PDA

View Full Version : Tribute from Ann...Falwell



AggieTool
5/18/2007, 04:50 PM
JERRY FALWELL — SAY HELLO TO RONALD REAGAN!
May 16, 2007


No man in the last century better illustrated Jesus' warning that "All men will hate you because of me" than the Rev. Jerry Falwell, who left this world on Tuesday. Separately, no man better illustrates my warning that it doesn't pay to be nice to liberals.

Falwell was a perfected Christian. He exuded Christian love for all men, hating sin while loving sinners. This is as opposed to liberals, who just love sinners. Like Christ ministering to prostitutes, Falwell regularly left the safe confines of his church to show up in such benighted venues as CNN.

He was such a good Christian that back when we used to be on TV together during Clinton's impeachment, I sometimes wanted to say to him, "Step aside, reverend — let the mean girl handle this one." (Why, that guy probably prayed for Clinton!)

For putting Christ above everything — even the opportunity to make a humiliating joke about Clinton — Falwell is known as "controversial." Nothing is ever as "controversial" as yammering about Scripture as if, you know, it's the word of God or something.

From the news coverage of Falwell's death, I began to suspect his first name was "Whether You Agree With Him or Not."

Even Falwell's fans, such as evangelist Billy Graham and former President Bush, kept throwing in the "We didn't always agree" disclaimer. Did Betty Friedan or Molly Ivins get this many "I didn't always agree with" qualifiers on their deaths? And when I die, if you didn't always agree with me, would you mind keeping it to yourself?

Let me be the first to say: I ALWAYS agreed with the Rev. Falwell.

Actually, there was one small item I think Falwell got wrong regarding his statement after 9/11 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.'"

First of all, I disagreed with that statement because Falwell neglected to specifically include Teddy Kennedy and "the Reverend" Barry Lynn.

Second, Falwell later stressed that he blamed the terrorists most of all, but I think that clarification was unnecessary. The necessary clarification was to note that God was at least protecting America enough not to allow the terrorists to strike when a Democrat was in the White House.

(If you still think it isn't Christ whom liberals hate, remember: They hate Falwell even more than they hate me.)

I note that in Falwell's list of Americans he blamed for ejecting God from public life, only the gays got a qualifier. Falwell referred to gays and lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle.

No Christian minister is going to preach that homosexuality is godly behavior, but Falwell didn't add any limiting qualifications to his condemnation of feminists, the ACLU or People for the American Way.

There have always been gay people — even in the prelapsarian '50s that Jerry Falwell and I would like to return to, when God protected America from everything but ourselves.

What Falwell was referring to are the gay activists — the ones who spit the Eucharist on the floor at St. Patrick's Cathedral, blamed Reagan for AIDS, and keep trying to teach small schoolchildren about "fisting."

Also the ones who promote the gay lifestyle in a children's cartoon.

Beginning in early 1998, the news was bristling with stories about a children's cartoon PBS was importing from Britain that featured a gay cartoon character, Tinky Winky, the purple Teletubbie with a male voice and a red handbag.

People magazine gleefully reported that Teletubbies was "aimed at Telebabies as young as 1 year. But teenage club kids love the products' kitsch value, and gay men have made the purse-toting Tinky Winky a camp icon."

In the Nexis archives for 1998 alone, there are dozens and dozens of mentions of Tinky Winky being gay — in periodicals such as Newsweek, The Toronto Star, The Washington Post (twice!), The New York Times and Time magazine (also twice).

In its Jan. 8, 1999, issue, USA Today accused The Washington Post of "outing" Tinky Winky, with a "recent Washington Post In/Out list putting T.W. opposite Ellen DeGeneres and Anne Heche, essentially 'outing' the kids' show character."

Michael Musto of The Village Voice boasted that Tinky Winky was "out and proud," noting that it was "a great message to kids — not only that it's OK to be gay, but the importance of being well accessorized."

All this appeared before Falwell made his first mention of Tinky Winky.

After one year of the mainstream media laughing at having put one over on stupid bourgeois Americans by promoting a gay cartoon character in a TV show for children, when Falwell criticized the cartoon in February 1999, that same mainstream media howled with derision that Falwell thought a cartoon character could be gay.

Teletubbies producers immediately denounced the suggestion that Tinky Winky was gay — though they admitted that he was once briefly engaged to Liza Minnelli. That's what you get, reverend, for believing what you read in The Washington Post, The New York Times, Time magazine and Newsweek. Of course, Falwell also thought the show "Queer as Folk" was gay, so obviously the man had no credibility.

Despite venomous attacks and overwhelming pressure to adopt the fashionable beliefs of cafe society, Falwell never wavered an inch in acknowledging Jesus before men. Luckily, Jesus' full sentence, quoted at the beginning of this column is: "All men will hate you because of me, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved."

TUSooner
5/18/2007, 04:56 PM
Well. Some people may have hated Falwell because he was a Christian. But I've learned in nigh-on 50 years that just because you are a Christian and people dont like you, it doesn't mean they don't like you BECAUSE you are a Christian.

mdklatt
5/18/2007, 05:06 PM
Ann Falwell? Is that his wife or something? Kinda weird that she keeps referring to him as "Rev. Falwell". :confused:

mdklatt
5/18/2007, 05:10 PM
Well. Some people may have hated Falwell because he was a Christian. But I've learned in nigh-on 50 years that just because you are a Christian and people dont like you, it doesn't mean they don't like you BECAUSE you are a Christian.

I'll add that if somebody doesn't like you because you're a Christian, you need take a look in the mirror and see what kind of Christian you are.

soonerscuba
5/18/2007, 05:48 PM
She must write things, sell them, and then have a good belly laugh at everybody dumb enough to fall for her schtick. Good on her.

Paperclip
5/19/2007, 12:33 AM
Ann Falwell? Is that his wife or something? Kinda weird that she keeps referring to him as "Rev. Falwell". :confused:

Just in case you're not being sarcastic, I'm pretty sure the Ann here is Ann Coulter.
And apparently soonerscuba thinks I'm dumb, because I think this article is right on.

picasso
5/19/2007, 08:09 AM
She must say and promise things, sell them, and then have a good belly laugh at everybody dumb enough to fall for her schtick. Good on her.
sounds like our politicians.

leavingthezoo
5/19/2007, 08:51 AM
i'm starting to think our friend Ann is fighting an "internal" demon herself and the only way she can feel good about it is by constantly accusing everyone of being gay, supporting gays or hating Christ because we aren't stoning gays; etc, etc.

it reminds me of my dad when he pointed the finger at everyone else and denied profoundly that he wasn't having an affair while married to my mother until he could no longer keep up with his own lies.

it's ok ann. someday you'll find your mary and she might even be more manly than you. :D

Dio
5/19/2007, 10:40 AM
I'll add that if somebody doesn't like you because you're a Christian, you need take a look in the mirror and see what kind of Christian you are.

I respect your opinion klatt, but I gotta disagree. You don't think there are people in this world who automatically hate all Christians? That nobody ever judges us all by the most misguided members of our group? And the more somebody believes in the Bible as the true, inspired word of God, the more their views are summarily dismissed by certain elements in our society. I'd also be willing to bet that the Christians who are doing it right spend more time examining their own lives than anybody.

Jerk
5/19/2007, 11:12 AM
Goals 25, 26, 27, & 28

http://www.rense.com/general32/americ.htm

I'm just sayin!

mdklatt
5/19/2007, 10:54 PM
I respect your opinion klatt, but I gotta disagree. You don't think there are people in this world who automatically hate all Christians? That nobody ever judges us all by the most misguided members of our group?

Sure, but that's true of every group, everywhere, throughout the history of humanity.



And the more somebody believes in the Bible as the true, inspired word of God, the more their views are summarily dismissed by certain elements in our society.


There's a fine line between faith and zealotry, and that's where the problems start. This isn't just a knock on Christianity; all belief structures have their problem fundamentalists. The wise man is full of doubt, but the fool is full of certainty. If you're 100% convinced that you're right and everyone else is wrong, you can be easily encouraged to do a lot of crazy ****. The only difference between some crackpot televangelist and Osama bin Laden is where they were born. If the televangelist had been born in Saudi Ariaba he would be condemning Christians and Jews and recruiting suicide bombers. Osama bin Laden, on the other hand, would have made a fantasitic televangelist if only he was born and raised in the Bible Belt. It's not the belief that's the problem, but the believer. However, a religous zealot is usually scarier than a secularist zealot, because the secularist zealot doesn't think he's got God on his side.



I'd also be willing to bet that the Christians who are doing it right spend more time examining their own lives than anybody.

It's the ones that are examining everybody else's life that non-Christians have a problem with. Whatever happened to judge not lest ye be judged, and let he is without sin cast the first stone? There would be a lot less problems in the world if everybody would mind their own damn business.

Chuck Bao
5/19/2007, 10:59 PM
I was really scared at first when I thought it was Jerry's wife.

But since it was written by Ann Coulter, the fisting reference now makes sense.

mdklatt
5/19/2007, 11:04 PM
Just in case you're not being sarcastic, I'm pretty sure the Ann here is Ann Coulter.


Hey, how was I supposed to know? There was no link or anything to the source. Has Ann Colter acheived "Oprah" status? :D

Paperclip
5/19/2007, 11:19 PM
It's the ones that are examining everybody else's life that non-Christians have a problem with. Whatever happened to judge not lest ye be judged, and let he is without sin cast the first stone? There would be a lot less problems in the world if everybody would mind their own damn business.

I respectfully disagree. The passage you're referring to is in the 7th chapter of Matthew. The verse does say as you stated, however, if you continue on you see that Jesus commanded his followers to make sure to take care of their own sin so that they could "see clearly" to point out the sins of others and call them to repentence. Christ's followers are commanded to make disciples of all nations. For Christians to be silent on the issue of sin would be disobedient and therefore sinful.

soonerbrat
5/20/2007, 09:24 AM
there's no way i'm reading that whole thing.

Scott D
5/20/2007, 09:50 AM
I think just seeing the word Ann should suffice for how much you really need to read.

She need to write less, and get back to making some babies with Al Sharpton.