This is supposedly what happened with abortion
following Roe. According to the pundits and experts, the 1973 decision to
legalize abortion outraged millions of Americans and mobilized them into a
powerful movement to defend the rights of the unborn. They created the Moral
Majority, the Christian Coalition, Focus on the Family, and Concerned Women for
America. The Court’s decision in Roe triggered the birth of the religious
right—or so the argument goes.
But this tale turns out to be a myth. Religious
conservatives mobilized not because of outrage over legalized abortion but because
they were furious over threats from the Internal Revenue Service, or the IRS,
to revoke the tax-exempt status of a Christian college for practicing racial
discrimination.
Randall Balmer tells the true version of this story
in his book, Thy Kingdom Come. Balmer starts out by debunking the myth that
conservative Christians spoke out against abortion in response to the ruling,
as noted above. In fact, the Baptist Press applauded the Court’s decision in
Roe v. Wade, saying that, “Religious liberty, human equality and justice are
advanced by the Supreme Court abortion decision.” What’s more, two years before
the Court’s decision, the Southern Baptist Convention adopted a resolution
calling on fellow Southern Baptists to work to make abortion legal under certain
conditions—namely, “rape, incest, clear evidence of severe fetal deformity, and
carefully ascertained evidence of the likelihood of damage to the emotional,
mental, and physical health of the mother.”
According to Balmer, Paul Weyrich, a conservative
political activist and strategist, had tried for years to mobilize evangelicals
into a conservative movement over school prayer, the proposed Equal Rights
Amendment, and abortion—all to no avail. But when government agencies started
challenging the segregationist practices of the private Christian schools that
evangelicals had built and their children were attending, evangelicals snapped
to attention.
Especially jarring to many in this group was the
fact that their schools took no government money, leading them to believe they
had the right to act according to their beliefs and make independent decisions.
But the IRS, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and other federal
agencies were “intruding” anyway. In 1971 the Supreme Court had ruled that institutions
practicing segregation—whether or not they got public financial support—were
not charitable institutions and therefore were not tax exempt. The result:
Evangelicals owed the government lots of money in back taxes. And equally bad:
In their mind, this ruling meant the federal government could barge into their
schools and tell them what to do.
When the IRS threatened in 1975 to revoke the
tax-exempt status of Bob Jones University because it didn’t allow interracial
dating among its students, evangelicals were furious—and Weyrich saw his
opening. According to Balmer, Weyrich contacted James Dobson of Focus on the
Family, Jerry Falwell of Moral Majority, and other religious leaders to form a
new movement.
The group held a meeting in Washington, D.C., in the
late 1970s. An attendee named Ed Dobson, an associate of Falwell, told Balmer,
“The Religious New Right did not start because of a concern about abortion. I
sat in the non-smoke-filled back room with the Moral Majority, and I frankly do
not remember abortion ever being mentioned as a reason why we ought to do
something.”
So how, then, did abortion get added to the agenda?
Balmer writes about a conference call among leaders
to discuss strategies regarding Bob Jones University. Someone on the call pointed
out their potential to be a broader political force if they added other issues
to their agenda. Callers came up with a number of ideas, and then finally one
caller said, “how about abortion?” No one voiced an objection, and abortion got
added to the religious right’s agenda.
Over the years abortion has moved from the bottom to
the top of the list. Evangelicals joined forces with pro-life Catholics and
became a powerful voting bloc. They claimed the moral high ground, held
politicians accountable, and stigmatized their opponents. Though it didn’t
start out that way, opposing abortion became a top priority for the religious
right.
As the Supreme Court hears cases on marriage
equality this week, it’s important to remember the myth of how the religious
right first mobilized. Beyond that, it’s important to realize that the freedom
to marry is a basic human right—not one that should be decided on a
state-by-state basis or limited by fears of a mythical backlash from the past.
About the author: Sally Steenland is Director of the
Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative at the Center for American Progress.
Steenland, a best-selling author, former newspaper columnist, and teacher,
explores the role of religion and values in the public sphere.
This article was published by the Center for
American Progress.
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