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Originally Posted by athena123
applediva, when Barack says that his pastor is his spiritual leader and this spiritual leader espouses such hate and divisiveness, I have to question Obama's judgement. If he really wants this country to be united and really wants to stand behind his inspiring speech that America is not white, it's not black, it's not red, it's not blue, then he shouldn't belong to such a church with such a leader. That's what I'm saying. And this church really seems to think that America is the enemy. Have you read some of the things wright has said? It goes far beyond the celebration of clapping, music and singing. Way beyond. wright [I won't capitalize his name he doesn't deserve it] should thank his lucky stars he lives in America and not some country like Iraq where such unpatriotic statements would lead to imprisonment or execution.
I agree with you in a desire to completely separate religion from politics. I get really burned out on candidates trying to show the country how freakin' pious they all are. But at this point in time, I have to wonder about Obama's 20 year relationship with a hate-monger like wright. How have Obama's views been shaped and molded in this span of years? How is he able to reconcile his avowed love for America while he goes to a service once a week and hears his pastor spew this kind of hatred?
I'm just grateful that at last Obama will have to answer to all of this.
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Athena, your point here is well-taken. Of course, there is another side---it is entirely possible that Wright's comments have been taken out of context and distorted to sound like hate speech. Nevertheless, it's troubling.
As you and other posters have pointed out, politics should never be preached from the pulpit. It's appropriate to pray for safety for our troops, wisdom for our government officials, and an end to social problems such as lack of health care, homelessness and poverty. It's completely wrong to endorse a candidate or even a political solution to these problems---yet, many clergy do exactly that.
As a member of the United Church of Christ (Obama's denomination) I am distressed that he was permitted to address the denomination's annual meeting last year, giving an overtly political speech. Many pundits consider his speech at General Synod to be his first major faith-related speech as a presidential hopeful. As a result, the UCC is being investigated by the IRS, questioning the tax-exempt status. Rev. John Thomas, the general minister and president of the UCC, is being a tad disingenuous when he claims that Obama's speech was not politically motivated. I think my denomination made a mistake---one that has certainly been made by other churches, both conservative and liberal---but a mistake that nevertheless has diluted Obama's message and heaped controversy not only onto his campaign but an entire Christian denomination.
Then again, Senator Joseph Lieberman has questioned the IRS investigation into the UCC because he feels the IRS had not given religious organizations clear guidelines as to what is and is not acceptable.
At any rate, I think what bothers me the most about this is that Obama is acting just like any other politician. He stood by Rev. Wright for twenty years, claimed that he was not only his friend but his spiritual advisor, and now he's distancing himself from his pastor's comments. I heard Obama on TV this weekend and he said that he was a regular churchgoer---in spurts---and that he didn't hear every single sermon his pastor gave. Whatever. This is politics as usual---Obama appears to adhere to the beliefs of his church and pastor when it's convenient and distance himself from outrageous statements (whether taken in or out of context) when they might harm his political ambitions.
BTW, I also have heard clergy preach that their congregations must vote for certain politicians because they were God-fearing, righteous people (yep, George W. Bush here) and because the political party opposed abortion rights, stem cell research and gun control. At some of those same churches, I've heard pastors say (albeit not from the pulpit) that Hillary is the Anti-Christ.
AppleDiva is right: what matters is the way each of us influences the others in our lives. How we raise our children---to be angry vs. compassionate, to be proactive vs. reactive, to improve each generation as time goes on---that's what matters more than anything some politician---or preacher---can say or do.