Falwell Dies at 73

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JCDunkDogs

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He's in a better place, maybe. In the 1980's, this man's name was always a conversation starter at any dinner party.

Television Evangelist Falwell Dies at 73

By SUE LINDSEY, Associated Press Writer
LYNCHBURG, Va. - The Rev. Jerry Falwell, the television evangelist who founded the Moral Majority and used it to mold the religious right into a political force, died Tuesday shortly after being found unconscious in his office at Liberty University, a school executive said. He was 73.

Ron Godwin, the university's executive vice president, said Falwell, 73, was found unresponsive around 10:45 a.m. and taken to Lynchburg General Hospital. "CPR efforts were unsuccessful," he said.

Godwin said he was not sure what caused the collapse, but he said Falwell "has a history of heart challenges."

"I had breakfast with him, and he was fine at breakfast," Godwin said. "He went to his office, I went to mine, and they found him unresponsive."

Falwell had survived two serious health scares in early 2005. He was hospitalized for two weeks with what was described as a viral infection, then was hospitalized again a few weeks later after going into respiratory arrest. Later that year, doctors found a 70 percent blockage in an artery, which they opened with stents.

Falwell credited his Moral Majority with getting millions of conservative voters registered, electing Ronald Reagan and giving Republicans Senate control in 1980.

"I shudder to think where the country would be right now if the religious right had not evolved," Falwell said when he stepped down as Moral Majority president in 1987.

The fundamentalist church that Falwell started in an abandoned bottling plant in 1956 grew into a religious empire that includes the 22,000-member Thomas Road Baptist Church, the "Old Time Gospel Hour" carried on television stations around the country and 7,700-student Liberty University. He built Christian elementary schools, homes for unwed mothers and a home for alcoholics.
He also founded Liberty University in Lynchburg, which began as Lynchburg Baptist College in 1971.
Liberty University's commencement is scheduled for Saturday, with former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich as the featured speaker.

In 2006, Falwell marked the 50th anniversary of his church and spoke out on stem cell research, saying he sympathized with people with medical problems, but that any medical research must pass a three-part test: "Is it ethically correct? Is it biblically correct? Is it morally correct?"

Falwell had once opposed mixing preaching with politics, but he changed his view and in 1979, founded the Moral Majority. The political lobbying organization grew to 6.5 million members and raised $69 million as it supported conservative politicians and campaigned against abortion, homosexuality, pornography and bans on school prayer.

Falwell became the face of the religious right, appearing on national magazine covers and on television talk shows. In 1983, U.S. News & World Report named him one of 25 most influential people in America.

In 1984, he sued Hustler magazine for $45 million, charging that he was libeled by an ad parody depicting him as an incestuous drunkard. A federal jury found the fake ad did not libel him, but awarded him $200,000 for emotional distress. That verdict was overturned, however, in a landmark 1988 U.S. Supreme Court decision that held that even pornographic spoofs about a public figure enjoy First Amendment protection.
The case was depicted in the 1996 movie "The People v. Larry Flynt."

With Falwell's high profile came frequent criticism, even from fellow ministers. The Rev. Billy Graham once rebuked him for political sermonizing on "non-moral issues."

Falwell quit the Moral Majority in 1987, saying he was tired of being "a lightning rod" and wanted to devote his time to his ministry and Liberty University. But he remained outspoken and continued to draw criticism for his remarks.
Days after Sept. 11, 2001, Falwell essentially blamed feminists, gays, lesbians and liberal groups for bringing on the terrorist attacks. He later apologized.

In 1999, he told an evangelical conference that the Antichrist was a male Jew who was probably already alive. Falwell later apologized for the remark but not for holding the belief. A month later, his National Liberty Journal warned parents that Tinky Winky, a purple, purse-toting character on television's "Teletubbies" show, was a gay role model and morally damaging to children.

Falwell was re-energized after family values proved important in the 2004 presidential election. He formed the Faith and Values Coalition as the "21st Century resurrection of the Moral Majority," to seek anti-abortion judges, a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage and more conservative elected officials.

The big, blue-eyed preacher with a booming voice started his independent Baptist church with 35 members. From his living room, he began broadcasting his message of salvation and raising the donations that helped his ministry grow.
"He was one of the first to come up with ways to use television to expand his ministry," said Robert Alley, a retired University of Richmond religion professor who studied and criticized Falwell's career.

In 1987, Falwell took over the PTL (Praise the Lord) ministry in South Carolina after Jim Bakker's troubles. Falwell slid fully clothed down a theme park water slide after donors met his fund-raising goal to help rescue the rival ministry. He gave it up seven months later after learning the depth of PTL's financial problems.

Largely because of the Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart scandals, donations to Falwell's ministry dropped from $135 million in 1986 to less than $100 million the following year. Hundreds of workers were laid off and viewers of his television show dwindled.

Liberty University was $73 million in debt and on the verge of bankruptcy, and his "Old Time Gospel Hour" was $16 million in debt.

By the mid-1990s, two local businessmen with long ties to Falwell began overseeing the finances and helped get companies to forgive debts or write them of as losses.

Falwell devoted much of his time keeping his university afloat. He dreamed that Liberty would grow to 50,000 students and be to fundamentalist Christians what Notre Dame is to Roman Catholics and Brigham Young University is to Mormons. He was an avid sports fan who arrived at Liberty basketball games to the cheers of students.

Falwell's father and his grandfather were militant atheists, he wrote in his autobiography. He said his father made a fortune off his businesses ? including bootleging during Prohibition.

As a student, Falwell was a star athlete and a prankster who was barred from giving his high school valedictorian's speech after he was caught using counterfeit lunch tickets his senior year.
He ran with a gang of juvenile delinquents before becoming a born-again Christian at age 19. He turned down an offer to play professional baseball and transferred from Lynchburg College to Baptist Bible College in Springfield, Mo.

"My heart was burning to serve Christ," he once said in an interview. "I knew nothing would ever be the same again."

Falwell is survived by his wife, Macel, and three children, Jerry, Jonathan and Jeannie.
 

StevieD

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Just a feeling but I think he is going to have a lot of explaining to do.
 

AR182

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i know it's poor to speak ill of the dead but i think this country is better off without him....

all any of these "reverends" do(falwell,jackson, sharpton, & the others) is divide with their hatred & intolerance.....rather than heal & try to bring people together.
 
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AR182

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Falwell Changed U.S. Politics

Falwell Changed U.S. Politics

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

By RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer

The Rev. Jerry Falwell's habit of sounding off on everything from liberals and terrorism to the "Teletubbies" regularly embarrassed his fellow conservatives.

But it would be a mistake to remember the pastor as out of touch, or the buffoon his critics made him out to be.

Falwell turned a major segment of U.S. Christianity into a political sledgehammer _ even if the movement has not achieved all of its goals and its leader's tongue got him in trouble.

His decision in the 1970s to confront an American culture that he saw in moral free fall helped touch off a mass movement that transformed the Republican Party and U.S. politics. When he died Tuesday at age 73, white evangelicals comprised more than one-third of the GOP base and were among the Republicans' most reliable supporters.

"Just as the black church never again has to be indoctrinated to get involved politically, neither does the evangelical church," Falwell told William Martin, author of "With God On Our Side, The Rise of the Religious Right in America."

It may be hard to remember now, but conservative preachers avoided politics in the days when Falwell began his ministry. Then the U.S. Supreme Court legalized abortion in 1973.

"Religious people and religious values were being squeezed out of the public square," said the Rev. Ed Dobson, who worked at Falwell's side from 1973 until 1987.

As founding pastor of Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Va., Falwell began meeting with theologians and lawmakers to see how Christians could fight back. His foes? Liberals, "abortionists," the American Civil Liberties Union, feminists, gay rights activists and the faithless.

In 1979, he and his allies launched the Moral Majority. Falwell not only drew preachers from behind their pulpits into the brawling world of electoral campaigns, but he also brought conservative politics into the church. He helped persuade thousands of pastors nationwide to conduct voter-registration drives in their congregations, contributing to a flood of new voters on the GOP rolls.

"The Rev. Falwell's creation of the Moral Majority was a turning point in history for the church in America," said the Rev. Lou Sheldon of the Traditional Values Coalition. "His legacy will last for decades to come."

The Moral Majority platform mixed traditional Christian values with a strongly conservative world view: Falwell wanted prayer in public school and more money for national defense, too.

When Christian activists helped Ronald Reagan win the 1980 presidential race, Falwell credited the Moral Majority and became the mouthpiece for newly empowered Americans "who felt they and their beliefs were disrespected," said Cal Thomas, the syndicated columnist and Moral Majority spokesman for six years.

But Falwell and conservative Christians soon learned the limits of their political might.

They were courted by lawmakers and appeared with Reagan in the Rose Garden, yet their direct access to power changed little. Abortion has remained legal and gay couples have gradually won greater acceptance.

Activists questioned Falwell's ability to mobilize voters and, with the minister focused on politics, fundraising for his religious work suffered badly. Critics to his right, who advocated old-style isolation from the broader culture, attacked him.

In the late 1980s, Falwell disbanded the Moral Majority, saying he wanted to concentrate on the Christian school he founded, Liberty University.

He did not disappear, however.

GOP political candidates sought his backing and, in later years, treated him as an elder statesman of the party. In 2000, he prayed on the rostrum of the Republican National Convention.

But at the same time, Falwell's fiery attacks in the culture wars began eroding his reputation.

In 1999, Falwell's National Liberty Journal warned parents that Tinky Winky, a purple, purse-toting character on television's "Teletubbies" show, was a gay role model and morally damaging to children.

After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Falwell said that abortionists, feminists, gays and others "have tried to secularize America ... helped this happen." President George W. Bush, himself a conservative Protestant, rebuked Falwell, who soon admitted the comment was a mistake.

A 2004 poll for PBS's "Religion & Ethics Newsweekly" showed U.S. evangelicals had lower regard for Falwell than Pope John Paul II. That year, at the Republican National Convention, Falwell's only appearance was at a private rally for religious, anti-abortion Republicans. He was asked to stand and wave to the crowd, then whisked away.

Despite his waning political star, Falwell's greatest impact may lie ahead.

With 7,700 students, his Liberty University reflects the minister's classic fundamentalist beliefs in an inerrant Bible and the imminent return of Jesus Christ following seven years of tribulation to establish a 1,000-year kingdom. The school annually turns out young, Christian adults who go on to become active in politics.

This year's graduation will be held as scheduled, on Saturday.
 

ImFeklhr

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Early reports indicate that his death was caused by a jew who planted a new fast acting secular strain of AIDS on his toilet seat.

Details to follow.
 
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Dead Money

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Insider info?

Insider info?

Early reports indicate that his death was caused by a jew who planted a new fast acting secular strain of AIDS on his toilet seat.

Details to follow.



Fallwell was a Mason, there has been a deep Jewish- Mason bond in this country since the 1700'S, perhaps he finally saw the error of his ways and was put down before he exposed them and their insidious world domination plans ?:shrug:
 

AR182

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Fallwell was a Mason, there has been a deep Jewish- Mason bond in this country since the 1700'S, perhaps he finally saw the error of his ways and was put down before he exposed them and their insidious world domination plans ?:shrug:

i have been reading book titled...."the americanization of benjamin franklin". the book mentions that franklin joined the masons in about 1730. in fact he printed "the constitutions of the free-masons". the first masonic book written in america.briefly the masons is/was an organization that expressed enlightenment values...the masons were used to "blur" the values between gentlemen & commoners....there is no mention of any kind of faith.

in fact when i researched masons at wikpedia this is what is mentioned about religion....

Candidates for regular freemasonry are required to declare a belief in a Supreme Being; a generic description allowing the candidate to adhere to whichever deity or concept he holds to be appropriate.

In Masonic ritual the Supreme Being is referred to as Great Architect of the Universe, which alludes to the use of architectural symbolism within Freemasonry.

Many Freemasons would take the view that the Supreme Being equates to God; others hold a more complex or philosophical interpretation of the term. However, the candidate is not asked to expand on, or explain, his or her interpretation of Supreme Being. The discussion of politics and religion is forbidden within a Masonic Lodge so a candidate or Mason should not be placed in the situation of having to justify the interpretation.

dead money you might be right about a deep jewish-mason connection...i haven't found any.

since i like to learn whatever i can about american history...maybe you can supply any info on the subject....

if not we'll just chalk your post up to another of your anti-semetic bullshit that you have been sprouting since you joined madjacks....

thanks.
 
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Dead Money

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Check here Ar182

Check here Ar182

http://www.sullivan-county.com/id3/fm_jews.htm


I never claimed to be anti-semantic, actually one of my good buddies in NY is a Jewish stock broker, cool guy, grows dope, snorts coke, and chases poon with the best of them....

I just strongly sense that there is a caste of Jews and associated Gentiles that want to take America down (NWO), control media (which is happening--seen any caskets from Iraq? ) and embroil us in the Middle East----which in case you have not noticed, is killing OUR youth, and who benefits the most? Hardcore Zionists...

Hopefully my posts if nothing else, suggest to some with intelligence who frequent Jack's that perhaps something is becoming terribly wrong in America...hardly "Bullshit"
The polls bear me out, but can not point fingers at the big picture, maybe I am all wet, but maybe there is a much more sinister situation afoot....
 
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AR182

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http://www.sullivan-county.com/id3/fm_jews.htm


I never claimed to be anti-semantic, actually one of my good buddies in NY is a Jewish stock broker, cool guy, grows dope, snorts coke, and chases poon with the best of them....

I just strongly sense that there is a caste of Jews and associated Gentiles that want to take America down (NWO), control media (which is happening--seen any caskets from Iraq? ) and embroil us in the Middle East----which in case you have not noticed, is killing OUR youth, and who benefits the most? Hardcore Zionists...

Hopefully my posts if nothing else, suggest to some with intelligence who frequent Jack's that perhaps something is becoming terribly wrong in America...hardly "Bullshit"
The polls bear me out, but can not point fingers at the big picture, maybe I am all wet, but maybe there is a much more sinister situation afoot....

first let me congratulate you on knowing a jew....it must be the same one that hammer keeps referring to....

most people who are anti...black, jew, gay, etc. never admit that they are bigoted.it's usually what they say or do that gives others that indication. and judging from most of your posts at this forum, it suggest that you have something against people of the jewish faith. i assure you that it doesn't bother me since i probably dislike more jewish people than you.

i read the article to the link that you posted & i really don't know or care if this guy is telling the truth.....as the disclaimer says at the bottom of the article.....

"The FAQ is a collection of documents that is an attempt to answer questions that are continually asked on the soc.culture.jewish family of newsgroups. It was written by cooperating laypeople from the various Judaic movements. You should not make any assumption as to accuracy and/or authoritativeness of the answers provided herein. In all cases, it is always best to consult a competent authority--your local rabbi is a good place to start."

i'm glad that you think that only people who read what you write are intelligent. i frankly don't read much of what you post & i don't like what i have read..so i guess in your eyes i am not intelligent. i'll just live with this burden.

as far as your paranoid thoughts of the jews trying to take over...i only worry about things that i can control...

but since i'm one of the chosen people, i guess i'll survive.however if anybody who is reading this thinks like this guy, it's not too late to convert......it's a side job that i have & it only costs $25...no checks please...
 
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ImFeklhr

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One of my good friends is half jewish, but he is kinda an idiot.

But aside from that, MY post was meant in jest :142smilie
 
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Dead Money

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first let me congratulate you on knowing a jew....it must be the same one that hammer keeps referring to....

most people who are anti...black, jew, gay, etc. never admit that they are bigoted.it's usually what they say or do that gives others that indication. and judging from most of your posts at this forum, it suggest that you have something against people of the jewish faith. i assure you that it doesn't bother me since i probably dislike more jewish people than you.

i read the article to the link that you posted & i really don't know or care if this guy is telling the truth.....as the disclaimer says at the bottom of the article.....

"The FAQ is a collection of documents that is an attempt to answer questions that are continually asked on the soc.culture.jewish family of newsgroups. It was written by cooperating laypeople from the various Judaic movements. You should not make any assumption as to accuracy and/or authoritativeness of the answers provided herein. In all cases, it is always best to consult a competent authority--your local rabbi is a good place to start."

i'm glad that you think that only people who read what you write are intelligent. i frankly don't read much of what you post & i don't like what i have read..so i guess in your eyes i am not intelligent. i'll just live with this burden.

as far as your paranoid thoughts of the jews trying to take over...i only worry about things that i can control...

but since i'm one of the chosen people, i guess i'll survive.however if anybody who is reading this thinks like this guy, it's not too late to convert......it's a side job that i have & it only costs $25...no checks please...


Since you are Jewish, I understand your concern with posts that could make you really wonder.

Sorry if you deem some of my posts offensive, they are meant to be socially thought provoking, nothing more.
I never advocated anything but thought.
Peace be with you...


And Im Keklhr, my response to you was also in jest...seriously now, Falwell and aids??? Next you will tell us he caught it in a drunken romp with a Protestant Transexual.....
 

AR182

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Since you are Jewish, I understand your concern with posts that could make you really wonder.

Sorry if you deem some of my posts offensive, they are meant to be socially thought provoking, nothing more.
I never advocated anything but thought.
Peace be with you...


And Im Keklhr, my response to you was also in jest...seriously now, Falwell and aids??? Next you will tell us he caught it in a drunken romp with a Protestant Transexual.....

guys...

i'm a drop out jew (married to a catholic)who has a hard time in believing that there is a god. so saying anything about the jewish faith doesn't really bother me....except if i think there is a hint of anti-semetism in the posts.i would also say something if i thought a person was a racist.

it's all good...no harm done.
 
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