Someone should alert Donald Trump that the ethos of People of Praise, the Christian group which counts his newest Supreme Court nominee as a member, bears an uncanny resemblance to the core principles of communism. Maybe then he'd think twice about constantly and ridiculously hurling the Socialist/Marxist epithet at the corporate Democrats in an effort to deflect attention from their mutual capitalistic agenda. Who knows? He could even end up withdrawing Coney Barrett's name from nomination. People of Praise does not, for example, embrace the odious Prosperity Gospel beloved of GOP cultists, who count greed not only as a Christian virtue but as an addendum to the original Ten Commandments.
Somebody should also alert the media conglomerate about this oversight so they may start calling Trump out on it. In an alternate universe, it might even reach the point that the capitalist class accused Trump and his nominee of both heresy and hypocrisy for ignoring the fact that Coney Barrett's group solidly adheres to the original socialistic radicalism of Jesus even as she herself professes public fealty to the Pantheon of Constitutional Originalists. This dual belief system simply does not compute.
Of course, I jest. Because the Narrative chosen by the liberal press is that People of Praise is a scary, "secretive" cult that directly inspired Margaret Atwood's dystopian The Handmaid's Tale novel about forced fecundity in a misogynistic theocratic American society. That neither of these things is true doesn't seem to matter.
Interviews with experts who have studied charismatic Christian groups such as People of Praise, and with former members of the group, plus a review of the group’s own literature, reveal an organization that appears to dominate some members’ everyday lives, in which so-called “heads” – or spiritual advisers – make big life decisions, and in which members are expected to financially support one another. Married women – such as Barrett – count their husbands as their “heads” and all members are expected to donate 5% of their income to the organization.
The group emerged out of the Catholic charismatic movement of the late 1960s, which blended Catholicism and Protestant Pentecostalism – Catholics and Protestants are both members – and adopted practices like speaking in tongues. The group’s literature shows communal living is also encouraged, at least among unmarried members, as is the sharing of finances between households.
The People of Praise website states that "We admire the first Christians who were led by the Holy Spirit to form a community. Those early believers put their lives and their possessions in common, and there were no needy persons among them."
Now, compare that redistributionist radicalism to the old-school secular communism that once thrived right here in the Land of the Free.
In Vivian Gornick's The Romance of American Communism, one former leader explains how the party was organized in his poor Depression-era New York City neighborhood:
As for the individual Communist at the branch level, four-fifths of the time he followed Party directives, one-fifth of the time he was on his own; on his own he was supposed to respond to whatever happened in the course of a day in the neighborhood... "if there was a tenant conviction, or a sick comrade, or if he was needed to join a picket line, or canvas during an election. Or if the neighborhood needed a traffic light, or a shopkeeper was having trouble with the Fire Department. You know, just like the neighborhood Democratic Party would have operated - only we always got there first."
The branch members' other duties consisted of contributing a week's wages to the Party once a year, selling the Daily Worker and running off weekly leaflets.
People of Praise is religious, Communism is traditionally secular. Both embrace the spirit of community and both also have operated under varying degrees of rigidity and control, as do most organizations.
Amy Coney Barrett said that she admires the life and legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. I hope that at her confirmation hearing she is also asked about the life and legacy of fellow Catholic lay-person and anarchist Dorothy Day, who herself had undergone an abortion before converting to the Catholic faith and spending her life in social activism and constantly "pricking the consciences" of the Establishment regarding war, inequality, and labor rights. I hope, that in light of the fact that Coney Barrett has previously vowed for religious reasons to recuse herself in capital punishment cases, that she will also have enough of a conscience to recuse herself in Supreme Court cases concerning contraception and Roe v Wade.
But her history of siding with corporations and oligarchs over the needs of ordinary people is troubling, to say the least. She's like Mitt Romney, a devout Mormon, in that regard. He also tithes and generously helps members of his own insular community in tandem with getting rich, through private equity, by indebting businesses before destroying them and insisting that godless "corporations are people, my friend."
It is the fine art of holding two opposing ethical positions in one's mind at the same time, and thus being able to sleep well at night. Trump will also easily cancel out every kind of conservative hypocrisy whenever it suits him, just so long as it serves the purpose of shielding his own.
But it doesn't hurt to try to rattle their rigid, complacent, carefully compartmentalized little brains every once in a while, does it?
And we must always have faith. If you do happen to pray, then you might beseech the almighty to allow Amy Coney Barrett to follow in the footsteps of Reagan appointee Sandra Day O'Connor, who at a relatively young age resigned from the nation's highest court in order to care for her sick husband. It was the ethical thing to do.
Of course, since she was succeeded by the arch-conservative Samuel Alito in the Bush Jr. administration, we should also always be very careful about what we pray and wish for.
Thank you! I was beginning to think I was the only one who could see this.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteSpeaking in tongues is common to all high-paying professions. The whole point of going to law school is to be able to speak in tongues and outwit everyone else in argument, including yourself when necessary. Money and power are evidence that the Spirit is with you. Pro bono work on the job and strange but legal associations off the job give you and your law firm depth.
As for the Catholic Barrett’s recusing herself from death penalty cases ... Huh? Barrett and Sister Helen Prejean profess the same faith? When a case is about money or against the mob, Barrett’s on duty. When it’s a matter of life or death (capital punishment), this super devout Christian holds no opinion?
Or she’s secretly for it, but integrity forces her to mark time until she thinks up better arguments than Gandhi’s. Or is she against the death penalty but unwilling to alienate important friends, or to trouble herself writing dissents against fascism and state murder, or is she ensuring that on a death row decision she will have no need to side with liberal justices on a vote?
Are you kidding? radical redistribution? This sounds like a community of boilerplate traditionalist Catholic adherents-- more devoted to upholding the patriarchy than anything else. Liberation theology it ain't. I'm sure the membership skews succesful professionals-- who send their kids to their expensive schools. Compare the educational philosophy of the schools for their members versus the shoestring schools for the poors they set up in the cities that they do missionary work. One school is clearly designed to send out leaders into the world (and I'm sure they do) and the other, well...
ReplyDeleteProductive Students, Employable Graduates
The habits we teach in our classrooms will transfer over to a student's life at home and beyond.
Class sizes are small: no more than 16 students in a class.
Children and teachers learn together.
The habits of self-discipline we teach, such as concentration, personal initiative and manners, will assist our students for the rest of their lives, in future learning and employment.
My guess is these people are probably actively opposed to redistribution efforts by the government.
Kat,
ReplyDeleteDuh.... yeah, I was kidding. Maybe one of these days I'll be able to kick my sarcasm/cynicism habit and my sick taste for irony and silliness, in which case I'll also have to change the name of this blog. Meanwhile I will get my kicks wherever I can find them.
I suggest that you check out Jill Filopovic's piece on Coney Barrett in The Guardian if what you crave is serious liberal rectitude.
I caught the snark directed at the liberal panicking, I cop to any snark in this passage going completely over my head:
ReplyDeletePeople of Praise is religious, Communism is traditionally secular. Both embrace the spirit of community and both also have operated under varying degrees of rigidity and control, as do most organizations.
I have no need to read Jill Whoever. I suppose you can count me as someone who fears a second Trump term. I actually came to this conclusion because of Trump's words and actions, not from wasting time reading pundits.
ReplyDeleteI didn't watch the Trump Show last night, the one featuring a guest appearance by Joe Biden. This morning I scoured the headlines to read the particular way Biden had his meltdowns. Lots of noise, it's reported, but no meltdown.
Not even a gaffe. Something's wrong, terribly wrong: Joe's not his old self.
Kat,
ReplyDeleteOne must be very alert while "Hunting For the Un-Snark." So, congratulations are in order for the find!
I have been duly busted for committing the rank faux pas of sneaking a serious, sincere sentence into a piece poking sarcastic fun at the hypocrisy and dogmatism of both religious and political identity cults,
I will turn myself in to the consistency police forthwith.