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WEEKLY EDITORIAL RECAP

WEDNESDAY

JERRY FALWELL'S LEGACY

Jerry Falwell, the 73-year-old Christian televangelist and founder of the Moral Majority, died Tuesday in Lynchburg, Va.

The Rev. Falwell forged an alliance between the Republican Party and the "Christian Right" that is credited with the historic shift of the South into the Republican column for the first time since Reconstruction. ...

Movements that attempt to shift the moral tone of an entire nation aren't likely to achieve their goals in a single campaign, or a single decade. A ground swell of popular opinion now appears to share some of the Rev. Falwell's concerns over the way government "programs" and other institutions stripped of moral guidance can damage and undercut the traditional American family, leading to vast social pathologies.

But on any balance sheet of concrete political attainments to date ... what is most remarkable about the Christian Right in politics is how poorly they have fared.

Oh, Democratic politicians heading south of the Mason-Dixon line are now coached to wear their faith on their sleeves. And on the fringes -- in areas little dependent on Washington -- Christian home-schoolers may find government bureaucrats less intrusive these days, while the movement to lend state sanction to gay marriage seems largely derailed.

But on the major defining issues of abortion, prayer to the public schools, the curbing of illegitimacy and promiscuous sex, the Rev. Falwell and the movement he helped birth could pretty much look back on three decades of marginalization, lip service and failure.

In fact, the Moral Majority disbanded in 1989. And the Rev. Falwell proceeded to make himself a virtual caricature of all that those on the left ridicule in religious conservatism as he criticized the children's show "Teletubbies" because he thought one of the nonhuman characters (Tinky Winky, the purple one) might be gay. ...

"It's a very different game" today, concludes Luis Lugo, director of the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. "His relative importance declined."

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