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Frat House for Jesus
The entity behind C Street.
by Peter J. Boyer September 13, 2010
One midwinter night in 2008, Senator John Ensign, of Nevada, the chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, was roused from bed when six men entered his room and ordered him to get up. Ensign knew the men intimately; a few hours earlier, he had eaten dinner with them, as he had nearly every Tuesday evening since hed come to Washington. Now they were rebuking him for his recklessness. They told him he was endangering his career, ruining lives, and offending God.
The men leading this intervention considered themselves Ensigns closest friends in Washington. Four of those who confronted EnsignSenator Tom Coburn and Representatives Bart Stupak, Mike Doyle, and Zach Wamplived with him in a nineteenth-century brick row house on C Street*, in southeast Washington, a short walk from the Capitol. The men regarded themselves in part as an accountability group. Despite their political differencesCoburn and Wamp are Republicans, Stupak and Doyle are Democratsthey had pledged to hold one another to a life lived by the principles of Jesus, and they considered the Tuesday supper gatherings at C Street an inviolable ritual.
The regulars at the dinner included the nine men who lived at the house, along with half a dozen colleagues and friends who were non-residents. Every Tuesday evening, they would convene in the first-floor living room of the C Street house, a large space furnished with a long leather sofa and stuffed chairs. A bookshelf was filled with political biographies and James Patterson novels, and paintings of hunting scenes and sailing vessels hung on the walls, suggesting the atmosphere of a mens club, or, as Coburn put it, a fraternity house. (Some of the private bedrooms upstairs, including his, were usually in a state of collegiate disarray.) After some small talk and friendly ribbing, the group broke up, and the men took their places in two narrow, adjoining dining rooms down the hall.
The meals were prepared by a volunteer host couple who lived in the house, and were served by a team of silent young men, also volunteers, who were part of the groups mentoring program. At mealtime, the tone turned more serious, but the subject of conversation was rarely politics. Spiritual issues and the most intimate personal matters were discussed, with the assurance of absolute confidentiality.
Coburn, the senior man in the house, enjoyed these sessions, but at dinner that Tuesday night in 2008 he was plainly troubled. Finally, he spoke out. Guys, he said, weve got a problem in the house.
One day some weeks earlier, Coburn said, he had learned that John Ensign, who was married, was having an affair with Cynthia Hampton, the wife of one of his aides, Doug Hampton, and there had been an immediate intervention that same day. Meeting in an upstairs room at the C Street house (a room that was occasionally used for marriage counselling), Doug Hampton, accompanied by Coburn and three lay ministers who manage C Street, had confronted Ensign about the affair. The encounter was filled with recrimination and tears, and culminated in Ensign confessing and vowing to repent. Coburn returned to the Senate, but the others remained with Ensign, handing him a pen and paper and dictating a letter to Cynthia Hampton declaring his intention to end the affair.
Cindy, the letter began. This is the most important letter that Ive ever written. What I did with you was wrong. I was completely self-centered + only thinking of myself. Ensign wrote that God wished for the two marriages to heal, and for the two lovers to restore our relationships to Him. The letter was put in a FedEx envelope, and addressed. The three ministersMarty Sherman, Tim Coe, and David Coedrove with Ensign to a FedEx station, and watched as he slipped the letter into the drop-box.
Hearing of this weeks later, the men at Coburns table were astonished. Ensign, a handsome, silver-haired conservative, was a Republican with national prospects. He and Doug Hampton had been extremely close, attending religious retreats together, and even buying houses in adjacent Las Vegas neighborhoods. Cindy Hampton had been Ensigns campaign treasurer. Ensigns Pentecostal faith, embraced when he was in graduate school, had been a central part of his public identity. An active member of the evangelical group Promise Keepers, he had publicly pledged himself to a life of spiritual, moral, ethical, and sexual purity.
CONTINUED AT:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/09/13/100913fa_fact_boyer
The Magistrate
(95,264 posts)She is not going to, once elected, take off a mask and emerge as Ms. Theocrat of 2016, inaugurating the Dominionist millennia.
KoKo
(84,711 posts)But...at least we are "reasonable" about it. But, sometimes I do feel you push a bit hard for indefensible.
octoberlib
(14,971 posts)Where I'm currently employed we're strongly discouraged from even discussing religion, much less holding prayer sessions in our offices. Thanks for posting; I hadn't read this article yet.
WillyT
(72,631 posts)nadinbrzezinski
(154,021 posts)over the Betlway media, is conveniently forgotten. It did happen, but a few here would love to forget about it, and the more they post about it, the more we all go and find them.