In the 19th century one of America's great patriots, Joseph Smith, pioneered a the one true American way of worship. One in which Jesus was not a swarthy middle-easterner, but a good ole American.
Today, the finest orator to grace this country's media since Thomas Payne, follows this path. The love Glenn has for his country (as well as everyone in it) is evident from watching just one of his inspiring broadcasts.
[quote]
Some are familiar with Glenn Beck’s teary Mormon conversion story, but what many are not aware of is the extent to which Mormonism has given Beck key elements of his on-air personality and messaging—and how it may shape the future of American conservatism.
Mr. Beck mugs for the camera.
Glenn Beck leans forward on his elbows. His voice hushes. His eyes grow red at the corners. He presses his lips together and clears his throat. He cannot speak. The tears fall, and just for a moment the brashest voice in American conservatism today falls silent.
This is what happens when Beck tells the story of his 1999 conversion to Mormonism.
“I was friendless, working in the smallest radio market I had ever worked in... a hopeless alcoholic, abusing drugs every day,” Beck said in an interview taped last fall. “I was trying to find a job and nobody would hire me... couldn’t get an agent to represent me.”
That’s when Beck’s wife-to-be Tania suggested that the family go on a “church tour,” which finally led (after some prodding from Beck’s longtime on-air partner Pat Gray, a Mormon) to his local Mormon wardhouse. Six months later, the Beck family joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
“I was baptized on a Sunday, and on Monday”—Beck’s throat tightens again; he wipes tears from his eyes with his index fingers—“an agent called me out of the blue.” Three days later, Beck was offered his own political talk radio show at WFLA-AM in Tampa, Florida, the job that put him on the road from “morning zoo” radio prankster to conservative media heavyweight.
Spiritual narratives of the I-once-was-lost-now-I-am-financially-sound variety are commonplace within Mormonism, which, like most of American Protestantism, has never been allergic to wealth. The institutional culture of the Mormon Church is strongly corporate, down to the dark suits, white shirts, and red or blue ties church leaders wear instead of vestments; Mormonism’s most powerful public figures like Mitt Romney, Jon Huntsman Jr., and Bill Marriott Jr., come from the business world.
But whether or not one believes that God rewards baptism with fortune, it is clear that Glenn Beck’s conversion to and education in the Mormon faith after 1999 corresponds precisely with his rise as a media force.
Beck, who was raised Catholic in Washington state, has produced, with the help of Mormon Church-owned Deseret Book Company, the DVD An Unlikely Mormon: The Conversion Story of Glenn Beck (2008); Mormon fansites invite visitors to learn more about Beck’s beliefs by clicking through to the official Web site of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. But what these fansites don’t reveal is the extent to which Mormonism has given Beck key elements of his on-air personality and messaging.
Teary Tirades and Mormon Masculinity
Before 1999, Glenn Beck told jokes and pulled on-air stunts for a living. He developed the content of his current conservative messaging (an amalgation of anti-communism, United States-founder worship, and connect-the-dots conspiracy theorizing) after his entree into the deeply insular world of Mormon thought and culture. A significant figure in this world is the late Cleon Skousen (1913–2006), the archconservative and fiercely anti-communist Brigham Young University professor, founder of the Freeman Society, and author of 15 books, including The Naked Capitalist, The Making of America, and Prophecy and Modern Times. Beck, who first cited Skousen in his 2003 book The Real America: Messages from the Heart and the Heartland, later started pitching Skousen’s 1981 book The 5,000 Year Leap on air in December, 2008. He wrote a preface for a new edition of the book issued a few months later and in his March 2009 kick-off of the 9/12 movement declared Skousen’s book to be “divinely inspired.” In a recent article for Salon.com, Alexander Zaitchik suggested that Beck “rescued [Skousen] from the remainder pile of history.” But Cleon Skousen was never remaindered among the most politically conservative Mormons, for whom he has been a household name since the 1960s.
It is likely that Beck owes his brand of Founding Father-worship to Mormonism, where reverence for the founders and the United States Constitution as divinely inspired are often-declared elements of orthodox belief. Mormon Church President Wilford Woodruff (1807–1898) declared that George Washington and the signers of the Declaration of Independence appeared to him in the Mormon Temple in St. George, Utah in 1877, and requested that he perform Mormon temple ordinances on their behalf. Many Mormons also believe that Joseph Smith prophesied in 1843 that the US Constitution would one day “hang by a thread” and be saved by faithful Mormons; this idea was given new life in the 1960s by former US Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, who cited Smith’s 1843 prophecy from the pulpit while speaking as a member of the Church’s Quorum of Twelve Apostles.
Many key elements of Beck’s on-the-fly messaging derive from a Mormon lexicon, such as his Twitter-issued September 19 call: “Sept 28. Lets make it a day of Fast and Prayer for the Republic. Spread the word. Let us walk in the founders steps.” This call to fasting and prayer may indeed have been an appropriation of the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur, but it is also rooted in the traditional Mormon practice of holding individual, familial, and collective fasts to address spiritual challenges. [/quote]
[url]http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/mediaculture/1885/how_mormonism_built_glenn_beck[/url]
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKtAPT9KEfM[/url]
This is kind of old news but it deserves a thread
I meant to do that cause he is more man then you'll ever be facepunch!!!
[QUOTE=Jewsus;17882997] the finest orator to grace this country's media since Thomas Payne[/QUOTE]ahahahahahahahahahahahahhaha
[QUOTE=Jewsus;17882997]
Today, the finest orator to grace this country's media since Thomas Payne, follows this path. The love Glenn has for his country (as well as everyone in it) is evident from watching just one of his inspiring broadcasts.
[/QUOTE]
ahahahahahahahahahahahahhaahahahahahahahahhhahahahahdfhhffsdf sa asd asfd fa i shit myself laughing theres feces everywhere
This is important how?
Mormon you moron.
[editline]09:07PM[/editline]
He also uses vickes to cry, big deal.
[QUOTE=Jewsus;17882997]
Today, the finest orator to grace this country's media since Thomas Payne, follows this path. The love Glenn has for his country (as well as everyone in it) is evident from watching just one of his inspiring broadcasts.
[/QUOTE]
Oh my god, you actually believe that shit? You are a fool, good sir.
I am [b]Morman![/b]
I am more man
We are [b]Mormens![/b]
I am Murmoon
Mormon jesus
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46PXaJxzuDE[/media]
I actually read the title as Glenn Beck is a Moron.
he is also a moron
a morman moron
[editline]03:19PM[/editline]
that is hard to say
Perhaps a Moronman?
Mormanoron
Mormosaurus Rex
[QUOTE=Jewsus;17882997]In the 19th century one of America's great patriots, Joseph Smith, pioneered a the one true American way of worship. One in which Jesus was not a swarthy middle-easterner, but a good ole American.
Today, the finest orator to grace this country's media since Thomas Payne, follows this path. The love Glenn has for his country (as well as everyone in it) is evident from watching just one of his inspiring broadcasts.
[url]http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/mediaculture/1885/how_mormonism_built_glenn_beck[/url]
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKtAPT9KEfM[/url]
This is kind of old news but it deserves a thread[/QUOTE]
This deserves a thread like Hitler deserves a Nobel Peace Prize.
Stupid07er is Mormon, and he's cool. So I fail to see how this is news :colbert:
No No! I read it as Moron.
[QUOTE=Bryanrocks01;17884266]Stupid07er is Mormon, and he's cool. So I fail to see how this is news :colbert:[/QUOTE]
How does Stupid07er being cool have anything to do on whether this is news or not?
[QUOTE=Marlwolf78;17884307]How does Stupid07er being cool have anything to do on whether this is news or not?[/QUOTE]
How does Beck being Mormon matter enough to make news?
well that makes sense
He's an idiot
[QUOTE=Bryanrocks01;17884343]How does Beck being Mormon matter enough to make news?[/QUOTE]
Nothing at all.
Why is it so much fun to say Mormon Jesus?
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