As Director of the Christian Worldview
Center at North Greenville University (not a university), organizer of the
Truth for a New Generation Conferences, and co-host of the radio program
“Exploring the Word” (on American Family Radio),
Alex McFarland has managed to make something of a name for himself as one of
the most delusional, most deranged fanatical extremist on the fringes of the
religious right. He has also written numerous books and served as Director of
Teen Apologetics for the extremist hate group and cult Focus on the Family,
and yes: his primary target seems to be younger and more impressionable people,
some of whom are surely receptive to his death-cult-like hate and extremism. He
is also president of Southern Evangelical Seminary in Charlotte.
When explaining his own Project 2026 for
instance, he described it,
an initiative to save America from annihilation at the hands of “the four groups that are actively working to
secularize and destroy America: humanists; atheists; militant homosexuals; and
Muslims.” Boo to humanism. And that coalition – they’re allied, you know –
has allies in “apostate” churches and
people “that are enlisted for Satan” that
are pushing for the destruction of America.
McFarland
on dissent
In general, McFarland’s go-to argument is
that if you disagree with him on anything you are really trying to ruin
America, and his friend God might beat you up, too, so you better not. Also, it
may be treason.
In 2015, for instance, McFarland reacted with horror to students and libruls protesting Bobby Jindal’s prayer rally, calling it “borderline treasonous” (they’re
disagreeing with something McFarland agrees with after all – and even voicing the disagreement – and if they’d
just read the Constitution McFarland’s read they’d have realized that
disagreeing with McFarland just might violate that constitution); the protests
also exemplified an “intense spiritually
oppressive environment;” clearly “Father
of Lies, Satan” was the one really behind it all.
McFarland also invoked the Founding Fathers, since The Founding Fathers would never have sown discord by protesting
anything. Obama’s Syrian refugee policy was treasonous, too,
as was Obama’s comments at the National Prayer Breakfast.
On the other hand, in 2016, McFarland claimed that God intervened in the election to save the Constitution and get Trump elected,
which doesn’t sound like it would be
something the fake Constitution most of us are familiar with would allow.
By contrast, those who voted for Obama in 2012 “need to get on their knees and ask for
God’s forgiveness.” Interestingly, McFarland himself was apparently no fan of
Romney, however, mostly because of Romney’s Mormonism. Here is McFarland explaining how Mormons are not Christian, and that Mormonism is
actually more like Islam, because McFarland doesn’t fancy either. (According to McFarland,
next to the Fall of Man in the Garden of Eden, Islam is the worst thing to ever
happen to humanity.)
Obama, too. According to McFarland,
President Obama refused to fight radical Islam because he is secretly a Muslim.
After all, there were no bombings or drone attacks or military interventions in
Afghanistan or the Middle East during Obama’s presidency.
Here is McFarland on the fact that some people actually say out loud that they don’t
believe in God (it’s “both disrespectful
and intolerant of those with deeply held beliefs”). After all, people like
McFarland would never proclaim his
faith out loud, try to convince anyone to conform to his beliefs (except when arguing that failing to place Bibles in hotel rooms is harmful because it potentially
deprives guests of “an avenue to truth
that could rescue that individual from a very dark place and help save a life”)
or accuse those who disagree with him of being in league with Satan.
McFarland
on gay people and women
Well, but of course. When Obama came out in
support of marriage equality in 2012, McFarland reacted the way you’d expect from someone hateful, dumb and delusional, saying that Obama’s support for marriage equality
has put America under “the judgment of
God” and “will contribute to the
damnation of so many souls,” especially “impressionable young people” and “his own daughters.” Then he went on to doubt Obama’s Christian
faith.
Apparently Satan is using gay and transgender identity to “debase and devalue and harm the ones made in God’s image.” So, to
those who think that homophobia and bullying of gay and transgender people is a
problem, McFarland would answer by pointing out that it is “psychologically destructive”
homosexuality that causes problems for LGBT people, not bullying. You see, gays
are really just victims of “emotional pain and sometimes molestation”.
Then he claimed that Christians were the ones actually facing persecution in
America.
Also in line with his general principles
for reasoning, McFarland concluded that God didn’t prevent the 2015 San Bernardino shootings because of abortion and gay marriage.
Indeed, gay rights (and the Obama presidency) is God’s punishment on America for the sins of liberals. Apparently Obama, gay people and liberals were also to blame for a Malaysian jet being shot down over Ukraine in July 2014, just because
Jesus, God.
Gender equality is an abomination too. In
2017, when a Chicago megachurch named a woman co-pastor, McFarland was shocked:
“Women do much, much, much great
ministry, and men and women are definitely in the eyes of God equal in worth,
and value, and personhood, and dignity, but I see making a woman the senior
pastor of a church as really a capitulation to acquiescing to the spirit of
egalitarianism – the secular mindset that there must be no differences between
males and females.”
He was not impressed when President Obama in 2016 invited a lesbian pastor to read scripture at the
White House’s Easter Prayer Breakfast. Caitlyn Jenner’s gender transition,
meanwhile, was downright demonic.
McFarland
on evolution
Teaching evolution in schools was,
according to McFarland,
a cause of the Fort Hood shootings, since whenever you wish to explain
something like this you point to something you already disagree with, ignore
the facts, and assert that whatever you don’t like was the cause.
The theory of evolution is, according to McFarland,
also the cause of racism. After all,
there was no racism before the publication of The Origin of Species in 1859. “The Bible teaches that there is only one
race, the human race, and that all people are made in the image of God,” McFarland
pointed out, so racist views must come from elsewhere. According to McFarland,
the Founding Fathers also knew that all men are created
equal and blamed “150 years of Darwinian evolution”
for supposedly undermining that core American principle. “Evolution, for about 75 years, has had a stranglehold on American
education,” McFarland declared),
“and so the number one reason for racism
is belief in evolution,” since schools have become more racist since the 1950s when they started teaching that all
humans are related through relatively recent common ancestors, and slavery was
either i) mostly justified not by reference to the Curse of Ham in the Bible,
by the theory of evolution, before that theory was discovered; or ii) wasn’t
racist at all: maybe people of different races just have different roles, just like people of different
genders?
Diagnosis: Ridiculous madman, whose
arguments usually consist (exclusively) of labeling those who disagree with him
with the worst labels he can think of – “treason”, “Satan”, “the Founding
Fathers would disagree” – regardless of whether there is any relation between
the meaning of the label and the person or phenomenon labeled (indeed, it’s
interesting to see the extent to which religious right talking points consist only of this trick – as opposed to us
calling them out as “loons” by showing how and why they are loons). McFarland
does apparently have some influence on the religious right, however. Dangerous.
It's hard to believe that so much stupidity can be crammed into just one person.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your detailed report on this "wolf in sheep's clothing" zealot. Dangerous indeed!
ReplyDeletePS Keep an eye on the latest member of the vacuous Wildmon clan, Walker. Although he can hardly string two sentences together; his Dad, Tim, has given him his own AFR show "Exposing Washington".