"I believe abortion should be outlawed" and "The Bible is pretty clear about homosexuality, it specifically calls it a sin." Thus sayeth Pastor Dan Yeary. Normally the preachments of a Southern Baptist oriented minister in North Phoenix, Arizona wouldn't stir much of a fuss. That kind of hard nosed saber rattle against gays and abortion is SOP within and among Southern Baptist preachers.

But Yeary's comments deserve special attention for a couple of reasons. He's the pastor of North Phoenix Baptist Church. And one among the faithful who can often be seen occupying a pew at Yeary's Sunday services is John McCain. For more than a decade Yeary has been his pastor and spiritual mentor. His rock solid anti-gay and abortion preachments have not been looped on YouTube, endlessly repeated on every major network, peddled on legions of websites, emailed, and text messaged to millions, and gabbed about ad nauseum from the suites to street corners as Obama's much embattled pastor Jeremiah Wright's racial diatribes still are.

There are no calls for Yeary to explain, justify, or defend his views. There is no known press effort to dig deeper and find out what else Yeary might have said that could cast him as a wild eye extremist and by extension taint his star parishioner with guilt by association. Yeary is depicted as a benign, thoughtful, soft-spoken man of deep spiritual conscience and belief that downplays politics. His only mission is to save souls even those of damned to hell-fire homosexuals. Yeary, however, caught the drift of the Wright-Obama furor and figured out that some might start pecking around to find out if there were damaging rants that he made on gays and abortion that could be used to hammer McCain. He smartly headed that line of media and public march off at the pass and chuckled to a reporter that he didn't talk with McCain about politics and that he thought that if McCain were asked whether he agrees with some of his views he would emphatically say that he disagrees as Obama did with Wright.

That's fair and reasonable enough. Yet Yeary's denials his hard-line views on abortion and gay rights are politically edged, and they're shared by millions of voters. These are the millions that McCain banks on to help put him in the White House. But it was touch and go between him and them for a while. An embittered Focus on Family President James Dobson in 2007 loudly proclaimed that he wouldn't vote for McCain. That spelled potential trouble.

Even before Dobson lambasted McCain, then would be GOP presidential candidate McCain scrambled fast to head off a religious palace revolt. He did a sort of repentance to the evangelicals and came in from the cold when he delivered the commencement address at Falwell's Liberty University in April 2006. Falwell promptly returned the favor and told the press that he was satisfied that McCain marched in lock step with many of his principles and beliefs. Falwell's imprimatur of approval on McCain was absolutely crucial to send the right signal to the Christian fundamentalist flock that he was an alright guy.

The Falwell-McCain détente was important for another reason. It was open acknowledgment that the Christian evangelicals could and should have a big say in politics. Despite Yeary's disavowal of politics, a political agenda is always on the table for Christian evangelical leaders and ministers. Many don't try to hide it. In a survey by the Detroit News in 2005 following Bush's reelection the question was asked whether the church should have more influence in politics. Nearly sixty percent agreed.

But Yeary, as many ministers, also know that to much talk about politics will leave them wide open to the charge that they are GOP stalking horses. Falwell was fond of shouting to supporters "I am not a Republican! I am not a Democrat! I am a noisy Baptist!" He was, of course, much more than that. And so is Yeary and the other ministers that deliver the conservative morals message to their Sunday flock.

The sixty to eighty million Christian evangelicals that Yeary speaks for are big, important, and politically positioned. In fact, in 2007 seven out of 10 Americans said they were Christian. They are strategically placed in many key swing states and their numbers haven't dropped. They have been the back bone of the GOP for a quarter century. Those that self-identify as evangelicals or born again Christians in 2004 made up nearly one out of four voters. They provided the vote muscle for Bush in 2000 and even more muscle for him in 2004. Yeary and McCain will move earth and especially heaven to make sure that they flex those muscles again in 2008 for the GOP.

Wright may have been a liability for Obama, but Yeary is certainly not one for McCain. Don't expect an unkind word here from McCain about his pastor.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His forthcoming book is The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House (Middle Passage Press, February 2008).


 
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Carville's attempt is to try and STOP ANYONE else from ENDORSING OBAMA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 AM on 03/25/2008
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Hutch, the tepid response to this particular post of yours is indicative of the fact that they have spent themselves on Wright and are about done with the matter. You could get that Pierce fellow from the National Alliance to come squawking and there would be no brouhaha from this. It is a non-issue, Hutch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 PM on 03/24/2008

Yeary, like most Southern Baptists ministers is untrained in linguistics of the bible. No where is homosexuality condemned in the bible. Lot was the sinner (1) by seeking out strangers to stay with him [which was against the law of the city] and (2) offering his daughters to the people outside his house [for murder, moreso than for gang rape]. The prophet Ezekiel states clearly: Eze. 16.49, 50 "Behold, this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom, pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her and in her daughters, neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy. And they were haughty, and committed abomination before me: therefore I took them away as I saw good." Jesus' sole reference was an attack on inhospitality: Luke 17.26 - 29 "And as it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man. They did eat, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and the flood came, and destroyed them all. Likewise also as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold, they planted, they built. But the same day that Lot went out of Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all." Yeary, like Wright must be exposed as a hatefilled preachers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 03/24/2008

Interesting post, though I think that digging up dirt on every candidate's spiritual advisors is missing the point. The lesson learned from this whole discussion should be this:

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 03/24/2008

It will be as much of an issue as we make it. Write your local newspapers and phone or write your local TV channels and the Networks. Demand that they expose the crazy talk from Hagee and Parsley, as well as McCain's right wing preacher. Frankly, I had thought that a person's church should be off limits because I believe in the seperation of church and state. On the other hand, now that we've all crossed that rubicon, fairness demands nothing less than a thorough and repeated airing of some of the more scary and controversial statements by these right wing nuts is added to the mix. Write the media and make some NOISE!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 03/24/2008

I am sure others will look more into Pastor Dan Yeary now. I am for one tired of talking about each candidates pastors after my last post on Wright and Hagee with videos of their sermons.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 PM on 03/24/2008

I fear that with all this high-profile, very-vocal Democratic party infighting, we may be heading towards a train wreck moving in reverse. With McBush masquerading as a card-carrying member of the Christian right and his willingness to get down on his knees for anybody and any group, I fear reversal of Roe v Wade, reversal of civil union legislation, reversal of medical marijuana laws--reversal of anything not blessed by the far right. If Mitt Romney becomes his VP pick, we're in even bigger trouble.

G-d help us all. Maybe we Democrats need a wake-up call to stop all this mud-slinging and start working together to keep the McBushies out of the White House.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 03/24/2008

You may be right. And I'm so sick of the infighting anyway. I can't wait till it's over. Bless you for writing this. We should all kiss and make up, and start talking of a dual ticket. But even that seems beyond the beyond now. More's the pity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 PM on 03/24/2008
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Don't forget Don Parsley

"There"s been considerable discussion, at least online, about John McCain reaching out and embracing televangelist John Hagee, despite Hagee"s record of attacking people not like him, most notably Catholics, Jews, and gays. But it"s worth keeping in mind that there"s another right-wing televangelist with close ties to McCain whose background deserves closer scrutiny.

Meet Rod Parsley."

http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com/archives/14877.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 03/24/2008
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