Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-2lccl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T10:53:26.631Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Carl McIntire and the Fundamentalist Origins of the Christian Right

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2012

Abstract

Recent scholarship has argued that Cold War anticommunism was key among the tools with which conservative evangelicals in the United States negotiated their return to the mainstream of American public conversation. While useful, such renderings of the anticommunist leaven in the repoliticization of religious conservatives remain misleading as long as they remain pivoted on the small cadre of reputedly moderate new evangelical intellectuals. Entirely obscured in such portrayals is the agency of the militant separatist fundamentalists whose engagement with anticommunism was at once broader in scope, more systematic, organized and pervasive, and of significantly earlier lineage than that of their new evangelical rivals. The roots of the Christian Right do indeed lie in Cold War Christian anticommunism but the lines of influence stretch as much, if not more, from the fundamentalists gathered around the controversial pastor Carl McIntire and his American (and International) Council of Christian Churches as they do from the new evangelicals. A pivotal transitional figure who nurtured, renovated, and passed on to a new generation the anticollectivist public doctrines of the original fundamentalist movement. In his anticommunist work McIntire pioneered, as well, the faith-based mass demonstration and petition, the political use of Christian radio, and the lobbying of government officials that the later Christian Right perfected.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 For succinct introductions to McIntire's career, see Balmer, Randall, “Fundamentalist with Flair,” Christianity Today, May 21, 2002, 5357Google Scholar; Twenty Years: The Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1955–1975 (Collingswood, N.J.: The Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1975), 225Google Scholar.

2 See Dochuk, Darren, From Bible Belt to Sun Belt: Plain-Folk Religion, Grassroots Politics, and the Rise of Evangelical Conservatism (New York: W.W. Norton, 2011), 151–52Google Scholar; Williams, Daniel K., God's Own Party: The Making of the Christian Right (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010), 3840CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For a rare earlier example, see Fea, John, “Carl McIntire: From Fundamentalist Presbyterian to Presbyterian Fundamentalist,” American Presbyterians 72 (Winter 1994), 254–68Google Scholar.

3 Lahr, Angela M., Millennial Dreams and Apocalyptic Nightmares: The Cold War Origins of Political Evangelicalism (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 4143CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 Clabaugh, Gary K., Thunder on the Right: The Protestant Fundamentalists (Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1974), 164–73, 208–9Google Scholar; Ribuffo, Leo, The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Far Right from the Depression (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1983), 259–60Google Scholar; Jorstad, Erling, The Politics of Doomsday: Fundamentalists of the Far Right (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1970), 44–9Google Scholar; Himmelstein, Jerome L., To the Right: The Transformation of American Conservatism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990), 68, 113Google Scholar; Hendershot, Heather, “God's Angriest Man: Carl McIntire, Cold War Fundamentalism, and Right-Wing Broadcasting,” American Quarterly 59 (June 2007)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Quote taken from Hendershot, “God's Angriest Man,” 374.

5 Wilcox, Clyde and Larson, Carin, Onward Christian Soldiers? The Religious Right in American Politics, 3rd Edition (Boulder, Colo.: Westview, 2006), 6Google Scholar.

6 Separatist fundamentalism is understood here as being composed of the conservative Protestant groups that emphasize, in addition to biblical inerrancy, total separation from theologically modernist churches and from all those who cooperate with such churches. See Beale, David O., In Pursuit of Purity: American Fundamentalism Since 1850 (Greenville, S.C.: Unusual, 1986), 111Google Scholar. New evangelicals are defined as those doctrinally fundamentalist Protestants who in the 1940s began to de-emphasize separation, who gave up on militancy in expression, and who sought to re-enter mainstream cultural and intellectual discussion. Marsden, George M., Reforming Fundamentalism: Fuller Seminary and the New Evangelicalism (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1987), 69Google Scholar.

7 For example, see Williams, God's Own Party, 3–6; Dochuk, From Bible Belt to Sun Belt, 269–74; Harding, Susan Friend, The Book of Jerry Falwell: Fundamentalist Language and Politics (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2000), 1029, 126–39, 145–50Google Scholar; Martin, William, With God on Our Side: The Rise of the Religious Right in America (New York: Broadway, 1996), 191–99Google Scholar; Fowler, Robert Booth, A New Engagement: Evangelical Political Thought, 1966–1976 (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1982), 23, 6–14, 62–73Google Scholar.

8 Fea, “Carl McIntire,” 259, 262; Ferris, Thomas J., “Christian Beacon,” 146, in The Conservative Press in Twentieth-Century America, edited by Lora, Ronald and Longton, William Henry (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1999)Google Scholar; Clabaugh, Thunder on the Right, 82; Gasper, Louis, The Fundamentalist Movement 1930–1956 (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, 1981), 34Google Scholar; Reich, Jutta, “Twentieth Century Reformation”: Dynamischen Fundamentalismus nach Geschichte und Erscheinung (Marburg/Lahn: N. G. Elwert Verlag, 1969), 119Google Scholar; press release by the International Council of Christian Churches, September 18, 1985, Carl McIntire Manuscript Collection, box 212, folder “Bundy, Major Edgar (2 of 3),” Special Collections, Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, New Jersey [hereafter PTSEM].

9 McIntire, Carl, “J. Gresham Machen—1937–1957,” Christian Beacon, January 10, 1957, 1Google Scholar. For the Machen-McIntire relationship, see Marsden, George M., “Perspective on the Division of 1937,” in Pressing Toward the Mark: Essays Commemorating Fifty Years of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, edited by Dennison, Charles G. and Gamble, Richard (Philadelphia: Orthodox Presbyterian Church, 1986), 295328Google Scholar, and for the civic and economic libertarianism of Machen, Hart, D. G., Defending the Faith: J. Gresham Machen and the Crisis of Conservative Protestantism in Modern America (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, 1994), 139–45Google Scholar.

10 McIntire, Carl, “The Gospel Carl McIntire Preaches,” Christian Beacon, March 25, 1965, 37Google Scholar. On Kuyper's influence in the U.S., see Bolt, John, A Free Church, A Holy Nation: Abraham Kuyper's American Public Theology (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2001)Google Scholar.

11 McIntire, Carl, The Rise of the Tyrant: Controlled Economy vs. Private Enterprise (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1945), 25Google Scholar.

12 McIntire, Carl, Author of Liberty (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1946), 69, xivxviiGoogle Scholar.

13 McIntire, Author of Liberty, 12–17, 42; Carl McIntire, “The State's Responsibility Under God to Maintain Freedom,” The Christian Beacon, June 13, 1946, 1–2.

14 McIntire, “The State's Responsibility Under God,” 1–2.

15 McIntire, The Rise of the Tyrant, xiii, 12–28, 47–48, 181–87; McIntire, Author of Liberty, 26–27, 38–39. See also McIntire, Carl, Private Enterprise in the Scriptures (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1961), 1Google Scholar; McIntire, Carl, “A Christian America,” Christian Beacon, June 20, 1963, 1, 8Google Scholar.

16 Hart, D.G. and Muether, John R., Seeking a Better Country: 300 Years of American Presbyterianism (Phillipsburg, N.J.: P&R, 2007), 201Google Scholar.

17 McIntire, Carl, For Such a Time As This (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1946), 29Google Scholar; McIntire, Author of Liberty, 132, 199.

18 McIntire, Carl, “Christian Repudiation of Coexistence,” Christian Beacon, January 20, 1955, 3Google Scholar.

19 ACCC executive committee minutes, April 29, 1949, W. O. H. Garman Papers, folder “ACCC—Resolutions,” J.S. Mack Library, Bob Jones University, Greenville, South Carolina [hereafter BJU].

20 This was reaffirmed in the ICCC's Cape May Declaration of 1973. Reformation Review 21 (October 1973), 3738Google Scholar.

21 Carl McIntire to W. O. H. Garman, October 14, 1946, Garman Papers, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

22 Christian Beacon, January 11, 1940, 6; McIntire, For Such a Time As This, 29.

23 Christian Beacon, October 25, 1951, 1.

24 McIntire, Author of Liberty, 226.

25 Garman, W. O. H., What Is Wrong with the Federal Council? (New York: American Council of Christian Churches, 1948), 23Google Scholar; Minutes of the sixth General Synod of the Bible Presbyterian Church, October 14–19, 1943, Bible Presbyterian Church Archives, box 123, Presbyterian Church in America Historical Center, St. Louis, Missouri [hereafter PCAHC].

26 The books by McIntire are The Rise of the Tyrant; The Author of Liberty; For Such a Time As This; Twentieth Century Reformation (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1946)Google Scholar; Russia's Most Effective Fifth Column in America: A Series of Radio Addresses (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1948)Google Scholar; Modern Tower of Babel (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1949)Google Scholar; The Truth About the Federal Council of Churches and the Kingdom of God (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1950)Google Scholar; Better Than Seven Sons (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1954)Google Scholar; “The Wall of Jerusalem Is Also Broken Down” (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1954)Google Scholar; Servants of Apostasy (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1955)Google Scholar.

27 All of this activity was systematically planned and carefully coordinated: McIntire to J. Howard Pew, March 24, 1947, McIntire Manuscript Collection, box 257, folder “Pew, J. Howard,” PTSEM.

28 ACCC press release, October 27, 1961, Billy James Hargis Papers, box 74, Special Collections, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville [hereafter UARK].

29 McIntire to Bob Jones Jr., May 12, 1974, Fundamentalism File, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

30 McIntire, Carl, The Battle of Armageddon (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, nd [1967])Google Scholar; Fea, “Carl McIntire,” 257–59; Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 31–33.

31 Harding, The Book of Jerry Falwell, 239–45.

32 Carl McIntire to J. Oliver Buswell, October 21, 1936, Peter Stam Jr. Papers, box 408, PCAHC.

33 See, by McIntire, Carl, “The Last and Greatest Tribulation,” Christian Beacon, July 11, 1940, 3, 56Google Scholar; The Embodiment of Miracle and Brutality—The Final Beast,” Christian Beacon, July 18, 1940, 3, 56Google Scholar; The End of the War and the Method by Which It Is Attained,” Christian Beacon, August 1, 1940, 36Google Scholar; The Mark of the Beast,” Christian Beacon, July 31, 1941, 3, 6Google Scholar; “The Mother of Harlots,” Christian Beacon, August 7, 1941, 3, 6Google Scholar; Servants of Apostasy, 214–20, 257–80; Author of Liberty, 187–88, 205–10; Communism: Threat to Freedom,” Christian Beacon, March 29, 1962, 2Google Scholar; The Double Talk of the State Department (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1965), 14Google Scholar. In 1955, there was also a detailed ICCC resolution to this effect: Christian Beacon, September 29, 1955, 4.

34 McIntire to Bob Jones Jr., July 5, 1975, Fundamentalism File, BJU.

35 Bob Jones III to Dean Ohlman, April 21, 1971, Bob Jones University Archives, folder “Correspondence Vietnam War—Lt. W. Calley FR 16,” BJU.

36 See Rosell, Garth M., The Surprising Work of God: Harold John Ockenga, Billy Graham and the Rebirth of Evangelicalism (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Academic, 2008), 1113, 25–26Google Scholar; Marsden, Reforming Fundamentalism, 60–80.

37 Beale, In Pursuit of Purity, 6–9; Erickson, M. J., “Separation,” in Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, edited by Elwell, Walter A. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker, 1984), 1002–03Google Scholar.

38 McIntire, Carl, “A Separated Life,” Christian Beacon, June 17, 1937, 3Google Scholar, and God's Law of Separation,” Christian Beacon, February 13, 1941, 3Google Scholar; Balmer, “Fundamentalist with Flair,” 55–56.

39 McIntire, Carl et al., A Ministry of Disobedience: Christian Leaders Analyze the Billy Graham Crusade (Collingswood N.J.: Christian Beacon, nd)Google Scholar; McIntire, Carl, Billy Graham in Poland (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1966)Google Scholar.

40 Cf. Bordeaux, William Harrlee, “Second Degree Separation: Some Problems,” The Reformation Review 2 (April 1955), 164–71Google Scholar.

41 ACCC press release, nd [1970], Gilbert Stenholm Papers, folder “American Council of Christian Churches,” BJU; Reitsma, Carl J., “I Attended an Anti-Khruschev Rally,” Bible Presbyterian Reporter 4 (December 1959), 5Google Scholar.

42 W. O. H. Garman to Carl McIntire, September 14, 1946, Garman Papers, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU; W. O. H. Garman to Verne P. Kaub, April 19, 1954, reel 8, American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, Wisconsin [hereafter WHS]; Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 68.

43 In 1954, some 440,161 of the ACCC's claimed membership of 1.18 million were ‘individual auxiliary members’ from NCC denominations. “Statement Released by the American Council of Christian Churches on Statistics as of October 28, 1954,” Garman Papers, folder “American Council of Christian Churches,” BJU.

44 Verne P. Kaub to Adwin Williams, February 27, 1950, reel 1; Kaub to R. L. Decker, March 10, 1950, reel 1; Kaub to Henry E. Hedrick, September 30, 1953, reel 7; Kaub to James DeForest Murch, January 4, 1955, reel 11, each in American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS.

45 Christian Beacon, April 8, 1948, 4; Christian Beacon, October 25, 1951, 8; Christian Beacon, February 21, 1957, 6; “Resolutions Passed by the ICCC 2nd Plenary Congress, August 22, 1950, in Geneve, Switzerland,” American Council of Christian Churches and International Council of Christian Churches Collection, box 466B, PCAHC.

46 Christian Beacon, May 26, 1938, 4.

47 Christian Beacon, October 28, 1937, 7; Christian Beacon, November 18, 1937, 6; McIntire, The Rise of the Tyrant, 241; Christian Beacon, January 19, 1950, 1; Christian Beacon, October 25, 1951, 8; McIntire, Towards an Alliance of Communists and Catholics (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1965), 8Google Scholar; Christian Beacon, February 22, 1973, 1.

48 Reitsma, “I Attended an Anti-Khruschev Rally,” 5; Plain Speaking,” Valiant for the Truth 1 (1964), 3Google Scholar; ACCC press release “March for Victory—Double Standard!,” nd [1970], Stenholm Papers, folder “American Council of Christian Churches,” BJU.

49 FBI Headquarters file 94-HQ-37990, “Correlation Summary,” 24 June 1964, 7, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Washington, DC.

50 Verne P. Kaub to Charles Havlichek, October 6, 1954, reel 13; Kaub to Joseph LeSage Tisch, July 18, 1957, reel 20; Kaub to J. L. Bascom, April 1, 1957, reel 19; McIntire to Kaub, March 17, 1962, reel 35, Kaub to McIntire, March 19, 1962, reel 35, each in American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS.

51 William Harllee Bordeaux to Vern P. Kaub, March 6, 1953 and Kaub to Bordeaux, March 13, 1953, American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, reel 6, WHS; Carl McIntire to David Hedegård, February 7, 1955, David Hedegård Papers, A II a, box 3, folder “ICCC Korrespondens 1955,” Regional State Archive, Lund, Sweden [hereafter RSAL]; Fea, “Carl McIntire,” 262; Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 52–56; Christian Beacon, March 6, 1954, 5.

52 Wm. Harllee Bordeaux to Verne P. Kaub, December 1, 1954, American Council of Christian Laymen Records, WHS.

53 Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 39, 51–57, 69–70, 73–76.

54 Critchlow, Donald T., Phyllis Schlafly and Grassroots Conservatism: A Woman's Crusade (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2005), 6668, 80–83Google Scholar.

55 Edgar C. Bundy to Verne P. Kaub, January 24, 1950, reel 1 and Verne P. Kaub to Edgar C. Bundy, February 2, 1954, reel 8, American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS.

56 Billy James Hargis to Harvey Springer, July 25, 1961, Hargis Papers, box 67, UARK.

57 Billy James Hargis, The Voice of Ten Million Martyrs Cry Aloud (Granby, Mo.: np, nd), 4–7; Billy James Hargis to Bob Jones Jr., April 16, 1968, Fundamentalism File, folder “Hargis, Billy James,” BJU.

58 Bob Jones III to Billy James Hargis, June 24, 1968, Fundamentalism File, folder “Hargis, Billy James,” BJU.

59 American Council of Christian Churches and International Council of Christian Churches to the Democratic National Committee, September 21, 1960, John F. Kennedy Pre-Presidential Papers, Religious Issue Files of James Wine, box 1018, folder “American Council of Christian Churches,” John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Boston [hereafter JFKPL].

60 Carl McIntire to Jerry Falwell, August 21, 1980, Fundamentalism File, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

61 McIntire, the ACCC or the ICCC are mentioned only once in Inboden, William, Religion and American Foreign Policy, 1945–1960 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), 274CrossRefGoogle Scholar; in Stevens, Jason, God-Fearing and Free: A Spiritual History of America's Cold War (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2010), 66Google Scholar; and in Foglesong, David, The American Mission and the “Evil Empire”: The Crusade for a “Free Russia” since 1881 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 141Google Scholar. Kirby, Dianne, ed., Religion and the Cold War (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003)CrossRefGoogle Scholar ignores all Protestant anticommunists in the United States, Settje's, David E.Faith and War: How Christians Debated the Cold and Vietnam Wars (New York: New York University Press, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar all U.S. fundamentalists, and Lahr's Millennial Dreams and Apocalyptic Nightmares consistently maintains that only the new evangelicals' anticommunism mattered.

62 ACCC press release “Concerning the Present World Crisis Precipitated by Russia,” October 31, 1948, Garman Papers, folder “ACCC—Resolutions,” BJU.

63 L. Nelson Bell to Mrs. Leo Brady, February 29, 1960; L. Nelson Bell to Claude McIntosh, January 20, 1962, both in L. Nelson Bell Papers, box 35, Billy Graham Center Archives, Wheaton, Illinois [hereafter BGCA].

64 L. Nelson Bell to Joseph Mitchell, February 3, 1970, Bell Papers, box 35, BGCA.

65 Truman-Garman correspondence in the Garman Papers, folder “Truman, Harry S.,” BJU. Quote from W. O. H. Garman to Harry S Truman, February 24, 1949.

66 Memorandum by Harry W. Seamans, January 25, 1954, John Foster Dulles Papers, box 192, Rare Books and Special Collections, University of Princeton Library, Princeton, New Jersey.

67 FBI Headquarters file 94-HQ-37990, Memorandum, February 7, 1951, and ibid., July 13, 1954; Smith, Gary Scott, Faith and the Presidency: From George Washington to George W. Bush (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006), 242CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

68 W. O. H. Garman to Carl McIntire, July 27, 1946 and September 14, 1946, Garman Papers, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

69 Christian Beacon, October 25, 1951, 1; Christian Beacon, January 31, 1951, 1; McIntire to Bible Presbyterian Church ministers, November 16, 1951, National Presbyterian Missions Collection, box 496, PCAHC.

70 Christian Beacon, March 19, 1953, 5; Christian Beacon, May 14, 1953, 1.

71 Christian Beacon, January 20, 1955, 1; McIntire, Carl, “How Communism Is Using the Churches,” Christian Beacon, December 24, 1953, 8Google Scholar; A Letter from Carl McIntire About the ICCC, June 4, 1956,” Garman Papers, folder “Communism—Red Clergy,” BJU; Christian Beacon, September 10, 1959, 1Google Scholar.

72 Twenty Years, 11–15.

73 Save America Rally, Chicago, June 7, 1975 (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1975), 57, 10–12Google Scholar.

74 Shires, Preston, Hippies of the Religious Right (Waco, Tex.: Baylor University Press, 2007), 148, 175–80, 245–6Google Scholar; Bivins, Jason C., The Fracture of Good Order: Christian Antiliberalism and the Challenge to American Politics (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2003), 25–9, 85–6Google Scholar; Marley, John, “Riding in the Back of the Bus: The Christian Right's Adoption of the Civil Right Movement's Rhetoric,” in The Civil Rights Movement in American Memory, eds. Renee Christine Romano and Leigh Ford (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2006), 346–62Google Scholar.

75 Hankins, Barry, Francis Schaeffer and the Shaping of Evangelical America (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2008), 2226, 44–51, 158, 201–208Google Scholar; Harding, The Book of Jerry Falwell, 129–130.

76 Jerry Falwell to William May, August 29, 1974, McIntire Manuscript Collection, box 216, folder “Falwell, Jerry Dr. (1 of 2),” PTSEM.

77 Carl McIntire to David Lawrence, November 13, 1953, Garman Papers, folder “International Council of Christian Churches,” BJU. Robertson also worked with Billy Graham: Steven P. Miller, Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009), 55Google Scholar.

78 Critchlow, Phyllis Schlafly, 66–8; Dochuk, From Bible Belt to Sun Belt, 151–152, 231, 271–273; McGirr, Lisa, Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2001), 104–5, 233Google Scholar; Phyllis Schlafly to McIntire, May 26, 1971, McIntire Manuscript Collection, box 193, folder “Phyllis Schlafly.”

79 W. O. H. Garman to McIntire, December 10, 1955, Garman Papers, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU; Bundy, Edgar C., “The Abraham Lincoln National Republican Club and Its Goal,” Ashland Daily Press, April 21, 1955Google Scholar, Hargis Papers, box 33, UARK.

80 Robert T. Ketcham to ACCC executive committee, May 28, 1954, Garman Papers, folder “Bundy, Edgar C.,” BJU; W. O. H. Garman to Carl McIntire, December 10, 1955, Garman Papers, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

81 Elizabeth Dilling newsletter “February—1957 Month for Patriots (and Sleep),” nd, Hargis Papers, box 35, UARK.

82 On the Republican party factions and their relation to the New Christian Right's origins, see Critchlow, Donald T., The Conservative Ascendancy: How the GOP Right Made Political History (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007)Google Scholar; Schoenwald, Jonathan M., A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001)Google Scholar. For Billy Graham's efforts, see Miller, Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South, 72–88; Williams, God's Own Party, 21–34.

83 McIntire, Carl, “Why Should Christians Be Kind to Jews?,” Christian Beacon, October 27, 1938, 35Google Scholar; McIntire, Carl, “The Plight of the Jews,” Christian Beacon, February 22, 1940, 6Google Scholar; McIntire, Carl, “The Problem of the Jew,” Christian Beacon, July 24, 1941, 3, 6Google Scholar; Rausch, David A., Fundamentalist Christians and Anti-Semitism (Valley Forge, Penn.: Trinity Press International, 1993), chapter 5Google Scholar.

84 For conspiracist antisemitic themes in the early fundamentalists' public argument, see Carpenter, Joel, Revive Us Again: The Reawakening of American Fundamentalism (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 40–2, 91–105Google Scholar; Trollinger, William Vance Jr., God's Empire: William Bell Riley and Midwestern Fundamentalism (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1990), 6382Google Scholar.

85 Verne P. Kaub to Willis Carto, November 12, 1957, reel 21; Kaub to Billy James Hargis, January 24, 1961, reel 32; Kaub to Gerald L.K. Smith, November 30, 1955, reel 14, each in American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS.

86 Christian Beacon, April 23, 1936, 4; McIntire, “Why Should Christians Be Kind to Jews?,” 3–5; Christian Beacon, March 10, 1949, 4; Christian News, March 21, 1988, 1.

87 Christian Beacon, March 14, 1940, 8; Christian Beacon, May 10, 1945, 1.

88 Edward G. Stern to Louis Kariel, February 25, 1964, American Jewish Committee Anti-Semitic and Extremist Collection, box 194, folder Rev. Carl McIntire, American Jewish Committee Archives, New York.

89 Gerald L. K. Smith to Verne P. Kaub, November 23, 1955, reel 14, American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS.

90 Smith, Gerald L. K., “God Bless McIntire,” Cross and the Flag, February 1960, 13Google Scholar; Smith, Gerald L. K., “Editorial Briefs,” Cross and the Flag, July 1966, 6Google Scholar.

91 Christian Beacon, January 4, 1940, 1; Christian Beacon, April 11, 1940, 4; McIntire, Carl, The American Council of Churches: Its Purpose and Testimony (np, nd [1941]), 1113Google Scholar.

92 Wm. Harllee Bordeaux to ACCC executive committee members, April 7, 1948, Garman Papers, folder “ACCC—Conferences,” BJU; W. O. H. Garman to Harry S Truman, March 16, 1950, Garman Papers, folder Truman, Harry S,” BJU; Christian Beacon, January 26, 1961, 8Google Scholar.

93 McIntire, Carl, Servants of Apostasy (Collingswood, N.J.: Christian Beacon, 1955), 198Google Scholar; News from the American Council of Christian Churches (October 25, 1956), np; McIntire, Carl, “Presbyterian Exaltation of United Nations Organization,” Christian Beacon, April 18, 1957, 5, 8Google Scholar.

94 For these connections, see Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 107–114, 170–175; Crespino, Joseph, In Search of Another Country: Mississippi and the Conservative Counterrevolution (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2007), 164–66Google Scholar.

95 Carl McIntire to Thomas Cross, October 4, 1948, National Presbyterian Missions Collection, box 496, file 68, PCAHC; McIntire, Carl, “Witch Hunting and the Origin of the So-Called Civil Rights Program,” Christian Beacon, June 24, 1948, 2Google Scholar.

96 Carl McIntire to David Hedegård, August 30, 1957, Hedegård Papers, A II a, box 3, folder “ICCC Korrespondens 1957,” RSAL; Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 93, 94n26; Reich, “Twentieth Century Reformation,” 115, 126–35, 144.

97 Robert T. Ketcham to McIntire, April 11, 1952, and McIntire to Ketcham, April 21, 1952, McIntire Manuscript Collection, box 254, folder “Ketcham, Dr Robert T. 1950–1952,” PTSEM; Wm. Harrlee Bordeaux to Verne P. Kaub, March 2, 1955, American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, reel 11, WHS.

98 Carl McIntire to David Hedegård, August 30 and September 4, 1957, Hedegård Papers, A II a, box 3, folder “ICCC Korrespondens 1957,” RSAL.

99 Arthur G. Slaght to Verne P. Kaub, July 3, 1952, ACCL Papers, reel 4, WHS; Carl McIntire to David Hedegård, August 30, 1957, Hedegård Papers, AII a, box 3, folder “ICCC Korrespondens 1957,” RSAL; Christian Beacon, May 8, 1958, 5; Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 94.

100 McIntire Teaches Sunday School Lesson (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1967), 3Google Scholar.

101 Carl McIntire's address at the ICCC World Congress, July 16, 1975, Archer G. Weniger Papers, folder “International Council of Christian Churches,” BJU.

102 See Kornweibel, Theodore Jr., “Seeing Red”: Federal Campaigns Against Black Militancy, 1919–1925 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998)Google Scholar; Woods, Jeff, Black Struggle, Red Scare: Segregation and Anti-Communism in the South, 1948–1968 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2004)Google Scholar.

103 “Resolution on Civil Rights” adopted at the ACCC convention in Atlanta, May 6–9, 1948, Garman Papers, folder “ACCC—Conferences,” BJU.

104 Christian Beacon, November 18, 1948, 4Google Scholar; William Harllee Bordeaux to Verne P. Kaub, March 2, 1955, reel 11, American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS; The Ten Commandments and Civil Rights (Collingswood N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, nd [1963]), 12Google Scholar; McIntire, Carl, “An Open Letter to Martin Luther King,” Christian Beacon, June 11, 1964, 3, 78Google Scholar.

105 Balmer, Randall, Thy Kingdom Come: How the Religious Right Distorts the Faith and Threatens America (New York: Basic, 2006), 1317Google Scholar, is highly misleading.

106 American Council of Christian Churches and International Council of Christian Churches to the Democratic National Committee, September 21, 1960, Kennedy Pre-Presidential Papers, Religious Issue Files of James Wine, box 1018, folder “American Council of Christian Churches,” JFKPL.

107 Christian Beacon, November 9, 1961, 3; Christian Beacon, February 1, 1962, 1; Christian Beacon, May 10, 1962, 3, 6.

108 See Hendershot, “God's Angriest Man,” 375–84, 392–93.

109 McIntire, Carl, “Kennedy Administration Cracks Down on Fundamental Churches,” Christian Beacon, July 19, 1962, 1 (quote)Google Scholar; Religious Persecution and Discrimination by the Democratic Party (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, nd), 17Google Scholar.

110 McIntire, “Kennedy Administration Cracks Down,” 1.

111 Carl McIntire to Verne P. Kaub, May 6, 1954, reel 9; Kaub to McIntire, May 12, 1954, reel 9, both in American Council of Christian Laymen Papers, WHS.

112 Christian Beacon, July 26, 1962, 1, 8; Christian Beacon, November 8, 1962, 8; McIntire, Carl, “Harrassment of Churches by Federal Income Tax,” Christian Beacon, November 8, 1962, 3Google Scholar; McIntire, Carl, For Religious Reasons: Abolish the Income Tax (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, nd)Google Scholar.

113 Christian Beacon, July 5, 1962, 1, 8.

114 Christian Beacon, July 5, 1962, 1; McIntire, Carl, Freedom to Pray (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1966), 1, 4, 8Google Scholar.

115 ACCC press release, March 12, 1970, Weniger Papers, folder “American Council of Christian Churches,” BJU.

116 Christian Beacon, February 1, 1973, 1, 8.

117 Official Publication of National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Endorses Youth's Revolt Against Christian Sex Standards (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, nd [1961]), 2, 4Google Scholar. For an earlier example, see Garman, W. O. H., What Is Wrong with the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. (New York: American Council of Christian Churches, 1957), 2021Google Scholar.

118 McIntire to W.T. Hiering, August 7, 1969, McIntire Manuscript Collection, box 28, folder “McIntire Correspondence Mostly from 1960s + Early 1970s,” PTSEM; Sex Education Report (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1969)Google Scholar; In Public Schools: Undermining the Morals of Minors (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1974)Google Scholar.

119 Martin, With God On Our Side, 102–16; Clabaugh, Thunder on the Right, 23–40; Brown, Ruth Murray, “For a Christian America”: A History of the Religious Right (Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus, 2002), 1517, 29–45, 50–68Google Scholar.

120 This fact was pointed out more than thirty years ago in the otherwise tendentious Clabaugh, Thunder on the Right, 23–64, but since then largely ignored. An exception is Lichtman, Allan J., White Protestant Nation: The Rise of the American Conservative Movement (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2008), 314Google Scholar.

121 McIntire to Phyllis Schlafly, June 16 and July 24, 1978, box 184, folder “Schlafly, Phyllis,” McIntire Manuscript Collection, PTSEM; ERA: Equal Rights Amendment, Why Christians Should Oppose It (Collingswood, N.J.: Twentieth Century Reformation Hour, 1975)Google Scholar; Christian Beacon, February 22, 1973, 1.

122 W. O. H. Garman to Stephen W. Paine, January 31, 1949, Garman Papers, folder “International Council of Christian Churches,” BJU.

123 Dr. Wright Says A.C.C.C. Men Deluded by Satan,” The Baptist Bulletin (January 1951)Google Scholar, Garman Papers, folder “National Association of Evangelicals,” BJU.

124 L. Nelson Bell to Robert E. Craig, June 19, 1962, Bell Papers, box 35, BGCA; L. Nelson Bell to Harrison Roy Anderson, December 21, 1966, Bell Papers, box 35, BGCA.

125 Bob Jones Jr. to James A. Pond, March 18, 1976, Fundamentalism File, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

126 Billy James Hargis to McIntire, October 2, 1967, Garman Papers, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.

127 Carl McIntire to Robert T. Ketcham, November 23, 1968, and Robert T. Ketcham to Bob Jones Jr., February 3, 1969, both in Fundamentalism File, folder “American Council of Christian Churches—McIntire Controversy,” BJU; William Ashbrook to Ed Haver, May 11, 1965, Stenholm Papers, folder “Bundy, Edgar C.,” BJU.

128 Fea, “Carl McIntire,” 264–5; Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, 43.

129 McIntire, “The Wall of Jerusalem Also Is Broken Down,” 10, 54, 117.

130 McIntire to Bob Jones III, November 26, 1971, Fundamentalism File, folder “American Council of Christian Churches—McIntire Controversy,” BJU.

131 Bob Jones Jr. to Carl McIntire, May 24, 1980, Fundamentalism File, folder “McIntire, Carl,” BJU.