Phyllis Wheatley
Televangelists like Jimmy Swaggert and Jim and Tammy Fay Bakker promise the Christian faith to
millions everyday. For the right price, anybody can have something- a.k.a. Christianity, God, and
faith- in their lives. On these shows, there is no need to have believed in religion before, as long
as there is a need for it now.
Religious telecasts asking for money in exchange for faith attract nearly five million people
each year. Fifty-five
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else. She, like the victim of a 17th
century house fire or the casualty of the lonely war against aging, turns to faith when she has nothing,
needs something or anything, and uses this possession for her own needs. This is, nevertheless, a
faith in something, but it is not yet a true example of the believing, professing, or belonging to the
religion of Christ. For Wheatley, Christ is not most important; she is. And
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