Thank God—or any other deity you believe in—this election is almost over.
This is the last column I’ll write before the election, which makes me feel compelled
to say something serious—something so profound that future generations will circulate
the soggy article in their Waterworld universe as the Mad
Max savages close in: “Must … read … Spikol …”
Some think such an apocalyptic future is indeed near at hand. There’s a lot of misery
going on, and whenever that happens some religious fanatic jumps out of a burning bush
and says the Four Horsemen are on their way. I always picture the Horsemen as extras
from a Lord of the Rings movie, but I know that’s wrong. The
Lord of the Rings wasn’t even written, let alone filmed, when the Bible was
pieced together.
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The most prominent doomsayer of the moment is David Jeremiah, leader of a massive
broadcast ministry out of California who just published a book called What in
the World Is Going On: 10 Prophetic Clues You Cannot Afford to Ignore. The
clues include the oil crisis and the rise of Islamic terrorism. So far, so God. But
Jeremiah also mentions things that strike me as odd, like the prominence of the European
Union.
Really? That signifies the end of the world? God does work in
mysterious ways.
Jeremiah isn’t the only one who has that world-ending feeling. There’s a combination
of elements right now—climate change, war, financial collapse, SNL
getting good again—that seem to suggest the End Times. And if you believe in the End
Times, you’re probably pretty excited. It’s as if your favorite book is finally being
adapted for film. You can’t wait to get to the multiplex.
The New York Times’David Brooks wrote last week that the
Republican Party has lost a key constituency: smart people. He said, “a disdain for
liberal intellectuals slipped into a disdain for the educated class as a whole.” He
cited the tiny number of Republicans in academia and the way our unsophisticated,
inarticulate president’s style fits the party to a T. It’s gotten so bad, Brooks tells
us, that the majority of lawyers, doctors, tech execs and investment bankers are now
Democrats. And as Brooks points out, “It took talent for Republicans to lose the banking
community.”
I found it interesting that Brooks didn’t mention religious fanaticism— a kind of
anti-intellectual habit of thought embraced by certain members of the GOP base. In my
secularist opinion, fundamentalism of any stripe goes hand in glove with irrationality,
further alienating logical thinkers from the Grand Old Party.
Sarah Palin is a perfect example. She was brought on board to appeal to the
evangelical segment of the GOP base. But while there are all kinds of palatable
Pentecostal observance, Palin’s brand via her Assembly of God church is seriously goofy.
Most of those living in what Brooks calls the “highly educated regions” the GOP has
alienated would have a hard time relating to Palin’s pastor, Ed Kalnins, who once
suggested that people who voted for John Kerry might not get into heaven. (I got that
from Fox News, so don’t go blaming the liberal media.)
Kalnins also said, to those criticizing Bush’s handling of Hurricane Katrina, “I
question your salvation, I really do.” He believes the Iraq war is a “manifestation of
the spirit world” and that Alaska is a refuge state—one of the few that the saved will
come to when the approaching apocalypse occurs.
Palin says her connection to Kalnins’ Wasilla Assembly of God church is behind her.
But just four months ago she was at the church for a “laying on of hands” by Kalnins.
At that event, she blended politics and religion in a way that makes church-state
separatists cringe. In speaking about a natural gas pipeline for Alaska, she said: “I
think God’s will has to be done in unifying people and companies to get that gas line
built,” she said. “So pray for that.”
Smart people believe pipelines have more to do with lobbyists, money and political
realities than they do with God. God may be in the details, but in pipelines?
In Time magazine’s recent article “Does Sarah Palin Have a
Pentecostal Problem?” Amy Sullivan says Pentecostalism is “characterized by a focus on
the Holy Spirit and a belief in spiritual gifts, such as healing and speaking in
tongues.”
Such religious practice makes critical thinkers uncomfortable—even, reportedly, John
McCain, despite the fact that he told Beliefnet.com that since America is a Christian
nation, he’d prefer a Christian president. (Take that, Joe Lieberman.)
Palin seems to want to talk about Obama’s connection to Rev. Wright. Does she
want to discuss Kalnins too? The more she talks about her religion, her church and her
belief in the End of Days, the more she’s going to push away those snotty intellectuals.
Given my own views, when the Rapture comes, I’m sure I’ll be swept away in some kind
of Cormac McCarthy On the Road nightmare. The proto-civilians will
laugh at my stupidity as they gnaw on my shin bones and sizzle my fingernails into mini
potato chips over a fire.