Last September 2010, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) staged an evangelical rock concert, "Rock The Fort", at Fort Bragg in Georgia. The base both co-sponsored, endorsed, and even funded the event, which by one estimate cost US taxpayers over $100,000. "Rock The Fort" was billed as being part of an official "spiritual fitness" program.

In response, a coalition of atheist and freethinker groups planned a counter-concert at Ft. Bragg that was scheduled to be held on April 2nd, 2011. According to the organizers, Bragg officials have refused to endorse or fund the planned "Rock Beyond Belief" event and have also set up bureaucratic obstacles which make the event very difficult or even impossible to hold as planned (here's an excellent blow-by-blow account of the dispute, from Al Stefanelli.) Mikey Weinstein's Military Religious Freedom Foundation is suing on behalf of the Rock Beyond Belief effort.

Meanwhile, two months after its Fort Bragg concert, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, which has long sought to position itself squarely in the evangelical mainstream, promoted Christian rap artist Tedashii as well a song from Tedashii's new album--with lyrics declaring that Christians should be as dedicated as suicide bombers.

"Now we gotta start making WAR. Now we can start saying NO to the fleshly impulses that Jesus was paying for. Now we can start taking the lead, just like the Dalai Llama, and start going all out, just like a suicide bomber." - from Christian rap artist Tedashii's song Make War

Given that some soldiers now training at Bragg may be one day be killed by suicide bombers, the BGAE's promotion of Tedashii's song Make War seems especially striking.

In Fort Bragg's defense, it of course has to be noted that the BGAE promoted Tedashii and Make War after the "Rock the Fort" concert. But regardless of that mitigating circumstance, imagine the likely national outcry had the "Rock the Fort" concert been held by a Muslim religious group which subsequently promoted a rap song by a Muslim artist who celebrated suicide bombing.

It would have been national news.

In early November 2010 one of the 11 official sub-ministries of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, RansomTV, showcased an edited version of Tedashii's rap song Make War from which Tedashii's exhortation--that Christians should be as dedicated as suicide bombers--had been removed. But Ransom encouraged its readers to buy Tedashii's Identity Crisis album (which has the full version of Make War) and Ransom also promoted Tedashii as an artist.

Does globally celebrated evangelist Billy Graham endorse suicide bombing? That would seem unlikely, especially given his September 14, 2001 address at the National Cathedral on September 14, 2001, three days after the September 11, 2001 suicide bombing attacks obliterated the World Trade Center, damaged the Pentagon, and slaughtered over 3,000 innocent people.

The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association's first line of rhetorical defense will probably be that RansomTV featured a cut-down version of "Make War" from which the reference to suicide bombing had been stripped out. But that's irrelevant. RansomTV, and the BGEA, have promoted Tedashii, and that will entice evangelical Christian youth to buy Tedashii's albums, including the full-length cut of "Make War" on Tedashii's Identity Crisis album - in which they'll be rhetorically encouraged to be as dedicated as terrorists who immolate themselves in fiery explosions that claim the lives of others (including women and children, we might assume.)

In other words, Billy Graham's BGEA has just promoted, and thus endorsed, an artist who seems to celebrate what American secular media would typically describe as terrorism.

As Salon.com writer Glenn Greenwald observes, leading Republican politicians can be found these days fraternizing with members of a known terrorist group. American Taliban author Markos Moulitsas would seem to argue that's the new norm for secular 'conservative' leaders. But religious leaders of Graham's generation typically have aspired to a higher level of conduct.

Tedashii's exhortation is especially disturbing in light of the 2011 New Year's suicide bombing of an Egyptian church that killed 21 and injured 79 Coptic Christians.

Billy Graham himself has managed to wind down his astonishingly influential career as an evangelist with public perception of his character still heavily favorable despite the recent emergence of incriminating Nixon Tape conversation in which, for example, Graham can be heard telling Nixon, in a 1973 conversation, that there are two kinds of Jews in the world, one good and the other part of the "synagogue of Satan".

Tedashii's suggestion that Christians should aspire to a level of dedication shown by suicide bombers is not an anomaly. It's part of a rising tendency in evangelical Christianity, far from marginal, which celebrates the revolutionary zeal of suicide bombers and Hitler Youth, and speaks in the vernacular of religious warfare.

Hitler, Lenin, Mao, Hurrah!

As a November 5, 2010 story in Christian Today described,

"Make War" is from Tedashii's sophomore release "Identity Crisis", which debuted at No 2 on Billboard's Top Gospel Album chart. The song was inspired by a message from pastor and author John Piper, in which he said: "I hear so many Christians murmuring about their imperfections, and their failures and their addiction, and their shortcomings. And, I see so little war!"

In 2005, Time Magazine published a list of "25 Most Influential Evangelicals." Billy Graham shared the list with Doug Coe, head of the Family/Fellowship which runs the National Prayer Breakfast and has been the subject of two books [1, 2] by journalist Jeff Sharlet. Coe, who seems to have been a personal friend to a succession of US presidents, has also been known to encourage Christians to aspire to the level of dedication shown by the followers of Hitler, Lenin, and Mao [see NBC video segment]

Coe wasn't the only evangelist on Time's list to have publicly evinced admiration for Hitler Youth. Joining Coe was Rick Warren. In 2005, the same year as Time's "25 Most Influential" issue, mega-evangelist Warren, selected to give a prayer at President Barack Obama's inauguration in early 2009, held a massive church rally at California's Anaheim Angels Stadium during which Warren told his followers,