A Visit to Palin’s Church

 

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Pentecostalism is one of the fastest growing branches of Christianity in the world, and the Assemblies of God is one of the largest Pentecostal denominations in the country, claiming 1.6 million members. Pentecostals are generally characterized by a strict adherence to moral codes--no tobacco, no alcohol, no social dancing, no sex outside of marriage--and by their belief that the Holy Spirit bestows upon some the gift of "speaking in tongues," a reference to Acts 2: "And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost and began to speak with other tongues." A spokeswoman for the McCain-Palin campaign has said that Palin attends many churches and does not consider herself to be Pentecostal.

This past Sunday, worship at the Assembly of God fellowship in Wasilla was as euphoric as the Bible Church was staid. The congregation of about 100 was on its feet, shouting and clapping. Some members on another Sunday might murmur and keen in low voices, the sound of speaking in tongues. But the purpose of the sermon this Sunday was to prepare the church for the media onslaught that was sure to follow. "Because Jesus Christ died on the cross," the senior pastor, Ed Kalnins, told the crowd, "we can worship in public. How many people are thanking God for what's happening to Governor Sarah?"

Kalnins guessed that about half of the people in his church have the gift of tongues. He has it himself, he says, though he rarely demonstrates it. "It's not meant to be shown off," he said. "It's not like flexing muscles. I received the gift in college, and it transformed my life." It's not something like from the "remote parts of the jungle," he adds: It's a decision.

And if the staff of Wasilla Bible Church shies from taking political stands, Kalnins does not.  Homosexuality, he says, is a choice. He would not vote for a pro-choice candidate. When asked about the evolution-creationism debate, Kalnins is clear:  "You present the facts of creation versus evolution and the truth will come out," he says. What does Palin think?  "This is something inside every human heart of a believer," he answers. When Palin worships in Juneau, she attends an Assembly of God church there.  Sarah Palin may not call herself a Pentecostal, but she has deep and long experience in Pentecostal churches. And as the race wears on, this biographical fact will likely become another religious Rorschach test--pleasing to some, discomfiting to others.

With Tony Hopfinger in Wasilla

© 2008

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: acmetech @ 08/22/2009 2:16:25 AM

    It's so cool when stupid comments like his can be kept around for posterity.

    Btw, yelling with all caps just makes you look like a kook. Maybe even a fundamentalist, Bible Kook.

  • Posted By: acmetech @ 08/22/2009 2:08:14 AM

    You hit the nail on the head, but bent it anyway. How many times were any of those three middle names even mentioned? Hussein was repeated by the right too many times to count. That's why it kept making the news!

  • Posted By: mitchk @ 10/30/2008 10:54:29 AM

    Quotes from the founding fathers:

    -Christianity neither is nor ever was a part of the common law.
    -History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil government. This marks the lowest grade of ignorance of which their civil as well as religious leaders will always avail themselves for their own purposes
    -Thomas Jefferson

    The government of the US is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion
    -John Adams

    It is a myth that the US was founded as a "Christian nation". If folks like Palin want to believe that, that is fine; it is their right because we do believe in freedom of religion. But when the religious right promotes a candidate like her so that they can more effectively push their values on a nation they believe to be "christian", they are acting in a way contrary to that which the founding fathers would have agreed to. Separation of church and state is the law of the land. We need to keep it that way.

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