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Moral Majority

The Moral Majority was an American political organization and movement associated with the Christian right and the Republican Party in the United States. It was founded in 1979 by Baptist minister Jerry Falwell Sr. and associates, and dissolved in the late 1980s. It played a key role in the mobilization of conservative Christians as a political force and particularly in Republican presidential victories throughout the 1980s.

Jerry Falwell Sr., whose founding of the Moral Majority was a key step in the formation of the New Christian Right

Oxford Dictionaries defines the term as a "right-wing movement in the US formed in the 1970s."[1]

History edit

Before establishment edit

The origins of the Moral Majority can be traced to 1976 when Baptist minister Jerry Falwell Sr. embarked on a series of "I Love America" rallies across the country to raise awareness of social issues important to him.[2] These rallies were an extension of Falwell's decision to go against the traditional Baptist principle of separating religion and politics, a change of heart Falwell says he had when he perceived what he described as the decay of the nation's morality.[3] Through hosting these rallies, Falwell was able to gauge national support for a formal organization and also raise his profile as a leader. Having already been a part of a well-established network of ministers and ministries, within a few years Falwell was favorably positioned to launch the Moral Majority.

The impetus for the Moral Majority was the struggle for control of an American conservative Christian advocacy group known as Christian Voice during 1978. Robert Grant, Christian Voice's president, said in a news conference that the religious right was a "sham... controlled by three Catholics and a Jew." Following this, Paul Weyrich, Terry Dolan, Richard Viguerie (the Catholics) and Howard Phillips (the Jew) left Christian Voice.

During a 1979 meeting, they urged televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr. to found Moral Majority (a phrase coined by Weyrich[4]). This was the period when the New Christian Right arose.[5][6] Joining Falwell in the Moral Majority was Ed McAteer, who the same year, founded the Religious Roundtable in Memphis, Tennessee.[7]

Establishment and organizational activity edit

Falwell and Weyrich founded the Moral Majority in June 1979.[8] According to former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, who was Texas evangelist James Robison's communications director at the time, Robison's "Freedom Rally" at the Dallas Convention Center was the genesis of the Moral Majority.[9]

The Moral Majority was predominately a Southern-oriented organization of the Christian Right, although its state chapters and political activity extended beyond the South.[2] The number of state chapters grew quickly, with organizations in eighteen states by 1980.[10][11] The variety of resources available to the Moral Majority at its founding facilitated this rapid expansion, and included Falwell's mailing list from his program, Old Time Gospel Hour. In addition, the Moral Majority took control of the Old Time Gospel Hour's publication, Journal Champion, which had been distributed to the show's donors.[12] Through the 1980s, Falwell was the organization's best-known spokesperson. By 1982, Moral Majority surpassed Christian Voice in size and influence.

The Moral Majority's headquarters were in Lynchburg, Virginia, where Falwell was the presiding minister of the nation's largest independent Baptist church, Thomas Road Baptist Church. Virginia has been a seat of Christian Right politics, being the state where the Christian Coalition's first headquarters were established. Falwell was at the head of the Moral Majority and maintained an advisory board, constituting the organization's primary leadership. This leadership was drawn mostly from Falwell's fellow members of the Baptist Bible Fellowship. Falwell insisted the Moral Majority leadership also include Catholics and Jews, although not all members of the leadership approved of this inclusion.[13]

The Moral Majority was an organization made up of conservative Christian political action committees which campaigned on issues its personnel believed were important to maintaining its Christian conception of moral law. They believed this represented the opinions of the majority of Americans (hence the movement's name). With a membership of millions, the Moral Majority became one of the largest conservative lobby groups in the United States and at its height, it claimed more than four million members and over two million donors.[14] These members were spread among about twenty state organizations, of which Washington State's was the largest. The Moral Majority was incorporated into the Liberty Federation in 1985, remaining a distinct entity but falling under the Liberty Federation's larger jurisdiction. In 1987, Falwell retired as the formal head of the Moral Majority, and was succeeded by Jerry Nims,[15][16] although he maintained an active and visible role within the organization. The same year, a major effort which Falwell made to bring scandal-ridden Jim Bakker's PTL ministries out of financial trouble proved unsuccessful.[17]

Dissolution edit

By the end of Ronald Reagan's presidential administration, Christian Right organizations were generally in a phase of decline. After Reagan's two terms in office, donations were decreasing, because after eight years of Christian Right-supported leadership, the nation was no longer seen as in the same state of supposed moral peril as it was when Reagan first took office.[18] The Moral Majority's financial base seriously eroded by the time it became part of the Liberty Federation; its financial difficulties ultimately were a major factor in the decision to disband the organization.[19] Falwell offered an optimistic public opinion about the Moral Majority's dissolution. Disbanding the Moral Majority in 1989 in Las Vegas, Falwell declared, "Our goal has been achieved... The religious right is solidly in place and [...] religious conservatives in America are now in for the duration."[20]

Organizational goals and composition edit

The Moral Majority sought to mobilize conservative Americans to become politically active on issues they thought were important. A variety of tactics were used to garner support. These tactics included direct-mail campaigns, telephone hotlines, rallies, and religious television broadcasts.[21] Although the Moral Majority operated for only a decade, it rapidly became a visible political force and was relatively effective in its mobilization goals. According to Robert Liebman and Robert Wuthnow, common explanations for this success include:[22]

  • The Moral Majority was founded with strong financial backing already in place.
  • Its leaders frequently communicated with its constituents, enabling consistent messages to resonate throughout all levels.
  • Its leaders generally had previous organizational and management experience.
  • The general public was amenable to the issues the Moral Majority emphasized.

Some issues for which the Moral Majority campaigned included:[23]

Social agenda edit

Moral Majority successfully campaigned to create an integrated social platform that appealed to most conservative Christians by packaging a variety of previously disparate issues under the banner of "traditional family values”.[25] Moral Majority portrayed issues such as abortion, divorce, feminism, gay and lesbian rights, and the Equal Rights Amendment as attacks on the traditional concept and values of American families and tapped into a sense of societal moral decay that resonated with many evangelicals.[26] They also campaigned for the inclusion of prayer in schools and tax incentives for married couples as protection for the traditional family structure. Under this pro-family agenda, they mobilized a large base of supporters with issue-centric dialogue that they proliferated in their network of preachers and mailings.[25]

Gay rights issues edit

In particular, the anti-homosexual rhetoric that they publicized through fund-raising letters and Christian broadcasting had higher contribution rates than other topics. While not explicitly anti-gay in their public platforms during the 1970s, their internal mobilization as "shared anti-gay sentiment aided in solidifying a collective set of grievances and ideologies, in establishing a collective identity of constituents, and in constructing a hostile enemy against which the conservative Christian activists were to fight".[27] The Moral Majority refrained from directly speaking out against gays, feminists, and pro-abortion parties and instead used "pro-family" rhetoric to articulate their point. For example, instead of coming out directly against homosexuality and gay families, leaders of the Moral Majority defined a family as "two heterosexual parents" which appealed to many conservatives.[28]

Later, as the organization gained more influence in the 1980s, their rhetoric became more explicit in their stance on gay rights as they characterized the movement as an attack on the American family. Jerry Falwell Sr. expressed that because gay people were rejected by most of society, they had no choice but to prey on the young and were therefore a threat to children and families. Various Moral Majority members also expressed more extreme opinions, such as Moral Majority commentator Charlie Judd, who argued that "There are absolutes in this world. Just as jumping off a building will kill a person, so will the spread of homosexuality bring about the demise of American culture as we know it".[29]

Organizational structure edit

The Moral Majority comprised four distinct organizations:[30]

  • Moral Majority Inc. – the organization's lobbying division, which addressed issues on local, state, and national levels.
  • Moral Majority Foundation – the organization's educational component, through which the Moral Majority educated ministers and lay people on political issues and conducted voter registration drives.
  • Moral Majority Legal Defense Fund – the organization's legal instrument, used primarily to challenge the American Civil Liberties Union and secular humanist issues in court.
  • Moral Majority Political Action Committee – the organization's mechanism for supporting the candidacy of people whose political platforms reflected Moral Majority values.

The state chapters of the Moral Majority were financially independent from the national organization and relied on local resources to conduct their activities. Consequently, the national organization encouraged local chapters to cooperate with their policies but had little control over local chapters' activities.[31] Political activity of the Moral Majority divided accordingly, with the national Moral Majority office usually focused on addressing multiple issues through Congress while local branches tended to work on a single issue within their respective states.[32]

Political involvement edit

The Moral Majority engaged in political activity in a variety of ways, including national media campaigns and grassroots organization aimed at supporting particular candidates in elections and using mail and phone calls to reach office-holders.[33] The Moral Majority's initial political actions were aimed at supporting Jesse Helms' proposed legislation on school prayer.[34] Before long, the Moral Majority became heavily invested in presidential elections and national politics; although at the state level branches of the Moral Majority continued to pursue specific issues at lower levels of government. As far as elections, state Moral Majority chapters tended to deliberately focus their efforts towards particular candidates. For example, state chapters participated in campaigns to oust liberal members of Congress during the 1980 election. Also, in 1981, the Moral Majority mobilized delegates to the Virginia Republican state nominating convention in order to support Guy Farley, an evangelical candidate for lieutenant governor.[35]

Nationally, the Moral Majority encouraged electoral participation among its members and used registration drives to register church-goers to vote, with the logic that Moral Majority members would be likely to vote for Moral Majority-endorsed candidates, thus strengthening the organization's electoral efficacy and strengthening its endorsements. Leaders within the Moral Majority asked ministers give their congregants political direction, reminding congregants when to vote, whom to vote for, and why the Moral Majority held particular positions on issues.[36] The Moral Majority, however, is probably best known for its involvement in presidential elections, specifically those of Ronald Reagan.

Presidential elections edit

The 1976 election of Jimmy Carter as President of the United States marked a milestone for evangelical Christians. For the first time, a self-professed evangelical Christian had been elected to the nation's highest office, bringing the national awareness of evangelical Christianity to a new level. Despite commonality in religious identification, however, evangelical Christians in general and eventually the newly formed Moral Majority in particular came to be disappointed with Carter's policies. Carter did not share the Moral Majority's political imperative to unify personal and political positions and would instead support the positions of his own party, the Democratic Party. In particular, Carter did not actively oppose his party's general pro-choice platform on abortion, nor did Carter work to bridge the church–state divide, both factors in the Moral Majority's decision to support Ronald Reagan's candidacy in 1980.[3]

1980 edit

The Moral Majority was a relatively early supporter of Reagan, endorsing him before the Republican convention.[37] According to Jimmy Carter, "that autumn [1980] a group headed by Jerry Falwell purchased $10 million in commercials on southern radio and TV to brand me as a traitor to the South and no longer a Christian."[38] Naturally, the Moral Majority continued working on behalf of Reagan after he gained the Republican nomination. Following the organization's lead, more than one-fifth of Moral Majority supporters that had supported Carter in 1976 voted for Reagan in 1980.[39] After Reagan's victory, Falwell attributed Reagan's success directly to the Moral Majority and others registering and encouraging church-goers to vote who had never before been politically active.[40] Empirical evidence suggests that Falwell's claim about the role of Christian Right organizations in Reagan's victory has some truth, though difficult to determine definitively.[41]

Reagan sought input from the Moral Majority leadership during his campaign and appointed the Rev. Robert Billings, the Moral Majority's first executive director, to be a religious advisor to the campaign.[42] Later, Reagan appointed Billings to a position in the Department of Education. This appointment was particularly significant for the Moral Majority, which had lobbied on education policy issues, especially those regarding private schools.[43]

1984 edit

The Moral Majority maintained their support for Reagan's 1984 reelection campaign and, alongside other Christian Right organizations, influenced the Republican platform for the election, shaping the party's campaign stances on school prayer and abortion.[44] The nation's political climate, however, had changed since Reagan's first campaign. Although Reagan won reelection, the role of the Moral Majority in the victory had changed since 1980. A study of voters in the 1984 election showed that more anti-Moral Majority voters voted for Walter Mondale than pro-Moral Majority voters voted for Reagan, suggesting the Moral Majority may have actually had a negative effect on Reagan's campaign.[44]

1988 edit

1988 was the last presidential election for which the Moral Majority was an active organization. With Reagan having reached his two-term limit, the Republican nomination was open to a variety of primary contenders. The evangelical minister and televangelist Pat Robertson sought the Republican nomination and would have been, at first glance, a natural choice for the Moral Majority's support. Although Robertson's political platforms were extremely similar to the ones the Moral Majority supported, Falwell gave his organization's endorsement to contender George H. W. Bush instead. Falwell's decision highlighted the rivalry between Falwell and Robertson as televangelists but also revealed the deep-seated tension that still persisted between competing evangelical traditions – Falwell's fundamentalist tradition was at odds with Robertson's charismatic tradition.[45]

Challenges to the Moral Majority edit

By 1987–88, the views of the Moral Majority were challenged widely and the organization started to crumble. With its waning support, critics said "The Moral Majority is neither", meaning the organization was neither moral nor a majority. By 1988, there were serious cash flow problems and Falwell dismantled the organization in 1989.[46]

Bob Jones edit

During its existence the Moral Majority experienced friction with other evangelical leaders and organizations as well as liberal leaders and organizations. For example, Bob Jones particularly sought to challenge the public position of the Moral Majority and was known to make public statements that the Moral Majority was an instrument of Satan.[13] Such rivalries affected the Moral Majority's grassroots efforts. In South Carolina, the Moral Majority had no presence because Bob Jones University's religious network had already organized the state's independent Baptists.[47] The tension between Falwell and Pat Robertson also affected the Moral Majority.

Norman Lear edit

On the ideologically opposed side, Norman Lear's liberal organization People for the American Way was formed with the specific intention of opposing the platforms of the Moral Majority and other Christian Right organizations.[48]

Moral Majority Coalition edit

In November 2004, Falwell revived the Moral Majority name for a new organization, the Moral Majority Coalition. The intent of the organization is to continue the "evangelical revolution" to help conservative politicians get elected. Referring to the Coalition as a "21st century resurrection of the Moral Majority," Falwell, a father of the modern "religious right" political movement, committed to leading the organization for four years.[49] He died on May 15, 2007.[50]

Notable people within the movement edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 2018-09-10. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 58. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  3. ^ a b Allitt, Patrick (2003). Religion in America Since 1945: A History, p. 152. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12154-7
  4. ^ Lernoux, Penny. "A Reverence for Fundamentalism," The Nation, vol. 248, Issue #0015, 17 April 1989
  5. ^ Martin, William (1996). With God on Our Side: The Rise of the Religious Right in America. New York: Broadway Books. ISBN 978-0-553-06745-3.
  6. ^ Diamond, Sara (1995). Roads to Dominion. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 978-0-89862-864-7.
  7. ^ Margalit Fox (October 10, 2004). "Edward E. McAteer, 78; Empowered Christian Right". The New York Times. from the original on 2016-07-17. Retrieved May 26, 2016.
  8. ^ Hudson, D.W. (2008). Onward, Christian Soldiers: The Growing Political Power of Catholics and Evangelicals in the United States. Threshold Editions. p. 15. ISBN 9781416565895. Retrieved 2014-11-15.
  9. ^ Levy, Ariel (2010-06-28). "Prodigal Son". The New Yorker. from the original on 2012-01-22. Retrieved 22 January 2012.
  10. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, pp. 31–32. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  11. ^ Williams, Daniel K. (April 2010). "Jerry Falwell's Sunbelt Politics: The Regional Origins of the Moral Majority". Journal of Policy History. Cambridge University Press. 22 (2): 125–47. doi:10.1017/S0898030610000011. S2CID 146148193.
  12. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 61. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  13. ^ a b Allitt, Patrick (2003). Religion in America Since 1945: A History, p. 153. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12154-7
  14. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1996). Onward Christian Soldiers?, p. 96. Boulder: Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-2696-6
  15. ^ Lohmann, Bill (February 6, 1988). "From Beatnik to Religious Right Figure : New Moral Majority Leader Took His Own Path". Los Angeles Times. from the original on 2016-10-20. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  16. ^ Carroll, Jerry (November 5, 1987). "Falwell's Successor Recalls Fondly HIs Bay Area Roots Nims' dad was controversial preacher in the city". San Francisco Chronicle.
  17. ^ "Falwell Quits, Warning PTL Ministry May End". The New York Times. October 9, 1987. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  18. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1996). Onward Christian Soldiers?, p. 38. Boulder: Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-2696-6
  19. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1992). God's Warriors, p. 14. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4263-8
  20. ^ Allitt, Patrick (2003). Religion in America Since 1945: A History, p. 198. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12154-7
  21. ^ Robert Wuthnow (1988). The Restructuring of American Religion, p. 205. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-07759-2
  22. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 55–57. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  23. ^ . Columbia Encyclopedia. Vol. 6th ed. Columbia University Press. 2004. Archived from the original on 2007-08-19. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
  24. ^ Falwell: An Autobiography, The Inside Story, Liberty House Publishers, Lynchburg, 1997, p. 395.
  25. ^ a b Fetner, Tina. How the Religious Right Shaped Lesbian and Gay Activism, p. 58. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-4918-1.
  26. ^ Banwart, Doug (2013). "Jerry Falwell, the Rise of the Moral Majority, and the 1980 Election" (PDF). Western Illinois Historical Review. 5: 133–57. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  27. ^ Fetner, Tina. How the Religious Right Shaped Lesbian and Gay Activism, p. 60. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-4918-1.
  28. ^ Banwart, Doug (2013). "Jerry Falwell, the Rise of the Moral Majority, and the 1980 Election" (PDF). Western Illinois Historical Review. 5: 133–57. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  29. ^ Banwart, Doug (2013). "Jerry Falwell, the Rise of the Moral Majority, and the 1980 Election" (PDF). Western Illinois Historical Review. 5: 133–57. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  30. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 54. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  31. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 70. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  32. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 71. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  33. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1996). Onward Christian Soldiers?, p. 86. Boulder: Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-2696-6
  34. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 34. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  35. ^ Rozell, Mark J. and Clyde Wilcox (2003). "Virginia: Birthplace of the Christian Right," The Christian Right in American Politics, ed. John C. Green, et al., p. 43. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. ISBN 0-87840-393-0
  36. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 37. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  37. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 36. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  38. ^ Carter, Jimmy (2010). White House Diary. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 469. ISBN 9780374280994.
  39. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1992). God's Warriors, p. 117. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4263-8
  40. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1992). God's Warriors, p. 96. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4263-8
  41. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1992). God's Warriors, pp. 115-17. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4263-8
  42. ^ Liebman, Robert and Robert Wuthnow (1983) The New Christian Right, p. 60. New York: Aldine Publishing Company. ISBN 0-202-30307-1
  43. ^ Wald, Kenneth (1997). Religion and Politics in the United States, p. 137. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press. ISBN 1-56802-157-7
  44. ^ a b Johnson, Stephen D.; Tamney, Joseph B. (1985). "The Christian Right and the 1984 Presidential Election". Review of Religious Research. Religious Research Association, Inc., Springer. 27 (2): 124–33. doi:10.2307/3511667. JSTOR 3511667.
  45. ^ Wilcox, Clyde (1992). God's Warriors, p. xv. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4263-8
  46. ^ Utter, G., True, J.: Conservative Christians and Political Participation – A Reference Handbook.. ABC Clio, Santa Barbara, California, 2004. p. 68. ISBN 1-85109-513-6
  47. ^ Vinson, C. Danielle and James L. Guth (2003). "Advance and Retreat in the Palmetto State: Assessing the Christian Right in South Carolina," The Christian Right in American Politics, ed. John C. Green, et al., p. 23. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. ISBN 0-87840-393-0
  48. ^ Williams, Peter W. (1988). America's Religions, p. 482. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-252-02663-2
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-03-19. Retrieved 2007-08-12.
  50. ^ "Moral Majority founder Falwell dies", NBC News, 15 May 2007

External links edit

    moral, majority, american, political, organization, movement, associated, with, christian, right, republican, party, united, states, founded, 1979, baptist, minister, jerry, falwell, associates, dissolved, late, 1980s, played, role, mobilization, conservative,. The Moral Majority was an American political organization and movement associated with the Christian right and the Republican Party in the United States It was founded in 1979 by Baptist minister Jerry Falwell Sr and associates and dissolved in the late 1980s It played a key role in the mobilization of conservative Christians as a political force and particularly in Republican presidential victories throughout the 1980s Jerry Falwell Sr whose founding of the Moral Majority was a key step in the formation of the New Christian RightOxford Dictionaries defines the term as a right wing movement in the US formed in the 1970s 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Before establishment 1 2 Establishment and organizational activity 1 3 Dissolution 2 Organizational goals and composition 2 1 Social agenda 2 1 1 Gay rights issues 3 Organizational structure 4 Political involvement 4 1 Presidential elections 4 1 1 1980 4 1 2 1984 4 1 3 1988 5 Challenges to the Moral Majority 5 1 Bob Jones 5 2 Norman Lear 6 Moral Majority Coalition 7 Notable people within the movement 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editBefore establishment edit The origins of the Moral Majority can be traced to 1976 when Baptist minister Jerry Falwell Sr embarked on a series of I Love America rallies across the country to raise awareness of social issues important to him 2 These rallies were an extension of Falwell s decision to go against the traditional Baptist principle of separating religion and politics a change of heart Falwell says he had when he perceived what he described as the decay of the nation s morality 3 Through hosting these rallies Falwell was able to gauge national support for a formal organization and also raise his profile as a leader Having already been a part of a well established network of ministers and ministries within a few years Falwell was favorably positioned to launch the Moral Majority The impetus for the Moral Majority was the struggle for control of an American conservative Christian advocacy group known as Christian Voice during 1978 Robert Grant Christian Voice s president said in a news conference that the religious right was a sham controlled by three Catholics and a Jew Following this Paul Weyrich Terry Dolan Richard Viguerie the Catholics and Howard Phillips the Jew left Christian Voice During a 1979 meeting they urged televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr to found Moral Majority a phrase coined by Weyrich 4 This was the period when the New Christian Right arose 5 6 Joining Falwell in the Moral Majority was Ed McAteer who the same year founded the Religious Roundtable in Memphis Tennessee 7 Establishment and organizational activity edit Falwell and Weyrich founded the Moral Majority in June 1979 8 According to former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee who was Texas evangelist James Robison s communications director at the time Robison s Freedom Rally at the Dallas Convention Center was the genesis of the Moral Majority 9 The Moral Majority was predominately a Southern oriented organization of the Christian Right although its state chapters and political activity extended beyond the South 2 The number of state chapters grew quickly with organizations in eighteen states by 1980 10 11 The variety of resources available to the Moral Majority at its founding facilitated this rapid expansion and included Falwell s mailing list from his program Old Time Gospel Hour In addition the Moral Majority took control of the Old Time Gospel Hour s publication Journal Champion which had been distributed to the show s donors 12 Through the 1980s Falwell was the organization s best known spokesperson By 1982 Moral Majority surpassed Christian Voice in size and influence The Moral Majority s headquarters were in Lynchburg Virginia where Falwell was the presiding minister of the nation s largest independent Baptist church Thomas Road Baptist Church Virginia has been a seat of Christian Right politics being the state where the Christian Coalition s first headquarters were established Falwell was at the head of the Moral Majority and maintained an advisory board constituting the organization s primary leadership This leadership was drawn mostly from Falwell s fellow members of the Baptist Bible Fellowship Falwell insisted the Moral Majority leadership also include Catholics and Jews although not all members of the leadership approved of this inclusion 13 The Moral Majority was an organization made up of conservative Christian political action committees which campaigned on issues its personnel believed were important to maintaining its Christian conception of moral law They believed this represented the opinions of the majority of Americans hence the movement s name With a membership of millions the Moral Majority became one of the largest conservative lobby groups in the United States and at its height it claimed more than four million members and over two million donors 14 These members were spread among about twenty state organizations of which Washington State s was the largest The Moral Majority was incorporated into the Liberty Federation in 1985 remaining a distinct entity but falling under the Liberty Federation s larger jurisdiction In 1987 Falwell retired as the formal head of the Moral Majority and was succeeded by Jerry Nims 15 16 although he maintained an active and visible role within the organization The same year a major effort which Falwell made to bring scandal ridden Jim Bakker s PTL ministries out of financial trouble proved unsuccessful 17 Dissolution edit By the end of Ronald Reagan s presidential administration Christian Right organizations were generally in a phase of decline After Reagan s two terms in office donations were decreasing because after eight years of Christian Right supported leadership the nation was no longer seen as in the same state of supposed moral peril as it was when Reagan first took office 18 The Moral Majority s financial base seriously eroded by the time it became part of the Liberty Federation its financial difficulties ultimately were a major factor in the decision to disband the organization 19 Falwell offered an optimistic public opinion about the Moral Majority s dissolution Disbanding the Moral Majority in 1989 in Las Vegas Falwell declared Our goal has been achieved The religious right is solidly in place and religious conservatives in America are now in for the duration 20 Organizational goals and composition editThe Moral Majority sought to mobilize conservative Americans to become politically active on issues they thought were important A variety of tactics were used to garner support These tactics included direct mail campaigns telephone hotlines rallies and religious television broadcasts 21 Although the Moral Majority operated for only a decade it rapidly became a visible political force and was relatively effective in its mobilization goals According to Robert Liebman and Robert Wuthnow common explanations for this success include 22 The Moral Majority was founded with strong financial backing already in place Its leaders frequently communicated with its constituents enabling consistent messages to resonate throughout all levels Its leaders generally had previous organizational and management experience The general public was amenable to the issues the Moral Majority emphasized Some issues for which the Moral Majority campaigned included 23 Promotion of traditional family values Opposition to media outlets accused of promoting an anti family agenda Opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment and Strategic Arms Limitation Talks Opposition to state recognition or acceptance of homosexual acts Prohibition of abortion including in cases involving incest or rape 24 Support for Christian prayers in schools Proselytising to Jews and other non Christians for conversion to ChristianitySocial agenda edit Moral Majority successfully campaigned to create an integrated social platform that appealed to most conservative Christians by packaging a variety of previously disparate issues under the banner of traditional family values 25 Moral Majority portrayed issues such as abortion divorce feminism gay and lesbian rights and the Equal Rights Amendment as attacks on the traditional concept and values of American families and tapped into a sense of societal moral decay that resonated with many evangelicals 26 They also campaigned for the inclusion of prayer in schools and tax incentives for married couples as protection for the traditional family structure Under this pro family agenda they mobilized a large base of supporters with issue centric dialogue that they proliferated in their network of preachers and mailings 25 Gay rights issues edit In particular the anti homosexual rhetoric that they publicized through fund raising letters and Christian broadcasting had higher contribution rates than other topics While not explicitly anti gay in their public platforms during the 1970s their internal mobilization as shared anti gay sentiment aided in solidifying a collective set of grievances and ideologies in establishing a collective identity of constituents and in constructing a hostile enemy against which the conservative Christian activists were to fight 27 The Moral Majority refrained from directly speaking out against gays feminists and pro abortion parties and instead used pro family rhetoric to articulate their point For example instead of coming out directly against homosexuality and gay families leaders of the Moral Majority defined a family as two heterosexual parents which appealed to many conservatives 28 Later as the organization gained more influence in the 1980s their rhetoric became more explicit in their stance on gay rights as they characterized the movement as an attack on the American family Jerry Falwell Sr expressed that because gay people were rejected by most of society they had no choice but to prey on the young and were therefore a threat to children and families Various Moral Majority members also expressed more extreme opinions such as Moral Majority commentator Charlie Judd who argued that There are absolutes in this world Just as jumping off a building will kill a person so will the spread of homosexuality bring about the demise of American culture as we know it 29 Organizational structure editThe Moral Majority comprised four distinct organizations 30 Moral Majority Inc the organization s lobbying division which addressed issues on local state and national levels Moral Majority Foundation the organization s educational component through which the Moral Majority educated ministers and lay people on political issues and conducted voter registration drives Moral Majority Legal Defense Fund the organization s legal instrument used primarily to challenge the American Civil Liberties Union and secular humanist issues in court Moral Majority Political Action Committee the organization s mechanism for supporting the candidacy of people whose political platforms reflected Moral Majority values The state chapters of the Moral Majority were financially independent from the national organization and relied on local resources to conduct their activities Consequently the national organization encouraged local chapters to cooperate with their policies but had little control over local chapters activities 31 Political activity of the Moral Majority divided accordingly with the national Moral Majority office usually focused on addressing multiple issues through Congress while local branches tended to work on a single issue within their respective states 32 Political involvement editThe Moral Majority engaged in political activity in a variety of ways including national media campaigns and grassroots organization aimed at supporting particular candidates in elections and using mail and phone calls to reach office holders 33 The Moral Majority s initial political actions were aimed at supporting Jesse Helms proposed legislation on school prayer 34 Before long the Moral Majority became heavily invested in presidential elections and national politics although at the state level branches of the Moral Majority continued to pursue specific issues at lower levels of government As far as elections state Moral Majority chapters tended to deliberately focus their efforts towards particular candidates For example state chapters participated in campaigns to oust liberal members of Congress during the 1980 election Also in 1981 the Moral Majority mobilized delegates to the Virginia Republican state nominating convention in order to support Guy Farley an evangelical candidate for lieutenant governor 35 Nationally the Moral Majority encouraged electoral participation among its members and used registration drives to register church goers to vote with the logic that Moral Majority members would be likely to vote for Moral Majority endorsed candidates thus strengthening the organization s electoral efficacy and strengthening its endorsements Leaders within the Moral Majority asked ministers give their congregants political direction reminding congregants when to vote whom to vote for and why the Moral Majority held particular positions on issues 36 The Moral Majority however is probably best known for its involvement in presidential elections specifically those of Ronald Reagan Presidential elections edit The 1976 election of Jimmy Carter as President of the United States marked a milestone for evangelical Christians For the first time a self professed evangelical Christian had been elected to the nation s highest office bringing the national awareness of evangelical Christianity to a new level Despite commonality in religious identification however evangelical Christians in general and eventually the newly formed Moral Majority in particular came to be disappointed with Carter s policies Carter did not share the Moral Majority s political imperative to unify personal and political positions and would instead support the positions of his own party the Democratic Party In particular Carter did not actively oppose his party s general pro choice platform on abortion nor did Carter work to bridge the church state divide both factors in the Moral Majority s decision to support Ronald Reagan s candidacy in 1980 3 1980 edit The Moral Majority was a relatively early supporter of Reagan endorsing him before the Republican convention 37 According to Jimmy Carter that autumn 1980 a group headed by Jerry Falwell purchased 10 million in commercials on southern radio and TV to brand me as a traitor to the South and no longer a Christian 38 Naturally the Moral Majority continued working on behalf of Reagan after he gained the Republican nomination Following the organization s lead more than one fifth of Moral Majority supporters that had supported Carter in 1976 voted for Reagan in 1980 39 After Reagan s victory Falwell attributed Reagan s success directly to the Moral Majority and others registering and encouraging church goers to vote who had never before been politically active 40 Empirical evidence suggests that Falwell s claim about the role of Christian Right organizations in Reagan s victory has some truth though difficult to determine definitively 41 Reagan sought input from the Moral Majority leadership during his campaign and appointed the Rev Robert Billings the Moral Majority s first executive director to be a religious advisor to the campaign 42 Later Reagan appointed Billings to a position in the Department of Education This appointment was particularly significant for the Moral Majority which had lobbied on education policy issues especially those regarding private schools 43 1984 edit The Moral Majority maintained their support for Reagan s 1984 reelection campaign and alongside other Christian Right organizations influenced the Republican platform for the election shaping the party s campaign stances on school prayer and abortion 44 The nation s political climate however had changed since Reagan s first campaign Although Reagan won reelection the role of the Moral Majority in the victory had changed since 1980 A study of voters in the 1984 election showed that more anti Moral Majority voters voted for Walter Mondale than pro Moral Majority voters voted for Reagan suggesting the Moral Majority may have actually had a negative effect on Reagan s campaign 44 1988 edit 1988 was the last presidential election for which the Moral Majority was an active organization With Reagan having reached his two term limit the Republican nomination was open to a variety of primary contenders The evangelical minister and televangelist Pat Robertson sought the Republican nomination and would have been at first glance a natural choice for the Moral Majority s support Although Robertson s political platforms were extremely similar to the ones the Moral Majority supported Falwell gave his organization s endorsement to contender George H W Bush instead Falwell s decision highlighted the rivalry between Falwell and Robertson as televangelists but also revealed the deep seated tension that still persisted between competing evangelical traditions Falwell s fundamentalist tradition was at odds with Robertson s charismatic tradition 45 Challenges to the Moral Majority editBy 1987 88 the views of the Moral Majority were challenged widely and the organization started to crumble With its waning support critics said The Moral Majority is neither meaning the organization was neither moral nor a majority By 1988 there were serious cash flow problems and Falwell dismantled the organization in 1989 46 Bob Jones edit During its existence the Moral Majority experienced friction with other evangelical leaders and organizations as well as liberal leaders and organizations For example Bob Jones particularly sought to challenge the public position of the Moral Majority and was known to make public statements that the Moral Majority was an instrument of Satan 13 Such rivalries affected the Moral Majority s grassroots efforts In South Carolina the Moral Majority had no presence because Bob Jones University s religious network had already organized the state s independent Baptists 47 The tension between Falwell and Pat Robertson also affected the Moral Majority Norman Lear edit On the ideologically opposed side Norman Lear s liberal organization People for the American Way was formed with the specific intention of opposing the platforms of the Moral Majority and other Christian Right organizations 48 Moral Majority Coalition editIn November 2004 Falwell revived the Moral Majority name for a new organization the Moral Majority Coalition The intent of the organization is to continue the evangelical revolution to help conservative politicians get elected Referring to the Coalition as a 21st century resurrection of the Moral Majority Falwell a father of the modern religious right political movement committed to leading the organization for four years 49 He died on May 15 2007 50 Notable people within the movement editEd Dobson Jerry Falwell Sr founder Robert Grant Jesse Helms D James Kennedy Beverly LaHaye Tim LaHaye Trent Lott Jerry Prevo Judith A Reisman Pat Robertson James Robison Charles Stanley Cal Thomas Richard Viguerie George Wallace Paul Weyrich Penny PullenSee also edit nbsp conservatism portalSave Our Children Seven Mountain Mandate The Eyes of Tammy Faye 2021 film References edit Moral Majority Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 2018 09 10 Retrieved September 10 2018 a b Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 58 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 a b Allitt Patrick 2003 Religion in America Since 1945 A History p 152 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12154 7 Lernoux Penny A Reverence for Fundamentalism The Nation vol 248 Issue 0015 17 April 1989 Martin William 1996 With God on Our Side The Rise of the Religious Right in America New York Broadway Books ISBN 978 0 553 06745 3 Diamond Sara 1995 Roads to Dominion New York Guilford Press ISBN 978 0 89862 864 7 Margalit Fox October 10 2004 Edward E McAteer 78 Empowered Christian Right The New York Times Archived from the original on 2016 07 17 Retrieved May 26 2016 Hudson D W 2008 Onward Christian Soldiers The Growing Political Power of Catholics and Evangelicals in the United States Threshold Editions p 15 ISBN 9781416565895 Retrieved 2014 11 15 Levy Ariel 2010 06 28 Prodigal Son The New Yorker Archived from the original on 2012 01 22 Retrieved 22 January 2012 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right pp 31 32 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Williams Daniel K April 2010 Jerry Falwell s Sunbelt Politics The Regional Origins of the Moral Majority Journal of Policy History Cambridge University Press 22 2 125 47 doi 10 1017 S0898030610000011 S2CID 146148193 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 61 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 a b Allitt Patrick 2003 Religion in America Since 1945 A History p 153 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12154 7 Wilcox Clyde 1996 Onward Christian Soldiers p 96 Boulder Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 2696 6 Lohmann Bill February 6 1988 From Beatnik to Religious Right Figure New Moral Majority Leader Took His Own Path Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2016 10 20 Retrieved 2016 10 19 Carroll Jerry November 5 1987 Falwell s Successor Recalls Fondly HIs Bay Area Roots Nims dad was controversial preacher in the city San Francisco Chronicle Falwell Quits Warning PTL Ministry May End The New York Times October 9 1987 Retrieved December 2 2021 Wilcox Clyde 1996 Onward Christian Soldiers p 38 Boulder Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 2696 6 Wilcox Clyde 1992 God s Warriors p 14 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 4263 8 Allitt Patrick 2003 Religion in America Since 1945 A History p 198 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12154 7 Robert Wuthnow 1988 The Restructuring of American Religion p 205 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 07759 2 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 55 57 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Moral Majority Columbia Encyclopedia Vol 6th ed Columbia University Press 2004 Archived from the original on 2007 08 19 Retrieved 2007 08 11 Falwell An Autobiography The Inside Story Liberty House Publishers Lynchburg 1997 p 395 a b Fetner Tina How the Religious Right Shaped Lesbian and Gay Activism p 58 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 4918 1 Banwart Doug 2013 Jerry Falwell the Rise of the Moral Majority and the 1980 Election PDF Western Illinois Historical Review 5 133 57 Retrieved 2019 12 10 Fetner Tina How the Religious Right Shaped Lesbian and Gay Activism p 60 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 4918 1 Banwart Doug 2013 Jerry Falwell the Rise of the Moral Majority and the 1980 Election PDF Western Illinois Historical Review 5 133 57 Retrieved 2019 12 10 Banwart Doug 2013 Jerry Falwell the Rise of the Moral Majority and the 1980 Election PDF Western Illinois Historical Review 5 133 57 Retrieved 2019 12 10 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 54 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 70 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 71 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Wilcox Clyde 1996 Onward Christian Soldiers p 86 Boulder Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 2696 6 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 34 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Rozell Mark J and Clyde Wilcox 2003 Virginia Birthplace of the Christian Right The Christian Right in American Politics ed John C Green et al p 43 Washington D C Georgetown University Press ISBN 0 87840 393 0 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 37 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 36 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Carter Jimmy 2010 White House Diary New York Farrar Straus and Giroux p 469 ISBN 9780374280994 Wilcox Clyde 1992 God s Warriors p 117 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 4263 8 Wilcox Clyde 1992 God s Warriors p 96 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 4263 8 Wilcox Clyde 1992 God s Warriors pp 115 17 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 4263 8 Liebman Robert and Robert Wuthnow 1983 The New Christian Right p 60 New York Aldine Publishing Company ISBN 0 202 30307 1 Wald Kenneth 1997 Religion and Politics in the United States p 137 Washington D C Congressional Quarterly Press ISBN 1 56802 157 7 a b Johnson Stephen D Tamney Joseph B 1985 The Christian Right and the 1984 Presidential Election Review of Religious Research Religious Research Association Inc Springer 27 2 124 33 doi 10 2307 3511667 JSTOR 3511667 Wilcox Clyde 1992 God s Warriors p xv Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 4263 8 Utter G True J Conservative Christians and Political Participation A Reference Handbook ABC Clio Santa Barbara California 2004 p 68 ISBN 1 85109 513 6 Vinson C Danielle and James L Guth 2003 Advance and Retreat in the Palmetto State Assessing the Christian Right in South Carolina The Christian Right in American Politics ed John C Green et al p 23 Washington D C Georgetown University Press ISBN 0 87840 393 0 Williams Peter W 1988 America s Religions p 482 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 252 02663 2 Moral Majority Timeline Archived from the original on 2007 03 19 Retrieved 2007 08 12 Moral Majority founder Falwell dies NBC News 15 May 2007External links editMoral Majority Coalition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moral Majority amp oldid 1193017059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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