Conundrums: We should all be very afraid of The Family on C-Street
By Ove Overmyer
“C-Street” is a Washington-based fundamentalist sect living communally in Arlington, Va. They insist they are just a group of friends, yet they funnel millions of dollars through tax-free corporations. They claim to disdain politics, but these are elected congressmen for godsakes, who make up the most influential religious organization in our nation’s capital.
They say they are not Christians, but simply believers. But in what?
Behind the scenes at every National Prayer Breakfast since 1953, The Family is an elite network of senators, operatives and clergymen dedicated to a religion of power for the powerful. Their goal is “Jesus plus nothing.”
Their method is backroom diplomacy and their goal is to inject their version of religious belief into civil rights legislation and the rule of law. The Family is the startling story of how their personal faith — part free-market fundamentalism, part imperial ambition — has come to be interwoven with the affairs of nations around the world.
I first got wind of “The Family” when writer and religious scholar Jeff Sharlet published his new book titled “The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power.” The author managed to infiltrate the most influential and secretive fundamentalist network in America and his reporting is the most astute and original explanation of fundamentalism today.
He was shocked to find himself in the stronghold of a widespread “invisible” network, organized into cells and populated by elite, politically ambitious fundamentalists. Sharlet was present when a leader told a dozen men living at C-Street, “You guys are here to learn how to rule the world.”
The way I see it, this revelation is just plain horrifying. The group sees its role as promoting American power worldwide, promoting unregulated capitalism with no accountability and eradicating the existence of labor unions and public programs to help poor people — all with the notion that godly, powerful, rich white men should get as many financial and social resources as possible.
Evidently, the sect’s founder believed that God gave him a new revelation saying that Christianity had gotten it wrong for two thousand years and what most people think of as Christianity, as being about helping the weak, the poor and the disenfranchised, was misplaced ideology. As unsettling as this all seems, the truth is, they have shaped the faith of our nation in the 20th century and are still driving the politics of religion in 2009.
Jeff Sharlet provides a fascinating account of how the right wing of American Christianity has gone off the deep end. It should worry everyone — especially those of us who understand the Gospel to be a call to administer compassion and help to the powerless and not an instruction booklet to help the already powerful and privileged attain absolute control of the world.
You can’t help but see a connection between this power theology and the fact that disgraced Nevada Sen. John Ensign and two-timing South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford have lived in the C-Street House.
So far, they aren’t quitting their respective jobs, despite the sex and/or money scandals that swirl around them. Isn’t there something absurdly wrong about this type of theology that tells these guys, hey don’t worry about the affair, lying to your spouse, kids, staff and constituents — just stay in office so you can help carry on the mission of The Family?
Then they accuse gays of being threats to marriage and morality.…
When Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina talked about his relationship to this group, he described the living arrangements to the Associated Press six years ago by saying, “We do have a bible study there… somebody will share a verse or a thought, but mostly it’s more of an accountability group to talk about things that are going on in our lives, and how we’re dealing with them.”
The Family members also give each other veto power over their lives. With respect to the Ensign and Sanford scandals, this is nothing more than protecting their own self-interest, giving way to heightened delusions of grandeur and a belief that they answer to a different set of standards. It’s creepy, chilling and despicable all at the same time.
Every American should know about what is really going on at the C-Street House. The Christian Right will never be perceived the same way again if more people begin to comprehend how dangerous and hypocritical these people are and how they have been both betraying Christ’s message and injecting their own controlling chaos into modern day political life in America.
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