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Far-right Extremism

The Return of the 'One-Day Crusade'

Nearly a year after Rick Scarborough began his ambitious “70 Weeks to Save America(link is external)” to sign up thousands of “Patriot Pastors” and voters at church rallies across America, only to have it peter out due to money(link is external), mechanical problems(link is external), slim turnout(link is external), and Alan Keyes(link is external), and nearly three months since announcing the project’s triumphant comeback, Scarborough is finally holding a “Patriot Pastor” rally(link is external) in Nashville, Tennessee, featuring disgruntled ex-chaplain Gordon Klingenschmitt, “National Statesman/Evangelist Dr. Rick Scarborough,” and a singer billed as the “Pavarotti of gospel.”

This “One-Day Crusade” will be held at Two Rivers Baptist Church, home of Rev. Jerry Sutton, who is no stranger to church-based politicking. In 2005, he hosted a rally in support of President Bush’s controversial judicial nominees (including future Chief Justice John Roberts). Billed as a protest against “activist judges” supposedly trying to “silence” people of faith, “Justice Sunday II(link is external)” brought together some of the biggest names on the Religious Right, such as Family Research Council President Tony Perkins, Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, and then-National Evangelical Association President Ted Haggard, along with Robert Bork, Bill Donohue of the Catholic League, Bishop Harry Jackson, and then-House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.

Sutton himself boiled down(link is external) the message he hoped the audience would take home:

Number one, it's a new day.

Number two, liberalism is dead.

Number three, the majority of Americans are conservative.

Number four, you can count on us showing up and speaking out.

And number five, let the church rise.

Sutton, who is a research fellow(link is external) with Richard Land’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission and ran for president of the Southern Baptist Convention in 2006(link is external), has been involved in an imbroglio at his own church recently, when 71 members sued the church(link is external) over financial mismanagement (along with Sutton’s “lavish lifestyle(link is external)” and “authoritarian” leadership).