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Ministries|Fri, Mar. 14 2008 04:08 PM EDT

Christian Right Leaders Respond to Dobson’s Concerns

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

WASHINGTON – Words of comfort and assurance flowed forth from two prominent conservative leaders this week when they heard that Dr. James Dobson, one of the founding fathers of the Christian right movement, was concerned about the future of the religious right and its leadership.

Bishop Harry R. Jackson Jr. and Tony Perkins, both close friends of Dobson, reassured the founder of Focus on the Family that they would carry the Christian right torch into the next generation. But they were also quick to highlight that the movement will look different as it changes to adapt to the time.

“I believe that the next leaders of the movement need to be people of color, that would be very uniting, and would help the movement expand its agenda,” said Jackson, chairman of High Impact Leadership Coalition – a conservative black Christian group – to The Christian Post on Wednesday.

Jackson and Perkins were at an event to launch their new book, Personal Faith, Public Policy, in which they declare that the religious right is not dead but rather changing and maturing.

In their book, they tackle seven issues – some of which are relatively new to the movement – including immigration, poverty and justice, and the environment and global warming. The co-authors believe that the religious right must now expand its influence into these public policy areas.

“I believe this book is an attempt to give words to the change that Dr. Dobson feels that needs to happen,” Jackson said. “This is an intellectual, architectural game plan of a fresh move for the religious right.

“So I would say to Dr. Dobson, ‘Dr. Dobson, don’t be worried, we got it,” assured the up-and-rising black megachurch pastor.

Jackson added that he is not “vying to be coronated” the next Christian right leader, but wanted to help write the “blueprint” for the movement.

“I think Tony and I are simply saying that we want to be part of the scriptural, biblical leadership of the next movement,” he noted.

Dobson told a group of Christian broadcasters earlier this week that he was concerned about the Christian right’s future leadership with the passing of fellow conservative leaders, including Jerry Falwell, the Rev. D. James Kennedy and Ruth Bell Graham.

Others, such as Billy Graham, Chuck Colson, Pat Robertson and Chuck Swindoll, will also soon leave their leadership seats empty, he added.

"It causes me to wonder who will be left to carry the banner when this generation of leaders is gone," Dobson said at the National Religious Broadcasters conference, according to The Associated Press. "The question is, will the younger generation heed the call? Who will defend the unborn child in the years to come? Who will plead for the Terri Schiavos of the world? Who's going to fight for the institution of marriage, which is on the ropes today."

The 71-year-old Christian leader continued, “Who in the next generation will be willing to take the heat, when it's so much safer and more comfortable to avoid controversial subjects. What will be the impact on the conservative Christian church when the patriarchs have passed?"

When questioned about Dobson’s concerns, Perkins, president of Family Research Council, said his parents read Dobson’s books when raising him and that he had “deep appreciation” for both Dobson and Jerry Falwell’s leadership. Continue >>

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  • Sat Mar 22, 2008 1:55 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Brainetree,

    Very well written post. You kind of seem to be talking in circles here however. On one hand you proclaim liberty and on the other hand you criticize those who are putting into practice their constitutional responsibilities. You judge them for not being totally 100% other worldly, while at the same time criticizing them for taking part in God’s kingdom on earth. You would probably be quick to quote how God sets up the rulers; yet quick to criticize that same fallible man.

    You should study a bit more of the history involved here and then maybe you would be able to articulate your thoughts with better understanding. Furthermore, if you think this is about some kind of theocracy, I think that is overkill. There are numerous strategies in full swing to undermine our religious freedom. Maybe you should browse some of the alternative news outlets such as WND. There is a reason why America is a nation where people are dying to get in rather than dying to get out.

    Then again, why am I telling you this? You probably are a member of atheists united for the separation between church and state. This is not a secularist society and it was never intended to be. I don’t know what bothers you secular humanists the most; that a Christian like Bush could be put in office today or that a radical left-wing Christian like Obama can take over the alternative political camp. Maybe it just bothers you that Christians are tired of being walked on in the political process.

    Mr. Braintree, may I ask which party you will be voting for? Maybe it will be the Green Party? You know, I am a Christian first, but I do love my country. I am especially intrigued by the history of our great nation and even more so of what made it so great. There is nothing stopping revolutionaries as yourself from moving across the boarder. That is to say, if America is so terrible.

  • Fri Mar 21, 2008 9:38 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    Would that the Christian Right, as a movement, were dead. Jesus said, "My kingdom is not of this world." It is an apostate and spiritually dead church that seeks political power. Whenever the church has obtained secular power, she has employed it to punish dissent from her doctrines.

    You who are itching to get control of the state, you are on the wrong track. Our Founding Fathers wisely sought to guard against the employment of securlar power on the part of the church with its inevitable result, intolerance and persecution. The Constitution provides that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

    "The Bush administration has steadily diverted billions of dollars of taxpayer money from secular and governmental social-service organizations to faith-based organizations, bankrolling churches and organizations that seek to dismantle American democracy and create a theocratic state. . . the wall between church and state is being disassembled." Fascist Americans by Chris Hedges, p. 23.

    President Bush has set in operation elements that will strengthen the fascist Christian Right and turn our beloved America into a nation we no longer recognize. These forces are poised and ready, in the event of a great fiscal crisis, to ruthlessly seize control in the name of national security and turn America into theocratic dictatorship.

    Concludes Catherine Crier in a Huffingtonpost dot com article "CONTEMPT -- How the Right Is Wronging American Justice": "For all of those Americans who believe that our democracy is safe, you are wrong. Today, the radical Right is winning, and they know it. Sooner rather than later, we may be living in a very different country, a country that had been ours, a country that will be theirs."

    "What influence, in fact, have ecclesiastical establishments had on society? In some instances they have been seen to erect a spiritual tyranny on the ruins of civil authority; in many instances they have been upholding the thrones of political tyranny; in no instance have they been the guardians of the liberties of the people. Rulers who wish to subvert the public liberty may have found an established clergy convenient allies."
    -James Madison

  • Mon Mar 17, 2008 10:42 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    God will raise up a prophet...or 2.... there will always be someone fighting at the fore.... And who God calls He equips.. fear not...

  • Sun Mar 16, 2008 12:08 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    It just doesn't sound like either Jackson or Perkins would carry the same message for conservatives as Dobson and his generation have.

    I'm sure their book will do well though.

  • Fri Mar 14, 2008 9:35 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Don't call it a movement. That carries a connotation of a fad. While there are new issues that we may be dealing with today than 20-30 years ago, those issues are simply symptoms of a sinful and depraved world. The Church must continue (or arguably begin) to take a stand for holiness and refuse to compromise the core doctrines of the faith. This is what our "movement" must be known for. The individual organizations and ministries should focus on a single issue or symptom, trying to tackle it from a Christ-like perspective using Christ-like methods.

  • ML »
    Fri Mar 14, 2008 6:57 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    These men and women are great citizens of the kingdom of God. They do their best, but it is up to the mainstream America population to carry the cross, raise children with moral values, and patriotism, along with compassion for the poor and to lift up the oppressed. Everyone in America is responsible to love their fellow man and give dignity and the saving gospel of the Lord to others in the USA and to our world.

  • Fri Mar 14, 2008 6:11 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    James, what is the difference between Fundamentalists and Ecumenicals?
    The difference is as clear as the definition of heresy.
    You Believe Yahweh and do what He says you are a fundamentalist. Ecumenicals don't...
    And they both claim the title "evangelical".
    "fundamentalist evangelical" ?
    Patrick J. Burwell / OnlyJesusSaves.com

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