The Stealth Persuader:
Many people think Congress is the host of the gala annual National
Prayer Breakfast, which takes place this week. It is not. The
breakfast is organized by 33 members of Congress who belong to a
well-connected but secretive Christian group called the Fellowship
Foundation, which is run by Douglas Coe. Coe, 76, has been called the
"stealth Billy Graham." He specializes in the spiritual struggles of
the powerful.
Several members of Congress live in rooms rented in a town house
owned by a foundation affiliated with the group. Coe and his
associates sometimes travel (on their own dime) with congressional
members abroad andaccording to investigations by the Los Angeles
Times and Harper'shave played backstage roles in such diplomatic
coups as the 1976 Camp David accords. Yet Coe also befriends
dictators. "He would still hold out hope that these people could be
redeemed and try to work through them to help the people over whom
they have authority," says Richard Carver, president of the
Fellowship's board of directors. Some skeptical Evangelicals
criticize Coe's indiscriminate alliances and his downplaying of
Jesus' divinity in favor of his earthly teachingswhich allows Coe
to pray with Muslim and Buddhist leaders. But few turn down an
opportunity to confer with him.