sins and condemned only those who were not politically advantageous to the cause. He claimed to be pro-life, but I never heard him condemn the death penalty or the various wars his friends have led us into.He was pro-marriage, but as long as you were a multi-divorced neo-con, he didn’t make an issue of it. That evangelicals have one of the highest divorce rates of any religious groups didn’t bother him because he simply ignored that fact.Business dealings by his colleagues who were involved with some of the most despotic dictators, people who were committing horrific human rights abuses upon men, women & children didn’t seem to necessitate his public concern. Did he ever read Mark 10:25? As a Christian who believes we are called upon to live like Christ, I was appalled at what the Reverend Falwell had become. Upon his death, I prayed for his soul because he will have to answer for what he has done, just as the rest of us will have to do. May God have mercy on his soul.
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:08 pm
The world now has one less hateful, bigot.
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:28 pm
He was an evil man who preached hate. It is too bad that he didn’t pass before he created so much damage to innocent people. If I believed in a hell, I’m certain he would be in it.
posted May 16, 2007 at 3:29 pm
As Jesus said, “…He who is without sin, cast the first stone…” God will judge him accordinely, but I doubt it will be a nice judgement.
posted May 16, 2007 at 4:44 pm
God bless Rev. Falwell. Finally someone willing to stand up for what they believe. Sure he was rash at times in the things that he said, but let God be the judge of that. I’ve met Falwell and attended his university. He was a caring man that was willing to help others in need and he did indeed have a heart for souls. I have personally watched 1000′s of peoples lives changed and turned around at his university all because he was willing to stand for what he believed. Falwell was a human that made mistakes no doubt. But he leaves a university behind that will change the U.S. if not the world for Christ.
posted May 16, 2007 at 5:19 pm
Part of me feels as if I should be rejoicing because Falwell is gone, but I can’t. Say what you will about the man (and I could say a lot…) but he did speak up for what he believed, whether I agreed with him or not. If only others had such courage of conviction! I hope he’s in heaven today, and I also hope he has found that many others that he spoke against have made it there as well.
posted May 16, 2007 at 5:33 pm
I don’t generally like speaking ill of the dead, and Jerry Falwell should be mourned like anyone else, but I just don’t see how he lived out anything that resembles what Christians claim as their highest ideals. He presented himself, willingly, as an old-school bigot, exemplifiying primarily arrogance and ignorance. The fact that he could also give a poetic sermon or smile and hug the same people he was tearing apart just makes him a hypocrite. He exemplified the evil inherent in actually living out the mantra of loving the sinner but hating the sin. Despite the good he may have done for his congregation or those who personally knew him, his bigotry and distortion of Christian teachings, his promotion of divisiveness and petty hatred, will be his legacy.
posted May 16, 2007 at 5:43 pm
The article gives him to much credit. He was a bigoted, evil, judgemental, hypocrite who saved nobody other than those whose thirst for hate and power over ride any sense of decency and fairness. I am not exactly in mourning over the passing of such a man.
posted May 16, 2007 at 5:49 pm
Fare thee well, Reverend Falwell.
posted May 16, 2007 at 6:47 pm
JL, you hinted at what I want to say: If Jerry is indeed now in heaven, I’m guessing he is quite surprised by some of the folks he is seeing there with him! I have no problem with a person standing for their convictions. What made the so-called “Moral Majority”, and the “Christian right” (which is often neither) so dangerous is that it wasn’t really about faith or the Christian message. It was about power, cloaked in “the language of Zion”. One hardly needs to enumerate the horrible damage done by those who do what they do in the public or political arena in the name of their religion/God. One of my fondest memories of Jerry Falwell was from years ago, when he and William Sloan Coffin were guests on “Donahue”, debating this and that. Coffin had a manuscript copy of his latest book with him, from which he quoted. Falwell, sounding like an 11-year-old on the playground, baited and taunted him, saying, “Why didn’t you bring your Bible, Bill?” Without missing a beat, Coffin responded, dryly, “I thought you would have yours, Jerry.” Falwell kept his superior smirk, but had no comeback. Loved it!
posted May 16, 2007 at 7:15 pm
If the Amish could forgive the man who murdered their daughters, and the families of the Brown’s Chicken victims can forgive Juan Luna, then surely we can try to forgive Jerry Falwell for making his opinions into idols.
posted May 16, 2007 at 8:01 pm
No, I won’t forgive him. He was a hateful person, and I hope he reaps what he has sown.
posted May 16, 2007 at 8:05 pm
I did not attend Liberty University but another Christian University. However I did get to know Jerry through my three sisters who did. Jerry Falwell opened the way for Christians into the Public Sector. It am not suprised by David Kuo’s innaccurate portayal of Jerry Falwell. He clearly doesn’t know what everyone else does when they visited the campus. A loving man concerned for Christians in American Society. A man concerned for the unborn, and for the teen mothers having to make those tough decisions. Jerry Falwell was not a perfect man, but he was not what Kuo describes. He says, “I know a lot of Christians who don’t like to refer to themselves as “Christians” because they are afraid of the Falwellian association.” Well I know a lot of Christians who feel the same way about David Kuo. Kuo has made a reputation of attacking other Christians, this article is no different.
posted May 16, 2007 at 8:31 pm
Roe vs. Wade… divorce, drug use, out of wedlock birth. I’ll skip the sarcasm, and ask directly. What did Jesus say the day of judgment would be like? Did he say that on one side, he’d speak to those who fought abortion, divorce, drug use and out of wedlock birth? No… on one side would be those who fed the hungry, gave drink to the thirsty, clothed the naked, and visited the sick and imprisoned.Jesus also said that those who spoke for him could be recognized by their fruits. Note: this does not mean that if a person is not bearing good fruit, they are not *saved*. This only says that if a person *speaks* in Jesus’ name, you should look to their fruits to determine whether they are trustworthy.What were his fruits? Did the poor get fed, the hungry nourished? Did justice – that is, folks getting treated fairly – increase? Were the sick given help and comfort, or told they were being given a divine spanking?He helped elect Ronald Reagan… the man who helped make worship of Mammon more acceptable in our society. You know why you can’t worship God and Mammon? Because the godly choice is frequently not the smart money choice. Sometimes being righteous means you have to spend money you wouldn’t have to if you didn’t love your neighbor.I don’t see his legacy as very mixed, I’m afraid.
posted May 16, 2007 at 9:06 pm
Is he getting more credit than he deserved? Was Jerry Falwell this all powerful Conservative Christian leader or just another neo-conservative patsy? In any case I hope he finds forgiveness and the salvation we all hope for.
posted May 17, 2007 at 1:11 am
J Ran If you read this blog regularly, you would find that David does not attack other Christians. In a very “radical”(getting back to “root” beliefs)and prophetic way, he points us back to Jesus, emphasizing what Jesus cared about most — (ultimately in Matthew 25). When Christians stray from the message of the Gospel, David reminds them to get back on the Path.
posted May 17, 2007 at 2:58 pm
It is just simply the good people that Fawell protected and represented, versus the Liberals. They may have morphed into “Progressives” but aFalwell’s voice will not be silenced nor diminished, as he spoke the truth. It can be furthered outlawed by Liberals through their Democrat political machine, but through testing the Church has always been improved.We should shed the chaff and the weeds and grow as strong wheat.Falwell never wavered in his truth about that. Falwell left us a clear delineation of who and what are the enemies of Christians. For that he has done well as a good a faithful servant.That he was so right on the gay culture and its influence on our children and society is being witnessed now by the exaltation and celebration being embraced and encouraged and promoted in our scholls. Jerry Falwell stands as a prophetic voice for the ages. One only needs to look at the content of character of the people that denigrate the life of this man and celebrate the death of this wonderful Pastor.
posted May 17, 2007 at 3:53 pm
May God have mercy on his soul.
posted May 18, 2007 at 1:44 am
I don’t know how you can say that he lived as a Christian. I cannot imagine that Christ would have preached the hate and bigotry that this man did. He as non kind, charitabe and forgiving, traits that I thought were Christian. Perhaps I am wrong. I just try to be good and kind to everyone, not judge, in other words, do the right thing. I thought that I practised Christianity in my own way. It is hard to practice my religion in a structured way because of the bigotry. I was brought up to “not cast the first stone”, this includes to gay people, to all people regardless of their beliefs. Maybe I am wrong? I don’t think so, anyway, I will stay the way I am, and ignore the teachings of people like Mr. Falwell. I do say God Bless his soul, however.
posted May 20, 2007 at 7:06 pm
You know, Jerry Falwell may very well have been a very kind person in private. Trouble is that all we saw was the public speaker who always seemed to be complaining about someone. I am sorry for his family’s loss, but I am not sorry that he will no longer be here to spew hate.
posted May 21, 2007 at 1:54 am
Falwell mixed Christianity all too easily with the folk values and prejudices of rural white America. This may have made the gospel more palatable for folks in Lynchburg. Yet the same rhetoric needlessly turned thousands away from Christ in DC, New York, Chicago, etc.
posted May 21, 2007 at 8:44 am
Posthumously Jerry Falwell stands with clarity. Doing the triple back flip flop into politics he declares the mix of religion turns out was NOT of the devil. In doing so he homogenizes Jews and Catholics with evangelical Christians. Up until then we were taught the Catholics were the harlot who comes with the beast in Revelations. Today we see the Catholics and the evangelicals all on the same team. We are fighting against secularism however make no mistake, we are not the only ones fighting secularism, so are the Muslim extremists & Bin Laden. The plot thickens, could the harlot now be Bin & Jerry’s new flavor of church and state? Or is all this a tinky winky fairy tale? I ride on the wings of cynicism and resignation, but follow it closely. Ironically gay sex compassionately prevents abortions, 100%. Who missed that one? RIP Jerry, you could have had a bigger half time show.
posted May 21, 2007 at 7:07 pm
“Ironically gay sex compassionately prevents abortions, 100%. Who missed that one? Matt Hallstrom” LOL, too true. It also reminds me of a joke I heard; Let the men marry the men, the women marry the women, anyone who wants an abortion to have one, and in a few years there won’t be any more Liberals. (the previous joke does not reflect the attitudes of she who told it). You would think THAT would occur to someone as well
posted May 24, 2007 at 4:48 am
I’ll try to stay on topic and address the blog’s points… first of all, Dr. Falwell was a sincere and good-hearted person. Anyone who got to know him personally (including his political enemies) liked him as a man. Hmmm… that kind of reminds me of Jesus. As far as your point that the jokes about Bin Laden and Hillary Clinton were “angry” and an example of the “worst of Falwell”… huh? Maybe the jokes weren’t “PC” but I hear far worse jokes about our standing President every single night on TV. As to your point that changing politics doesn’t change the soul… well, that is a point worth debating. Your point that “statistics” show a moral decline is valid, but it doesn’t prove where we would be today if Dr. Falwell had remained silent. To all those that hate Dr. Falwell because he stood against sin… sorry, but Jesus ticked people off for the same thing back in His day. Dr. Falwell was a preacher, deal with it. Your argument isn’t with Dr. Falwell, it is with the Word of God. It is intellectually absurd to believe that the Bible is the infallible Word of God and to also claim that homosexuality isn’t sinful behavior. Read the Law (Torah)where it says “You shall not lie with a male as one lies with a female; it is an abomination.”, read the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. Last but not least, read this… Rom 1:22ff Professing to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures. Therefore God gave them over in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, so that their bodies would be dishonored among them. For they exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen. For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural, and in the same way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error. And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper, being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; {they are} gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful; and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them.
posted July 22, 2007 at 1:30 am
Your wrong. Jerry Falwell will always be remembered as the greatest preacher of the Gospel in our generation. I am a “Conservative” because I am a Bible believing Christian, a Jesus lover. But neither Dem or Rep, Conservatives or Liberals (in Canada) will ever solve the problems in the world. I was with Falwell in his moral majority days, and I never quit following him. He spoke the truth from the Biblical prospective. From the Norman Lear days to the Obama days….and just the other day Obama came out supporting sex ed for kinder kids…..I guess Pastor Jerry was right….Obama is to be feared, that is if you beleive in Biblical rightousness and the family..and on and on as Pastor Jerry preached for over 50 yrs.