And a highway will be there; it will be called the Way of Holiness. The unclean will not journey on it; it will be for those who walk in that Way; wicked fools will not go about on it."
-Isaiah 35:8
So, I'm having dinner over at Lynn Fellman Studios with Lynn, Genie Scott of NCSE who is in town for a conference, and a variety of friends and colleagues including the recently decorated Randy Moore. And I bring up the idea that I 35 ... the main north-south interstate through the Twin Cities, the one with the recent bridge collapse, is seen by some crazy religious people as a special "god's highway" because of the above quoted passage from Isaiah.
Remarkably, all but one (August Berkshire) of the people in the room found this too hard to believe and insisted that this must be some sort of urban myth. That people were praying to a highway because its official DOT number happen to correspond to a biblical passage that happen to mention a metaphorical road was a bit too much.
I agree. It is too much! But it is also for real! (in a surreal-this-can't-possibly-be-real sort of way).
So I told everyone I'd get together the documentation on this and let them know the details. To those of you who know me, this can only mean one thing.... I feel a blog post coming on...
Please refer again to the scripture cited above. What does this mean?
This has been interpreted by certain Christians in the following manner:
"... this scripture gives us .... direction for our own lighting of the highway, Interstate 35. I-35: Highway of Holiness is about coordinating our efforts as a people across the nation to reclaim for the Kingdom of God what the enemy thinks is his own."
-- Light The Highway Website.
I 35, which runs from Texas to Minnesota, is seen by a number of Christians as the Highway of Holiness. This highway was the site of a 35 day long 25/7 prayer vigils, coordinated with "Radical Evangelism" events and "Purity Sieges," a few years back.
That was then, and this is now. The I-35 Holy Highway thing continues. My memory is that the prayer vigils kept going for many many days after this initial 35 days, although perhaps sporadically. The movement does not document itself well, so it is actually rather difficult to reconstruct what they have been up to. A news report dated February 15th, 2008 notes that "The prayers continued well beyond those first 35 days....And now the movement is called Light the Highway."
The LTH web site is here.
Here is the cinematographic version, from October 2005:
(I hate when people stand up with their arms waving around in front of me at these things. Makes it hard to see.)
One could look at the web page and see people who count themselves as "christian" organizing to do good works, and think, "OK, whatever." But that is not, of course, what this is at all. I don't like the explicit statement that there is one way (God's way) and that those who travel on this highway (I-35) will be only those who follow God's way. Look out for some crazy person showing up one day, inspired by the kind of prophesying and preaching we see in the video (above), armed with a rifle and picking off people he thinks are not sufficiently Christian. Down in Dallas or someplace.
The linkage to disaster and sinning is explicit in the writings of the Heaven's Highway movement. There is a section of the web site called "A Call to Intercession" ... (should that not be "a call to intersection?"). Here, we learn that during a prayer meeting of the organizers, God brought to their attention (wow!) all of the incidents of bloodshed that have taken place all along I-35. These include The Alamo (remember the Alamo?), the Texas tower shooting of August 1966, Waco, the Assassination of JFK, the Oklahoma City bombing, and so on, right up to the August 2007 Bridge Collapse here in My Fair City.
We are told this:
Remembering these tragedies brought to our attention the need for repentance and healing to occur along I-35. On August 15, 2006, Cindy Jacobs declared this over the cities of I-35, "This is a time of uprooting of the ancient things in my cities that have stopped My glory and power from manifesting. Uproot corruption, pornography, abortion, homosexuality, terrorism, violence and any other thing that opposes My will." Click here to read the entire Royal road for His glory prophecy.
WTF? Oh, I "clicked here" and it is a prophecy of the Prophet Cindy Jacobs. This prophecy tells us that God tells us, through Cindy, that he wants a "royal road" as a way for him to go around anointing people and shit. Homosexuality, terrorism, and violence will be uprooted as part of this process. A siege will be laid against these things with fire and fear and such.
This ominous sentence appears within the prophesy: "I am coming with the fire of my holiness. Like in the Cane Ridge Revival in Kentucky, and the days of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards."
Cane Ridge was the site of a major mass hysteria event that figured large in the so called "Second Great Awakening, which you can pretty much blame for these crazy religious people speaking in tongues and waving their hands around over their heads all the time.
So, right, this is not a group of people using a quaint biblical reference linked to a road that a lot of people live near to get together and raise money for the poor or turn out a few symbol-laden quilts. No. This is more like a group of highly delusional people preparing for a religious war.
Stay tuned.
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The shoe! The shoe! Follow the shoe!
It's probably too late to explain the concept of metaphor to these people, isn't it.
Count your blessings, it could have been Route 666.
I lived in Dallas for a while. A nut job city if there ever was one, rude people. People in New York are friendlier than in Dallas, unless you're also a nut job.
Polly Harvey does an amazing (extraordinary) rendition of Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited.
Don't follow the shoe, follow the gourd!
I remember seeing this as part of a religous documentary in the UK. I'll have to see if I can dig it out, it was probably Channel 4.
Why did the bridge fall down? Did they pray wrong? Perhaps they were praying in the wrong lane.
Last fall, we drove I-35 from Des Moines to Duluth. It was an OK drive, but I can't say I noticed anything especially holy about that trip, and we're still atheists. Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that we detoured out to Morris to see You-Know-Who, and thus skipped the section between Twin Cities and Hinckley? Like, that's the section where God especially hangs out to sanctify unwary travellers?
Or maybe Canadians are immune?
Right. God was busy munching on the part he knocked down in Minneapolis. Nom nom nom.
Dave: This does seem to be a thing that started farther south and has slowly infested northwards.
I think it is just coincidental, but I-35 is also the focus of the anti-NAFTA tin-hat crowd, the ones who worry that the development of a "NAFTA supercorridor" along I-35 to connect Mexico and Canada is part of a greater plan to eventually unify Mexico, Canada, and the US in an EU-like superstate. Just google it for all kinds of craziness.