FACT CHECK: Was A Statue Of Robert E. Lee Replaced By A Statue Of A Beast?

A post shared on social media purports that a statue of Robert E. Lee was replaced by a statue of a beast in New Orleans. Verdict: False The statue is near the site previously occupied by the Robert E. Lee memorial, but was there before its removal and did not replace it. Fact Check: A gunman opened […]

No historical figure is without sin, but who we honor with statues reveals what we value



Conservative evangelicals who compared COVID lockdowns and mandates to “slavery” need to answer some tough questions if a future memorial of Dr. Anthony Fauci receives the same treatment as the recently destroyed statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.

First among them is this: How do you decide which slaves should submit to their “masters” and which ones should rebel?

This may sound like a strange connection, considering that conservative Christians were among Fauci’s most vocal critics during the COVID-19 pandemic. For them, masks and rolled-up sleeves were signs of submission.

Fauci was the public face of the “Coronavirus States of America,” an unrecognizable new nation where millions of people were stripped of their liberty and forced to labor under the control of political and corporate “masters.”

Fauci’s defenders at the time, much like General Lee’s today, reject the belief that upholding slavery was his primary motivation for serving his nation. To them, Fauci was a kind and caring physician who answered the call to serve his country when asked by President Trump in 2020. His reputations in previous battles against HIV/AIDS, cancer, swine flu, and Ebola earned him the respect of his peers and the trust of the public at the beginning of the pandemic.

But perceptions changed for many Americans after COVID started to spread and Fauci became the spokesman of our national pandemic response. The push for extended lockdowns — with exemptions for social justice protests — was described by Attorney General Bill Barr at the time as the “greatest intrusion on civil liberties” other than slavery. Things got even worse after the presidential election in 2020. By 2021, Fauci and his army of CSA officers were pushing for vaccine mandates and ID cards.

Americans of all stripes voiced their opposition, but conservative Christians were particularly wary of the CSA and its attempts to establish “Jab Crow” policies for COVID shot refusers.

Douglas Wilson, a Presbyterian pastor who is as controversial within the world of evangelicalism as he is with MSNBC viewers, went so far as to say that Christians could refuse the COVID shot and procure fake vaccine passports in good conscience. His hypothetical scenario involving nurses who refused the jab en masse was punctuated by this conclusion:

This is not rebellion against lawful authority. This would be an example of a free people refusing to go along with their own enslavement.

I’ve met Wilson in person and have benefitted greatly from his incisive cultural commentary. But this comment was striking, given his attempts to defend American chattel slavery on biblical grounds and the principles that animated the Confederacy on constitutional grounds. Wilson’s view of Southern slavery is somewhat complex. He counts himself a “fan” of General Robert E. Lee but not of Martin Luther King Jr. or Abraham Lincoln.

While he acknowledges that the racial basis for the institution was unbiblical, he does not believe that American chattel slavery itself was, which means that slaves were biblically obligated to submit to their masters.

These two views of slavery — submission to actual enslavement but resistance to metaphorical bondage — create a theological, moral, and logical conundrum for many white evangelicals. How can a Christian who refused to submit to mask orders in 2020 argue that an enslaved man in 1820s Mississippi was obliged to submit to actual slave owners who had the legal right to sell his children and the social license to violate his wife?

I don’t think you need a degree from a divinity school to spot the serious problems with these irreconcilable positions, but I don’t believe the issue is racism.

Evangelical Christians affirm the imago Dei, believing human beings were made in God’s image as described in Genesis 1:27. But that theological position can be quickly overtaken when believers — regardless of color — practice the politics of the imago hominum, evidencedby biblical verdicts on controversial social issues that consistently reflect our image.

It is easy to believe God supports your politics, whatever they are, and find scriptures you claim support your positions. There are churches that say they support same-sex unions because the Bible is pro-love and pro-marriage. Likewise, some abortionists claim they work to give women reproductive “choice” because of their Christian faith.

I certainly believe the scriptures have something to say about slavery. The Old Testament says that anyone who steals a man — as well as anyone found in possession of him — should be put to death. Slavery also shows up in the New Testament, and yes, slaves were instructed to obey their masters.

These verses appeared in letters the Apostle Paul wrote to the early church that address order and obligations within a typical household. These passages are often included alongside his instructions to husbands and wives as well as parents and children. They reflect a cultural context in which both masters and slaves were among the early converts to Christianity.

While the New Testament does not include an explicit call for abolition, that does not imply an endorsement. In fact, 1 Timothy 1: 8-10 includes enslavers among a longer list of lawless and disobedient sinners, a little after murders and men who practice homosexuality and right before liars and heretics.

The most compelling biblical refutation of the belief that American chattel slavery was defensible from a Christian perspective is the “Great Commission” itself. Jesus appeared to his followers after his resurrection and gave them clear instructions on how to engage an unbelieving world. The biblical imperative for believers with respect to unbelievers — whether in 1623 or 2023 — is to preach the gospel and make disciples. It was not to use the Bible to justify buying them from man-stealers, then claim the same Bible would eventually — perhaps after 400 years — lead you to grant them their freedom.

In fact, Robert Lewis Dabney, a Presbyterian minister and chaplain in the Confederate Army, published a defense of slavery in 1867 — four years after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. In it, Dabney used the Bible to defend Southern slavery — and criticize abolitionists — on moral, ethical, economic, and theological grounds.

Further, if slavery was a biblically mandated or permissible institution, then why would Christian defenders of the practice in this country believe it would have — or should have — ended? If you believe the Bible permitted slavery in the New Testament and the antebellum South, then why should we not engage in slavery today? Why can’t a Christian purchase another human being today and keep him and his offspring enslaved in perpetuity, as long as he treats the people kindly?

The truth is that the election of Lincoln — an anti-slavery Republican — made the South afraid that slavery would be on its way out. If “states' rights” were the main controversy and slavery was a dying institution in the South, you would expect this dynamic to be reflected in the writings of Confederate leaders.

That was not the case.

Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens was clear in his Cornerstone Speech that the Confederacy’s new government was built on the foundation that “the negro is not equal to the white man” and that “slavery subordination to the superior race is his natural and normal condition.”

The Constitution of the Confederate States of America was also explicitly pro-slavery. Article I, Section 9, Clause 4 prohibited the Confederate States Congress from passing any law to outlaw slavery. Article IV, Section 2 said slave owners could travel across the Confederacy with their slaves without fear of having their ownership rights impaired. Section 3 said escaped slaves must be returned to their masters.

The Confederacy was as committed to preserving slavery in 1861 as conservatives believed the Coronavirus States of America was committed to preserving lockdowns and mandates in 2021. Whatever Robert E. Lee’s personal feelings on the issue of slavery, this was the social order the army he led was fighting to preserve.

The irony of this entire situation is that Lee himself rejected the idea of memorials to the Confederacy and said the following in a letter declining an invitation to join officers on the battlefield of Gettysburg in 1869:

I think it wiser, moreover, not to keep open the sores of war but to follow the examples of those nations who endeavored to obliterate the marks of civil strife, to commit to oblivion the feelings engendered.

Lee had enough wisdom to understand that a nation healing from internal conflict is better served by focusing on the principles that are the foundation of its unity, not the political battles that almost tore it apart.

Most people understand this in any other context. I doubt any evangelical would argue that a couple trying to work through a wife’s adulterous affair would be well served by commissioning a painting of her in a romantic embrace with her paramour. If healing is the ultimate goal, a much wiser choice would be to frame a picture of the wife and her husband reciting their wedding vows on their wedding day.

No historical figure is without sin, but the people we choose to honor communicate clear messages about our values. There is nothing Orwellian about exercising prudence in the selection of public symbols. I doubt any conservative would see fit to honor Fauci with statues and memorials because of his long career in medicine. When it comes to ideological foes, very few are willing to untether skill and competence from worldview and vision. That is a standard worth applying consistently.

Further, there is no biblical mandate to preserve statues of political figures and civil authorities. Christians should never be ashamed of the Bible. But we should also reject any attempts by our forebears, contemporaries, or descendants to twist scripture for worldly purposes.

Robert E. Lee statue melted in secret ceremony, to be remade into 'inclusive' public artwork



The statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee in downtown Charlottesville has not only been torn down but also melted down in a secret ceremony. The Confederate statue was removed following the 2017 Charlottesville riot and will now be replaced with public artwork that is more "inclusive."

The Washington Post reported that the Robert E. Lee statue was "being cut into fragments and dropped into a furnace, dissolving into a sludge of glowing bronze."

The outlet reported that the destruction of the Confederate monument was done in secrecy – the name and location of the foundry were not revealed to the public for fear of retribution. The group transforming the Confederate statue said they have already been the victims of "past threats."

The owner of the foundry said, "The risk is being targeted by people of hate, having my business damaged, having threats to family and friends. Yet when you are approached with such an honor, especially to destroy hate, you have to do it."

NPR was also at the melting of the statue and noted that it was done "out of state."

"Only a few dozen people, including some who had housed or transported the dismembered figure of Lee, were invited to watch alongside them in secret," according to the Washington Post.

— (@)

As pieces of the statue were lowered into the furnace burning at 2,250 degrees, Andrea Douglas – executive director of the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center – joked, "Well, they can’t put Humpty Dumpty back together again. There will be no tape for that."

Douglas is a leader of the Swords into Plowshares project – a self-described project that is "shaping the national conversation around toppled Confederate statues by modeling a community-engaged process of creative transformation, one that turns historic trauma into an artistic expression of democratic values and inclusive aspirations."

The Swords into Plowshares project is also led by Jalane Schmidt – a University of Virginia religious studies professor.

"We want to transform something that has been toxic in the Charlottesville community," said Schmidt. "We want to transform it into a piece of art that the community can be can be proud of and gather around and not feel excluded or intimidated."

"People are willing to die for symbols," Schmidt added. "And as we saw in Charlottesville, they're willing to kill for them too."

After the statue was melted down, one of the metal-casters said, "It’s a better sculpture right now than it’s ever been. We’re taking away what it meant for some people and transforming it."

The approximately 6,000 pounds of bronze from the statue of Robert E. Lee in uniform riding his horse Traveller will be used to create an "inclusive" piece of artwork.

The Swords into Plowshares project noted, "A primary criteria for our eventual evaluation of artists' proposals is how effectively they incorporate the input we have gathered from the community."

As Blaze News previously reported, the new art project will cost approximately $1.1 million.

"The next phase is to form a jury and solicit artist proposals, with the goal of announcing a finalist in 2024," the Swords into Plowshares website reads. "Ideally, the new art piece(s) will be completed, donated back to the City of Charlottesville, and installed in 2027, the tenth anniversary of the 2017 right-wing attacks."

In August 2017, people who wanted the statue to remain clashed with advocates for tearing down the Confederate sculpture during the "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville. There were also Neo-Nazis and white supremacists at the rally.

James Fields Jr. deliberately rammed his car into a group protesting the Robert E. Lee statue. Heather Heyer was killed, and dozens of others were injured.

The polarizing Confederate statue was taken down from Lee Park (now Market Street Park) in July 2021 after the city of Charlottesville won its legal battle against a coalition of groups wanting the Robert E. Lee statue to remain. A Virginia judge ruled that the statue could be repurposed.

There was a movement to remove Confederate statues across the country following the death of George Floyd. There were 168 Confederate symbols removed across the United States in 2020.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

National Cathedral swaps out Civil War-themed stained glass for civil rights-themed windows



For nearly 65 years, the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., had four Civil War-themed stained glass windows featuring Confederate Gens. Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. They were allegedly installed in hopes of ameliorating postwar tensions between North and South.

On Saturday, the nation's second-largest cathedral unveiled its civil rights-themed replacement windows, featuring faceless black protesters. They were ostensibly installed as a symbolic nod to ameliorating racial tensions.

The National Cathedral, official seat of the Episcopal Church, indicated in a statement that its four new windows "signify a new chapter in the Cathedral's historic legacy of art and architecture."

What's the background?

The neo-Gothic cathedral's original 4'x6' windows were donated by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, designed by Boston artist Wilbur H. Burnham, and installed in 1953. They depicted Jackson and Lee as pious Christians at various stages in their military and spiritual lives.

The engraved stone below the Jackson window noted that he "walked humbly before his creator," reported the Washington Post.

The stone below Lee's window stated that the prominent Episcopalian was "a Christian soldier without fear and without reproach."

The windows were reportedly installed to "foster reconciliation between parts of the nation that had been divided by the Civil War," according to the cathedral's former dean, Gary Hall.

NPR indicated that around 2015, the idea of removing Confederate symbols from the building was raised after the massacre of black Christians at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina.

In 2016, Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas, a member of the five-person task force assembled to consider the status of the windows, intimated their historical and provocative nature was not altogether cause for iconoclasm, but a talking point.

"Instead of simply taking the windows down and going on with business as usual, the Cathedral recognizes that, for now, they provide an opportunity for us to begin to write a new narrative on race and racial justice at the Cathedral and perhaps for our nation," said Douglas.

The subsequent death of a counter-protester at the 2017 "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, expedited the removal of the windows.

At the time of their removal, Rev. Randolph Marshall Hollerith, dean at the cathedral, said, "Confederate monuments, windows like ours — many of them have become symbols of racism and white supremacy, and they’ve become quite painful for brothers and sisters of this nation," reported the New York Times.

On Saturday, Hollerith said, "Simply put, these windows were offensive, and they were a barrier to the ministry of this cathedral, and they were antithetical to our call to be a House of Prayer for All People. They told a false narrative, extolling two individuals who fought to keep the institution of slavery alive in this country."

New windows

Smithsonian magazine reported that the bright new images, entitled "Now and Forever," were born of a collaboration between Kerry James Marshall and stained-glass fabricator Andrew Goldkuhle.

They depict black protesters holding signs that read "fairness," "not," "no," and "no foul play."

— (@)

Kerry James Marshall, a prolific race-focused artist from Birmingham, Alabama, designed the new windows for a symbolic fee of $18.65.

Marshall told the Washington Post in 2021 that this figure is significant because, "of course, 1865 is the end of the Civil War."

The windows will soon be accompanied by a poem by Mellon Foundation president Elizabeth Alexander, whose organization helped fund the windows' replacement. The poem, which will be engraved below the windows in the coming months, notes, "May this portal be where the light comes in."

Bible passages were read, speeches were given, and gospel music was played at the Saturday dedication. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson reportedly also marked the occasion by reading excerpts from Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail."

Marshall indicated that the unveiling highlighted "one instance where a change of symbolism is meant to repair a breach of America’s creation promise of liberty and justice for all, and to reinforce those ideals and aspirations embodied in the Cathedral’s structure and its mission to remind us that we can be better, and do better, than we did yesterday, today."

"I am deeply humbled, incredibly grateful, for the opportunity and hope that the things the windows propose continue to be a catalyst for the kind of transformation that the Cathedral stands for, what this nation stands for … and what I hope we all will embody and stand for and bring forward ourselves," added Marshall.

The Art Newspaper reported that the ultimate fate of the original windows, presently being stored and conserved at the cathedral, has not yet been decided.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

George Washington’s Family Matters

Historian Cassandra Good's latest book, 'First Family,' ably tells the colorful, if not always redeeming, story of George Washington's adoptive children.

Leftists Hate The Minutemen Mascot Because They Love Tyranny

Radicals will never be content to tear down just the 'Redskins' and 'Chiefs' mascots. They'll always come for the proverbial Minutemen.

Virginia reaches deal to transfer Richmond Confederate monuments to Black History Museum



A deal has been reached between Virginia officials and the city of Richmond to transfer ownership of Confederate monuments to the Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia.

Gov. Ralph Northam (D) and Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney announced the agreement on Thursday, stating in a press release that a towering statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and its 40-foot tall pedestal will be among the removed monuments transferred to the museum. Work is still underway to remove the pedestal, which is now covered in graffiti and other "Black Lives Matter" protest art, the release stated.

MORE: Official release is out from @CityRichmondVA with details. @NBC12pic.twitter.com/pa5OsNNju0
— Henry Graff (@Henry Graff) 1640872898

Officials said the Black History Museum will partner with the Valentine museum of Richmond and other local cultural institutions to "determine the proper future use of each piece in the collection."

"Symbols matter, and for too long, Virginia's most prominent symbols celebrated our country's tragic division and the side that fought to keep alive the institution of slavery by any means possible," Northam said. "Now it will be up to our thoughtful museums, informed by the people of Virginia, to determine the future of these artifacts, including the base of the Lee Monument which has taken on special significance as protest art."

The Richmond City Council must approve the agreement before it is finalized. Mayor Stoney said he would seek the council's support in January to accept the Lee monument from the state government and transfer ownership of the property over to the Black History Museum, along with the other city-owned Confederate monuments.

"Entrusting the future of these monuments an dpedestals to two of our most respected institutions is the right thing to do," Stoney said. "They will take the time that is necessary to properly engage the public and ensure the thoughtful future uses of these artifacts."

The complete list of Confederate monuments being transferred includes monuments to Robert E. Lee, J.E.B. Stuart, Stonewall Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Matthew Fontaine Maury, Josephy Bryan, Fitzhugh Lee, Confederate Soldier and Sailors, and ceremonial cannon.

The city's Confederate monuments were removed last summer after Stoney issued an order to do so, during Black Lives Matter protests over the police killing of George Floyd.

According to the Associated Press, the statues have been held in storage since they were removed, spending at least part of the time at the city's wastewater plant.

The Lee statute was located on state property and legal issues prevented Northam from having it removed until last September. Work to begin removing its 40-foot pedestal began earlier this month.

Preservationists reveal contents of 1887 time capsule crews found hidden inside base of Robert E. Lee statue



Conservators in Richmond, Virginia, unpacked the hidden treasure trove that was stowed away in a time capsule found inside the base of the now-removed statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.

Among the many items found inside the 36-pound copper box were Confederate money, a Bible with a silver coin pressed into the cover, and a Confederate flag and Masonic symbol that historians say were carved from a tree that grew out of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson's original grave in the Lexington Cemetery.

The time capsule was found Tuesday by digging crews in charge of removing the historic statue of Robert E. Lee. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) ordered the statue removed last year as a result of national protests stemming from the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police. Historians thought they had found the prized time capsule earlier this month; however, the previously discovered box did not match the dimensions or description of historical records. It was later determined that the first capsule had likely been left by a person or persons involved with the construction of the monument.

It took conservators more than an hour and a half to unbox the capsule's contents, as many of the documents packed inside the box had been subjected to water damage.

The box also had to be examined by a bomb squad, as newspaper reports from 1887 claimed that the capsule contained an artillery shell from the battle of Fredericksburg, according to the New York Post. “We don’t trust what they wrote in the newspaper back then so we wanted to make sure it wasn’t live before anybody came into the lab,” Kate Ridgway, lead conservator of the state Department of Historic Resources, said, the Post reported.

Historians had hoped that the second time capsule contained a rare photograph of Abraham Lincoln in his coffin, but to their dismay, it was not among the collected artifacts. However, conservators did find an 1865 edition of Harper's Weekly that contained an image of an individual grieving the death of Lincoln at his grave.

Conservators are currently working to preserve all the items found in the capsule and promised to release a full list of the contents as soon as they are examined and restored, according to NPR.

1887 TIME CAPSULE OPENING \n\n#ICYMI ON @NBC12: Books, coins, and ammo were found in the 1887 time capsule found in the the Robert. E. Lee monument. An 1865 edition of Harper\u2019s Weekly with a centerfold image of a figure grieving over Abraham Lincoln\u2019s grave was also found.pic.twitter.com/AHqbiwlnRc
— Desiree Montilla NBC12 (@Desiree Montilla NBC12) 1640742375

Workers find time capsule inside base of Robert E. Lee statue. Historians believe it could be the 1887 box they've been looking for.



Digging crews wrapping up the removal of the historic statue of Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Virginia, found what is believed to be a long sought-after historical treasure inside the base of the statue of the Confederate general Monday: a time capsule from 1887, The Hill reported.

"They found it! This is likely the time capsule everyone was looking for. Conservators studying it—stay tuned for next steps! (Won’t be opened today)," Virginia Governor Ralph Northam tweeted Monday after diggers found the box.

They found it! This is likely the time capsule everyone was looking for. Conservators studying it\u2014stay tuned for next steps! (Won\u2019t be opened today)pic.twitter.com/3lWrsPGZd2
— Governor Ralph Northam (@Governor Ralph Northam) 1640627913

The copper box found at the base of the statue is believed to be a time capsule from 1887 containing around 60 objects, most of which are believed to be Confederate memorabilia. It is also believed that the capsule is supposed to contain a rare photo of former President Abraham Lincoln in his coffin, according to Smithsonian magazine. Records from the Library of Virginia indicate that the contents of the capsule were donated by 37 Richmond residents, organizations, and businesses 134 years ago, according to a press release from the governor's office.

The capsule is scheduled to be opened Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Department of Historic Resources lab in Richmond. Video footage of the event will be recorded and released Wednesday morning, the governor's office said.

Conservators believed they had found the time capsule earlier this month; however, when the first box was examined, it was determined that it was not the time capsule historians were looking for, but likely a lead box that was left by a person or persons who oversaw the construction of the monument, the Associated Press reported. The first box contained little more than a few papers, some waterlogged books, and a silver coin.

Northam ordered that the statue be removed last summer, citing George Floyd's death as the reason for the monument's deconstruction; however, removal plans were stalled by litigation until the Supreme Court of Virginia gave the green light to proceed last week, the AP said.

Northam's office announced plans to replace the old time capsule with a new one earlier this year. All Virginians were invited to suggest new artifacts for the capsule once the statue had been removed.

“It’s time to say to the world, this is today’s Virginia, not yesterday’s. And one day, when future generations look back at this moment, they will be able to learn about the inclusive, welcoming Commonwealth that we are building together. I encourage Virginians to be part of this unique effort to tell our shared story," Northam said in a statement.

Submissions for the capsule ended in July and are now being reviewed by a panel. Plans for the installation of the new capsule have not yet been announced, but all items that will be included in the new capsule will be kept by the Department of Historic Resources until the new capsule is installed, according to the governor's office.

Fairfax County Residents Oppose Renaming Lee Highway, But Unelected Bureaucrats Are Changing It Anyway

A majority of Fairfax County residents want to keep prominent highway names, yet members of the 'Confederate Names Task Force' voted overwhelmingly against their wishes.