Jerry Falwell’s final interview
- March 26, 2009
- Faith
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“Jerry Falwell was a polarizing figure.”
So begins Relevant Magazine’s feature article, the last interview of Jerry Falwell, which was conducted two weeks before his death in May 2007. And I think that one statement pretty well sums up how most Americans, Christian or not, would describe him.
As anyone who has spent time in evangelicalism’s inner orbit knows, there are really two Jerry Falwells. One, of course, is the fundamentalist most Americans have seen on television, the man who once denounced homosexuality as “a vile and satanic system” and the feminist movement as “a satanic attack on the home.” This is the Jerry Falwell who not only blamed the terrorist attacks of 9/11 on a long list of domestic minorities (homosexuals, feminists, pagans, abortionists, etc.), but who also tried to cash in on the public outrage over those remarks by telling his supporters in a letter signed by his son Jonathan—that he was being victimized by “a vicious smear campaign” and asking them to send “a special Vote of Confidence gift … of at least $50 or even $100.”
The other Jerry Falwell, the one I’m seeing today, is more akin to a religious Willy Wonka—a whimsical, mercurial figure who delights in unexpected acts of generosity and trickery. This is the Jerry Falwell who gives away college scholarships to kids who hit baseballs over his fence, who plays lighthearted pranks on uptight fundamentalists and speaks adoringly of his grandchildren. This Jerry Falwell has made some unlikely friends over the years, including Senator Ted Kennedy and Penthouse publisher Larry Flynt, both of whom praise Dr. Falwell as a decent human being while condemning his political views.
I’m not sure why the interview is only now being published, but it’s fascinating nevertheless, particularly in light of the recent rise of technically-progressive megachurches such as Mark Driscoll’s Mars Hill Church and Andy Stanley’s Buckhead Church. Falwell’s dark wood office walls and Diet Peach Snapple habit seem somewhat antiquated by comparison. Yet even two years after his death, it’s amazing how controversial the founder of the Moral Majority still is. This interview, however, shows the human side of him, a side that rarely if ever is portrayed by the secular media.
Too bad we had to wait this long to see it.












