FROM: James C. Dobson Focus On The Family Colorado Springs, CO 80995 March 1993 Dear Friends, My letter this month will address a great debate going on in churches and the pro-family movement itself. It deals with the alarming erosion of morality in the culture, some of it related to the changing philosophy of government. On the third day of his new administration, Bill Clinton took pen in hand and prescribed far-reaching policies for the nation and the world. On that "Black Saturday" following his inauguration, the president issued five executive orders, as follows: (1) he permitted the tiny bodies of aborted babies to be used in medical research; (2) he lifted the restriction on abortion counseling in federally funded clinics; (3) he began the process of importing the abortifacient RU 486, which could ultimately result in many millions of additional deaths; (4) he removed the prohibition (or attempted to) on openly active homosexuals and lesbians in the military; (5) he provided federal funding for abortions in military hospitals overseas. It did not escape notice that President Clinton issued these revolutionary orders on January 23, one day after the 20th anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision. Indeed, thousands of pro-life marchers were in Washington that very day. Mr. Clinton sent them an unequivocal message, and they heard it! That was just his first week in office. There is more to come--much more. The president has expressed enthusiastic support for the "Freedom of Choice Act", which will be considered in Congress shortly. If passed, it will permit the killing of babies throughout nine months of pregnancy and preempt every state law that would regulate abortion. Other dangerous legislation is working its way through the system. Furthermore, each of the five executive orders cited above is now rippling through society like the rings in a pond. For example, The Washington Times reported on February 10th that a coalition of gay rights groups has prepared a broad agenda of new policies to impose on the armed forces if the military ban on homosexuality is lifted. This 13-point plan would require the Pentagon to conduct "indoctrination" programs for all heterosexual military personnel to ensure their acceptance of gays and lesbians. It makes no difference that many will have religious or moral objections to the instruction. The plan would also establish an advisory committee to the secretary of defense to oversee and report on homosexuals in the military. In short, vast changes are in store for the armed forces if the restriction is ultimately lifted. Will President Clinton accept these sweeping recommendations? All I can say is that he has not denied gay activists anything they've demanded to date. In mid-February, he attempted to lift the restriction on immigration by people infected with the AIDS virus, despite strong opposition from the American Medical Association, the National Commission on AIDS, and the majority of Americans. This time, however, Congress stepped in and handed the president his first legislative defeat. Still, he presses forward with a revolutionary agenda. We're beginning to understand what Mr. Clinton meant on May 18, 1992, when he said to a group of gay activists in Los Angeles, "I have a vision, and you are a part of it." Also in mid-February, the president appointed Roberta Achtenberg to a high post in the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Achtenberg is a radical lesbian activist who directed the National Center for Lesbian Rights. She lives with Mary Morgan, presiding judge of the San Francisco Municipal Court. Neither woman reportedly will reveal which is the birth mother of their young son. Of particular relevance to this discussion, however, is her leading role in expelling the Boy Scouts of America from public facilities within the Bay area and from the lists of charitable givers. That effort cost the Boy Scouts an estimated $848,000 in 1992. In defending her action, she said, "Do we want children learning the values of an organization that...provides character building exclusively for straight, God-fearing male children? The question is: What is it that drives the president to advance the cause of homosexual and lesbian activism? What debt does he seek to repay? There are other moral concerns that come to light nearly every day. The nation will be hearing soon about an aggressive "safe-sex" campaign to be spearheaded by HHS Secretary Donna Shalala and Surgeon General appointee Joycelyn Elders. It could eventually reach every public school teenager in America with immoral propaganda. Dr. Elders, by the way, is quoted as saying, "We would like for the right-to-life, anti-choice groups to really get over their love affair with the fetus and start supporting the children." We are, indeed, living in an era of convoluted values. How are Christians reacting to this dramatic shift in governmental policy and its impact on the culture? What is happening to the body of believers as the ground shakes beneath them? It's a difficult question to answer. I do know that hundreds of churches are actively involved in the struggle, and I thank God for all of them. Many individuals also seem determined to use their influence wherever possible, and they're very well informed of national events. After Mr. Clinton attempted to permit homosexuals in the military, for example, more telephone calls were received at the Pentagon than occurred even during the Persian Gulf War! Switchboards at the White House and the Congress were overloaded for days. Yes, millions of Americans are aware that their values are under attack, and they are stepping forward to defend them. There are Christian leaders, on the other hand, who do not feel it is the role of the church to confront evil in government. They feel we must concern ourselves only with spiritual matters, as though the killing of unborn babies and the support for public morality are beyond that scope. The United States and Canada have seen the most rapid deterioration of the Christian ethic in memory, and yet these leaders are saying, in good conscience, "It's not our calling." Others say, "When we try to use our influence in society, we expose ourselves and our faith to ridicule and rejection." How well I know! My colleagues and I are beginning to understand what "the offense of the Cross" really means. We have taken more abuse from the press and the media in four months than in the past 15 years combined. But we are certainly not the only ones who are targeted. It is open season on any Christian who has the courage to stick his head out of the foxhole. Indeed, I believe we are seeing the beginning of an era of serious repression against believers. On February 1, 1993, The Washington Post wrote a terrible article about Christians who called the Capitol to protest Clinton's lifting of the homosexual ban. It referred to them as "poor, uneducated and easy to command." Tell me, if you will, what other minority group in the nation could they have insulted in this way? Can you imagine the outcry that would have gone up if a major newspaper referred to African-Americans, Hispanic-Americans, Chinese-Americans or Native Americans as "poor, uneducated and easy to command"? How about the recent political cartoon drawn by Pat Oliphant, depicting fundamental Christians as rats dragging the Republican elephant into a mission with a "Jesus Saves" sigh above the door? Can you think of any other minority group that could be characterized as rats? Consider this quote from good ol' grandfatherly Hugh Downs, host of ABC's "20/20": "During times of social stress, humanity usually regresses into the family." Then he explained what he meant. "In the 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan urged the nation to adopt family values and to return to old- time religion. Similarly, Adolf Hitler launched a family-values regimen. Hitler's (methodology) centered on his ideas of motherhood. Fanatics in the Ku Klux Klan, the Nazi Party, the Hezbollah, or any other intolerant organization refer to themselves as religious warriors. As warriors, fanatics censor the thoughts of others and love to burn books. In the modern United States, new proponents of family values continue this tradition of fear and intolerance." So much for diversity and pluralism as American values. In our case, the attacks have not been focused on anything we have said or done--but rather on the fact that we exist. Leading a large conservative ministry today is reason enough for ridicule. The only example to which the media has pointed is based on outright fraud. A recent Associated Press story by Peggy Lowe was carried nationwide, implying that I had tried to hound homosexual teachers out of schools in Colorado Springs. Three local superintendents have signed statements saying there is not a shred of truth to the story; yet it has appeared in most of the nation's newspapers. Linda Fowler, chairperson of the Gay and Lesbian Advisory Committee in Denver, repeated this assertion on the Gil Gross national radio talk show. When our lawyer asked her to produce supporting evidence, she had none. The truth of the matter is that I have not made any hateful comments about homosexuals, even though I oppose the radical agenda some of them support. Thus, they have mounted a campaign of hate and disinformation against us. And it has had an impact locally. Our staff and their families have been subjected to mistreatment and wild-eyed rumors in the surrounding community, which saddens me. Fortunately, our people here at Focus on the Family are made of good stuff, and they are handling the personal criticism with poise and courtesy. Of greater concern to all of us is the condition of our country and where it seems to be going. If what I'm sensing is accurate, there is widespread confusion in the Christian community about how to respond to the spiritual free-fall we are witnessing. Some are flailing about in disarray. Others tell us they have been in a state of despair since November 3. I must admit that I am among those who have been discouraged in days past. To be candid, nothing in my adult life has shaken me quite like the devastation we are seeing. Most of what we have fought for is on the line today. The implications of a possible moral collapse in this beloved nation has been more painful than I felt I could bear. In fact, I went through a period of soul-searching after the election, struggling to regain my equilibrium. Perhaps you sensed that heaviness of heart during some of our recent radio broadcasts. All of these sources of oppression were weighing on me as 1992 came to a close. Then a dramatic thing happened just before Christmas. My spirit was so burdened one morning that Shirley and I got in the car and drove to a beautiful place near the base of the mountains. We just sat there for a couple of hours, listening to inspirational tapes and reading the Bible. Then we prayed earnestly and asked the Lord to lift the heavy burden that we carried. Two days later, I received an anonymous 13-page letter that addressed everything I had been struggling with in the previous months. Fifty-eight Scriptures were tucked within the text, most being first-person quotations from the Lord. The words are too personal to share in detail, but I'll quote this brief excerpt: This letter is being written as an encouragement to you. We serve the LIVING, risen Jesus, you and I. I believe this message is from our Father's heart for you. I can only tell you that as I have been praying for you, I began to weep and groan within my spirit. Over this past year, there has been such an acceleration of events nationally and spiritually. I find myself saying, "Lord strengthen him, undergird him, comfort him." It's almost as if I can hear, and feel, the aching lump in your throat as you talk about the situation this nation and our families are in. I believe that (in regard to) the burden you carry for the Church, the Bride of Christ, that God is desirous to make you know He is causing others in the body to "hold up your arms" in this battle for our faith, our families and our nation. Therefore, be strong and of good courage, because the work belongs to the Lord, our God! Serve Him with a perfect heart and a willing mind, for He has chosen you to STAND in the midst of this perverse generation and say to His people, "Let us do this thing together." We must not be separated and alone, everyone looking out only for the things of his own household, but we must be of one mind and one heart to STAND when the enemy comes in like a flood. Our God is with us for good and He will strengthen our hands for this work. We will not be discouraged or dismayed, for we know that our God is with us. He will not fail us, nor forsake us 'til we have accomplished all the work to which He has called us. We will humble ourselves before Him and ask Him a right way for us to go, and for our little ones, and for all our substance. We will ask Him to forgive us and save us, heal us, and deliver us, for we are in danger on all sides. Yes, Lord, You are our only hope. The letter continued with some instructions specifically for me and numerous promises for the future. Repeatedly, it told me to "stand firm"--and believe me, that is what I fully intend to do. There has been considerable pressure on me from friends and advisers to retreat from the battle--to take this ministry into safer pastures where we will not encounter the social reformers. Well, that issue is resolved and laid to rest. I am beyond the pain of criticism now. There is a job to be done, and if God can use me, I am available for His purposes. The battle is not over, and I am through complaining about the circumstances in which we find ourselves. Let me return to the advice of some religious leaders I referred to earlier--that Christians should withdraw from the public arena and yield the decision-making process to those who represent a secular-humanistic point of view. I believe their perspective is wrong, although it is obviously well-intended. Perhaps they have not thought through the position they have taken. Consider this: Even if our inclination is to hide in coming days, it will be impossible to do so. We will not be permitted to exercise our beliefs in private. The Church will not be allowed to protect its precepts. Consider, for example, a recent development in Maine. The legislature there passed a law in 1992 that required every hospital in the state, including Catholic institutions, to perform abortions. Of course, Catholics have led the fight against abortion, based on their deep moral convictions. No matter. The law has spoken and they must comply. So it will be in other settings. Our Christian enclaves will be invaded. Your home, in fact, will be the next battleground as Hillary Rodham Clinton cranks her "children's rights" agenda into action. Thus, most of us will be faced eventually with one of two choices: We'll either speak up or submit in silence. Why not use our voices now, while the memory of the Judeo-Christian ethic still lingers like rare perfume within the popular culture? Furthermore, to those who suggest we retreat to our Christian enclaves, I would ask a few extremely important questions: 1. At what point will you rise to defend what you believe? Is there anything worth putting your reputation or life in jeopardy? Will you object if your children are routinely indoctrinated in homosexual ideology in the public schools? Will you object if imperfect babies are killed in our hospitals? Will you object if the State tells your pastor or priest what he can say from the pulpit? (In Sweden, an evangelical pastor who preached a sermon on Sodom and Gomorrah was convicted of "verbal violence" against homosexuals and sentenced to a four-week prison term.) Will you object if the church loses its non-profit status and is heavily taxed? Will you object if the State assumes "ownership" of children and tells parents how they must raise them--under penalty of losing custody? Will you object if boys and girls are given a wide range of rights that override the wishes of their mothers and fathers? Will you object if every teenager in America is given immoral advice and a supply of condoms to implement it? Will you object if each family is permitted only one baby, as is the official policy today in China? Will you object if Christian business people are required to satisfy a quota of homosexual and lesbian employees? Will you object if churches are not exempt from that quota obligation? Will you object if universities refuse to grant degrees to outspoken Christian students? Will you object if daughters or sisters or wives are drafted into the military and required to fight in combat? Will you object if obscenity laws are repealed and child pornography is ignored by the government? Will you object if the schools teach "death education" classes to students beginning in elementary school? Will you rise to speak if every tenet of your faith is legislated against in Congress and in your home state? Are these changes coming to Western nations? I don't know. Some of them are already well-entrenched. Others appear to be right around the corner. Anything can happen to the losers of a civil war. To rephrase my question to those who oppose Christian political involvement, just where will you draw the line? Is there any freedom or principle you would defend with your life? 2. Let me ask another series of questions to the church leaders who believe we should stay out of the political fray. What would have been your teachings about slavery and abolition if you had led a congregation in 1855? The bloodiest war in American history was rapidly approaching. Especially as a minister in the South, would you have avoided the divisive slavery issue? Would you have even addressed its evil? What would you have done if you had lived and worked in Germany during the late 1930s and early 1940s? How well would your philosophy of non- involvement have held up against the terrors of the Nazi regime? If you had known Hitler was exterminating people in concentration camps, would you have focused only on your local responsibilities? Would it have been appropriate to take an apolitical posture? That is precisely what the mainline church did in Germany as World War II approached. It chose not to confront the evils of the Third Reich. History tells us, sadly, that in 1933 the Lutheran Church in Germany actually passed a resolution condemning Jews and excluding them from their worship services. They looked the other way for more than a decade, while millions of Jews, Gypsies, Poles, homosexuals, the mentally impaired and the physically handicapped were systematically murdered. Let me cite the historical record as expressed in the publication Christian History: During this period, many Christians within Germany had adopted Hitler's National Socialism as part of their creed. Known as "German Christians", their spokesman, Herman Gruner, made it clear what they stood for: "The time is fulfilled for the German people in Hitler. It is because of Hitler that Christ, God the helper and redeemer, has become effective among us. Therefore National Socialism is positive Christianity in action...Hitler is the way of the Spirit and the will of God for the German people to enter the Church of Christ." By September 1933, the conflict was out in the open. In the "Brown Synod" that month (so called because many of the clergy wore brown Nazi uniforms and gave the Nazi salute), the church adopted the "Aryan Clause," which denied the pulpit to ordained ministers of Jewish blood.... Thank God for Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who refused to go along with this wickedness. He protested loudly, to his own peril. Let me quote again from Christian History: Finally (Bonhoeffer) declared that the church should "jam the spokes of the wheel" of state should the persecution of Jews continue. (Sounds like Operation Rescue, doesn't it?) Many of the gathered clergy left in a huff, convinced they had heard sedition. (Bonhoeffer and friends) pledged to fight for repeal of the Aryan Clause, and by late September, they had obtained 2,000 signatures. But to Bonhoeffer's disappointment, the church's bishops again remained silent. Their silence will echo throughout eternity! So will the words and deeds of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. He was rejected as a pastor, ridiculed and hounded by the Nazis. He was arrested April 5, 1943, and charged with "subversion of the Armed Forces." On April 9, 1945, he was hanged with six other resistors at Flossenburg concentration camp. What a man of consummate courage! Now admittedly, there are many differences between the oppression of the Nazi regime and the policies of today's Western governments. I would not weaken the point by overstating it. But there are striking similarities, too. Hitler murdered 6 million Jews; we in the United States have killed nearly 30 million unborn babies. And what have many denominations done in response? They have passed resolutions defending and even encouraging the killings, thereby granting religious sanction to the horror. They have assigned "study groups" to produce sophisticated reports that whitewash perverted sexual behavior the Bible calls "an abomination." And millions of believers have sat passively in their pews and uttered no protest. God help us! More than 450 years ago, Martin Luther wrote: "If I profess with the loudest voice and the clearest exposition every portion of the truth of God, except precisely that little point which the world and the devil are at that moment attacking, I am not confessing Christ, however boldly I may be professing Christ. Where the battle rages, there the loyalty of the soldier is proved, and to be steady on all the battlefield besides is mere flight and disgrace if he flinches at that point." So what are we to do as the Christian ethic comes under greater attack? Where do we go from here? Well, first and foremost, we must fortify ourselves with prayer. That is the foundation. That's why Focus on the Family has called for 100 days of prayer (which began January 20), during which we are suggesting that people ask for wisdom and for God's blessing on our nation. Pray specifically for our president and for our leaders in Washington. We must do nothing in a spirit that would dishonor the cause of Christ. We are His ambassadors, whether in our neighborhoods or in the halls of Congress. Let me leave no doubt that President Clinton is not the enemy in this struggle. Liberal congressman are not the problem. The biased media is not the source. Homosexual activists are not our enemies. "Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms." Sin in all its wretchedness is the sickness that infects humanity. And all the political action in the world will not cleanse one hideous stain from our beleaguered nation. Only the blood of Jesus Christ can do the marvelous work. Nevertheless, we must use our influence in the world around us. We are blessed to live in a representative form of government, and we are responsible to be salt and light within it. These are not contradictory concepts. They fully complement one another. My good friend Chuck Colson is calling for this dual responsibility-- national and local--in this time of crisis. He wrote in an article in Christianity Today, "What we do must flow from who we are. We cannot export something we don't have. Before we can bring a holy influence in society, we must first be a holy people." But Colson also wrote, "Don't get me wrong. I am not suggesting political disengagement. By my theology, Christians must contend for biblically informed morality and justice in the halls of power." That is the balance that keeps our ethics and our activism in proper perspective. Second, and I say this with the strongest emphasis, I urge you to hold tightly to your courage and your moral convictions during the stressful days ahead. This is no time to wimp out! Discouragement and despair are not of the Father. He has not given us a spirit of fear. We are serving the One about whom it is written, "...If God is for us, who can be against us?" What is occurring in our country today is the moral equivalent to war. We are, as Gary Bauer and I wrote in our book, Children at Risk, engaged in a civil war of ideas that will be won or lost in the next few years. If the Church does not use its vast influence in the public square, the night will be much longer! We must not lose our nerve now. If Winston Churchill had cowered before Hitler's hegemony in 1939, the British might well be living under tyranny today. Instead of saying, "Never give up! Never! Never! Never give up!" what if he had told his countrymen, "Germany defeated France in less than 100 days. There is no way we can stand alone against the blitzkrieg. Perhaps there is a less dangerous approach to this threat." That is precisely what Neville Chamberlain concluded, and his appeasement of "Herr Hitler" nearly ended Britain's long and glorious sovereignty. The fear of defeat can paralyze good men and women in times of crisis. One thing is absolutely certain: The withering wave of secular humanism we are now seeing will eventually collapse of its own weight. It always does. Why? Because it violates the basic laws of God. A nation cannot be blessed while killing its babies, destroying its families, "de-moralizing" its teenagers, and promoting perversion. Since we cannot immediately change the policies that distress us, our task for the moment is to engage actively in this great democratic system and then hold onto our convictions and our resolve until the turnaround occurs. That day will come--unless we are entering the final events of human history. Even in that eventuality, we are commanded "to occupy until I come." Will we be ridiculed and wounded in the meantime? Yes, no doubt some of us will. The heroes of the faith, described in Hebrews 11, suffered and died for their beliefs. We must be prepared for sacrifice too. It is the specter of ridicule, however, that may motivate some Christian leaders to suggest we remain quiet and unobtrusive. Because we are outnumbered, outgunned and often humiliated by the press, they say we should give them nothing to criticize. That is a familiar posture during times of national emergency. General Washington fought the Revolutionary War with support from only about 15 percent of his countrymen. Lincoln's entire Cabinet opposed the Civil War and would have permitted the Confederate States to secede. In September 1941, the United States Congress buckled in terror at the Nazi threat. Unbelievably, when our friends in England and Europe were being ravaged, our representatives came within one vote of ending the draft, closing numerous army bases and virtually emasculating the military. Senator Jennings Randolph, then a congressman, cast the winning vote in the House that prevented passage of the bill. We were, mind you, three months from Pearl Harbor as those discussions took place. There have always been those in times of national peril who wanted to settle the differences with appeasement. And most of them have expressed the concern we're hearing today, "We can't win in that arena." That is irrelevant! It is not our duty to win. It is our duty to be faithful! Apart from the spiritual dimension of this conflict, there is a constitutional matter to be considered. The political system does not belong exclusively to those with whom we disagree, and I will not yield them a single victory without using what little influence I have. I have been granted the right to be heard, and I will exercise it. If I get mauled. If I am ridiculed, I will be ridiculed. If I lose, I will lose. But I will die defending what I believe, and I will go down knowing I did the best I could to represent righteousness and family integrity. How can I do less? What's at stake at this stage in our history is profoundly more significant that the whims of politics. Hanging in the balance is the essence of the Christian faith--purity, reverence for life, family stability, love for God and receptivity to the gospel itself. We are the custodians --the stewards--of this precious heritage. We can't afford to tremble now! What is needed are millions of believers who will remain true to their convictions and ask God to help them prevail (or persevere) against overwhelming odds. Will you join that army of committed soldiers? If for no other reason, let's do it for our children and grandchildren. If we lose them, there will be no family on which to focus. I sure wish you'd write and let me hear your reaction to this appeal. I'll tell you one thing: It comes from the depths of my being! Your prayers for this ministry will be appreciated. God bless our country. Sincerely James C. Dobson, Ph.D. President P.S. One more thought: May I caution you not to believe anything the media says about Colorado Springs and the granting of special rights for homosexuals. Not since the struggle to control obscenity in 1986 has the press shown such bias and deception on a public issue. For example, Newsweek March 1, 1993, attributed the "hate campaign" to organizations like Focus on the Family. To illustrate their point, they cited a study conducted by this ministry that revealed the unhealthy behavior of homosexuals. It was vintage Newsweek baloney. Focus on the Family has never conducted any research on homosexuality. After a search of our past publications and on-air comments, we found a three-year-old publication written by a staff member which referenced scientific findings from the New England Journal of Medicine and other medical journals. That, according to Newsweek, illustrated our hate and intolerance. The Newsweek article concluded with this bit of self-righteous tongue-clucking directed at the citizens of Colorado Springs, "If this beautiful city wants to be the evangelical capital of America, then Christians have to get back to first principles: remembering to love their neighbors as themselves." Thanks, Newsweek, for showing the way.