Pubdate: Sat, 29 Mar 2003 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2003 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: David L. Beck, Mercury News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?1043 (Christianity) GOD'S COUNTRY When in the course of divine events God saw fit to punish his wayward New Englanders in the 17th century, he sent them drought, disease, crop failure, Baptists, Quakers and, of course, "barbarous heathens," whom we now politely call Native Americans. And the New Englanders, being hip to the ways of the Lord, knew exactly why they were being punished. "Children and servants . . . are not kept in due subjugation," pointed out a 1679 synod of ministers. 'Christians . . . have become too like unto the Indians" -- wild clothes, immodest displays of flesh, adultery, the works. Family values were in abeyance. "Most of the evils that abound amongst us, proceed from defects as to family government," the synod explained. More than three centuries later, apparently we still haven't learned. When thousands of Americans lost their lives in terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the Rev. Jerry Falwell knew exactly why. "The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked," he said. Pagans, feminists, gays and lesbians -- "I point the finger in their face and say 'You helped this happen.' " The idea that God takes a personal interest in local affairs is hardly unique. Indeed, the notion that there is a covenant between us and the deity is at the heart of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic-Western tradition. But other nations grew, in a haphazard, organic way. We were founded, and founded by people who had a very specific goal: to get it right. "We must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill, the eyes of all people are upon us," said John Winthrop, governor of what became the Massachusetts Bay Colony, while still at sea. And from that mindset flows practically everything that has followed, argues James A. Morone, a political science professor at Brown University. It has long been a commonplace that American moral attitudes somehow, despite growth, change, education, immigration and the Internet, derive from our Puritan ancestors. But Morone goes farther. Surveying American history -- from the decks of Winthrop's flagship, the Arbella, to the crumbling towers of the World Trade Center -- he sees a nation continually driven by moral fervor, advancing in an almost Hegelian way from crusade to backwash to synthesis to the next crusade. I admit to a certain fascination with unified field theories of history, such as last year's intricate and compelling "Measuring America," in which Andro Linklater finds "the promise of democracy" in the surveyor's measuring chain invented by Edmund Gunter in 1607. But Morone's book is especially persuasive. It explains almost everything: why we prefer to ban rather than to regulate, why we throw rocks at economists in Seattle, why the Vietnam War had to be opposed as evil rather than merely stupid, why the jeremiad is the theme song of right-wing talk radio (and why talk radio is right-wing, for that matter), and so on, right down to why public comment at local school board meetings often focuses on the presumed mendacity of officials. We're not good at understanding systems; we prefer personalities. On the larger scale, that inadequacy is played out in the supremacy of the gospel of individual responsibility -- if you're poor, it's your own fault -- over what Morone calls the social gospel -- if you're poor, it's society's fault, and how can we help? Moral conflicts -- "slavery, purity, the rise and fall of liquor prohibition -- rarely got resolved by splitting differences," he writes. "The partisans stuck to their sides. Instead, shifts in the larger political economy pushed the old debate into a new framework." Thus, free-labor Republicans in the mid-19th century melded the fiercely moralistic debate over slavery into a new economic vision and, later, the Hoover administration wedded its economic vision to Prohibition -- a blunder that allowed the Depression to make both Hoover and Prohibition irrelevant. Interwoven with our moral obsessions has been a persistently Manichaean vision of a world divided: between us and them, men and women, black and white, patriots and traitors. Those who disagree with us are not merely damned fools, but damned. As one preacher put it not long ago: America -- "You're either for her or against her. There is no middle ground." As it happens, the preacher was country musician Charlie Daniels, but John Winthrop couldn't have put it better. For the Puritans, them quickly became anyone who disagreed with the elders theologically or (the two were basically the same) politically. A man's inability to "crucifie his lusts" made him an enemy. Without self-control, a man was nothing but an Indian. As for women -- well! Sex and gender wind through American history, as Morone tells it, as prominently as race and class do. The Puritans insisted they were hanging Anne Hutchinson for preaching heresy, but her real crime was having the temerity to preach at all. And once they started looking into her religious beliefs, which seem pretty orthodox from our perspective, they were able to see with perfect clarity that she was not merely wrong but evil. Sound familiar? The abolitionist movement was bitterly divided over the gender issue. It was all very well for women to oppose slavery -- women, with their higher moral purity and tender sensibilities, were naturally shocked at the cruelty of it all -- but that didn't mean they should be up on the platform preaching about it. Why, who knows where such promiscuity might lead? When Victoria Woodhull, long after the Civil War, ran for president with Frederick Douglass, their intergender/interracial ticket brought into high relief all the twisted strands of sex, politics and race that troubled abolitionists in the 1840s (and conservatives in the 1960s). As each American crusade swells like a giant wave and then subsides, it leaves the shoreline permanently altered for the next wave that will come along. The Post Office shocked Puritan sensibilities by delivering on Sundays. Later, in the great purity movement of the last third of the 19th century, the Post Office would become the nation's morals police, as Congress passed sweeping laws about what could and could not be mailed -- and, therefore, published -- and turned their enforcement over to the leading crusader, a former postal clerk named Anthony Comstock. The great white-slavery scare of the early 20th century gave a fledgling Bureau of Investigation something to do. (The bureau's first name, Federal, came later.) The 18th amendment to the Constitution, and the Volstead Act Congress passed to enforce it, turned the FBI into the nation's liquor cops, and by association -- since liquor, its consumption, creation, importation and sale and the crime waves associated therewith were the chief evil in the land in those days -- its moral police. It was a short step from J. Edgar Hoover's FBI to the launching of a federal War on Drugs and the creation of a vast police bureaucracy to fight that war, and an even shorter step from the Drug Enforcement Administration to a Department of Homeland Security equipped with the power to hack into e-mail systems and browse library records. Not the least of the ironies that attend politics in modern America is the fact that those who bray the loudest against big, intrusive government are generally those who demand the creation of its some of its biggest and most intrusive agencies, all in the name of what's good for us. Cotton Mather, meet John Ashcroft. "Hellfire Nation" is long and repetitive. Morone could, I suppose, have made his point in an essay rather than a book. But his style is lively and his examples entertaining (how delightful to find John C. Calhoun, historian Paul Johnson's candidate for the ablest public man America ever produced, explaining that slavery is good for the slaves). The book has the force of its repetitiveness. With each new detail, Morone is able to show how this connects with that -- the First Great Awakening with the American Revolution, the Second Great Awakening with the abolitionist movement, the Women's Christian Temperance Union with the New Deal -- until the reader is not just convinced of Morone's truth but chagrined at not having thought of it himself. I will listen with new insight to the Austin Lounge Lizards' anthem, "God Loves Me (But He Can't Stand You)." [SIDEBAR] HELLFIRE NATION: The Politics of Sin in American History By James A. Morone, Yale University Press, 576 pp., $35 - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl