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With Another Bush In White House, Rev. Moon Makes Comeback

by Bill Berkowitz


READ
our 1998 article on ties between Moon and Bush senior
In one of his first moves as president, George W. Bush signed a proclamation designating the day after the inauguration as a National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving. Hold onto your prayer shawls my friends, because behind the most prominent Inaugural weekend prayer event was the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. Out of the pomp and pomposity of the inauguration comes the rising of the Rev. Moon.

The January 19, pre-inaugural prayer luncheon was attended by some 1,700 religious, civic, and political leaders. The guest list included a host of Religious Right luminaries; the ubiquitous Rev. Jerry Falwell, former National Evangelical Association President Don Argue, Trinity Broadcasting Network's Paul Crouch and a host of leaders from the Southern Baptist Convention including President James Merritt, Executive Committee President and CEO Morris H. Chapman, and Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission President Richard Land.

According to a front-page story in the Moon-owned Washington Times, Sen. John Ashcroft, who had not yet been confirmed as President Bush's attorney general, dropped by and "brought down the house with a tale of amazing grace." One of the featured speakers at the luncheon was Dr. Tony Evans, head of the Texas-based group, The Urban Alternative. Dr. Evans, an African American, is an entertaining and unrestrained speaker with a penchant for saying outrageous things. He is frequently a featured speaker at assorted Promise Keeper events around the country. He is also a close friend and confidant to President Bush. Several months ago, The New York Times reported Bush often calls upon Evans for spiritual guidance. According to its website The Urban Alternative proclaims itself "a ministry that seeks to equip, empower and unite Christians to impact individuals, families, churches and communities for the rebuilding of lives from the inside out."

Despite being a rhetorically-charged and lively interdenominational event, some leaders from the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) backpedaled quickly after learning that the Inaugural Prayer Luncheon for Unity and Renewal was sponsored by the Rev. Moon-run Washington Times Foundation. In a January 23 report from Baptist Press, some SBC officials claimed they knew nothing about Moon's imprint on the event. "We knew that it was going to be an interdenominational event, but we had no idea that the luncheon was hosted by the Moonies," said Merritt, pastor of an Atlanta-area church. This despite the fact that for years Moon has been lending a helping hand to several financially challenged Religious Right organizations; not long ago, he gave a large donation to help shore up the Rev. Jerry Falwell's financially troubled Liberty University.


Rising of the Moon
One of the Unification Church's desired outcomes from sponsoring a prayer gathering of this magnitude was to indicate that the Rev. Moon could still bring together a diverse group of religious and civic leaders.

Rev. Moon's Unification Church, which enjoys 501(c)(3) nonprofit tax status, is once again finding fertile ground for its political mission. Moon, the owner of the ultra-conservative Washington Times and a large group of other media outlets, including the recently acquired United Press International, delivered an address at the prayer luncheon, and then handed out complimentary copies of one of his books and other Unification Church materials.

For a period of time during the past few years, things weren't looking so good for the Reverend and his family. In 1998, Moon's former daughter-in-law, Nansook Hong, wrote an explosive book, "In the Shadow of the Moons," detailing her stormy relationship with Moon's eldest son, Hyo Jin Moon, including alcoholism, drug abuse, wife beating and his cavorting with prostitutes. In October 1999, another of Moon's sons, Phillip Youngiin Moon, committed suicide by jumping from a 17th-story balcony at Harrah's hotel in Reno. According to Don Lattin, Religion writer for the San Francisco Chronicle, revelations in Nansook Hong's book, coupled with the death of his son were important because they strike at the heart of Moon's teachings "that he and his wife are the True Parents of a new spiritual lineage born without original sin." Last year, Lattin reports, the Unification Church published a history of its U.S. ministry, "40 Years in America." The book "ends with the clear anointing of Hyun Jin Nim, a graduate of Harvard Business School."

The much-publicized disfunctionality of Rev. Moon's family was in part responsible for keeping him out of the public spotlight recently. However, in recent months the Rev. Moon has reemerged, participating in a series of high profile events aimed at what the church calls unification -- meaning the "melt[ing] down [of] all denominational barriers to form one body of Christ," according to the Rev. Michael Jenkins, a top Moon official.

In mid-October, Moon's Unification Church provided critical financial and organizational support to Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan's Million Family March in Washington DC. Hundreds of Unification Church followers were mobilized to help organize, finance and attend the Washington, DC gathering. Long-time right-wing watcher and author Frederick Clarkson, who broke the story in the online journal Salon, wrote: "Moon's role in the Million Family March is the fruit of a three-year personal relationship that began when Farrakhan helped officiate at one of Moon's marriage ceremonies at Washington's RFK Stadium in 1997."

Moon's minions were also intimately involved in the vote counting fiasco in Florida. On December 1, according to Church & State, the monthly publication of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, "Moon's American Clergy Leadership Conference (ACLC) sponsored a press conference in front of the Supreme Court to coincide with legal arguments before the justices over the Florida election results." This event was another interfaith call to "unite upon the common ground of America's tradition of faith in God to prevent the continued partisan struggle over the election results in Florida from further polarizing the nation."

Rev. Moon's Unification Church non-profit front groups might become beneficiaries of President Bush's recently launched faith-based initiative that allows religious organizations to compete with secular groups for government funding for social service programs. Mose Durst of Berkeley, Ca., a former national president of the Unification Church, told reporters that "you have to open it to all religions or no religions." And, according to The New York Times, the Unification Church is already planning to stake its claim on these funds. "You will see us involved in any area where we can partner in practical projects with government," the Rev. Phillip D. Schanker, the Unification Church's vice president for public affairs, told the Times.

Over the years, the Bush family has developed a close relationship with the Rev. Moon. During his run for the presidency George the elder enjoyed the unequivocal support of the Washington Times. According to veteran reporter Robert Parry, "Moon-affiliated organizations paid for speeches by former President Bush in the United States, Asia and South America. The price tag for the speeches has been estimated at from hundreds of thousands of dollars to $10 million" according to a senior Unification Church official. During the 2000 presidential campaign the Washington Times threw their whole-hearted support behind George W. Bush.

As we move into the new millennium, the Rev. Moon has begun to repackage himself and his Unification Church. His intention remains true -- to unite all Christians under the authority of the "True Parents," which, of course, are the Rev. Moon and his wife Hak Ja Han.


Bill Berkowitz is an Oakland, Ca-based free-lance writer covering the Religious Right and related conservative movements

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Albion Monitor March 19, 2001 (http://www.monitor.net/monitor)

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