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auntsue Donating Member (169 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-19-08 07:04 PM
Original message
Conservative evangelicals' wary faith in Obama
We who are gay are worried that Obama will abandon us - they who are Christian zealots are worried he'll listen toomuch to the gays.
Obama must be doing something right - to stir up so much response.
If the bible-thumpers are woried - I take it as a good thing.
From today's L.A. Times -

Conservative evangelicals' wary faith in Obama:
Pointing to the president-elect's liberal record, they fear that their way of life will be threatened.
By Manya A. Brachear
December 19, 2008
Reporting from Chicago -- Barack Obama isn't in the White House yet, but conservative evangelical Christians are worried that he will threaten their freedom to live according to the Bible and profess it as the literal word of God.

If evangelicals don't act now, prayer in schools and on the airwaves would give way to pornography and same-sex marriage, some predict.


"We've seen what we feel is a clear rise in hostility among our institutions -- political institutions and media institutions," said Craig Parshall of the National Religious Broadcasters, a Virginia group. "There are those who believe religion is unhealthy for society."

Obama has endorsed faith-based initiatives and conversation about the role of religion in public life. Despite objections from gay rights activists, he plans to have the Rev. Rick Warren, a popular evangelical minister from Orange County, deliver the invocation at his inauguration.

But conservative evangelicals, who had a great deal of access to the Bush administration and influenced its policies on abortion and other issues, worry that Obama's commitment to listen to their concerns comes with caveats on issues such as same-sex marriage and hiring gays and lesbians.


They fear he would favor religious organizations such as his own liberal denomination, the United Church of Christ, which was the first mainline Protestant church to condone equal marriage rights for couples regardless of gender.

Conservative critics worry that potential vacancies on the Supreme Court would open the door for Obama to create a liberal-leaning judiciary that views the Constitution as a changing document that accommodates culture, just as many progressive Christians interpret Scripture.

Others fear the possibility that federal regulations on airwaves could be used to silence Christian broadcasters on issues involving homosexuality on the basis that such talk could be considered hate speech.

And they fear that elementary school teachers and home-schoolers could be forced to teach about same-sex relationships. They don't trust the president-elect to push laws that would reduce the number of abortions.

<snip>

"The influence of that community will drive what legislation Congress considers," said Carrie Gordon Earll, senior director for public policy for Focus on the Family, a Colorado Springs group founded by James Dobson, a pillar of the religious right. "That will have an impact on Christians and people of conservative faith."

Earll added: "We're not doing anything yet. . . . But we are anticipating and expecting that threat will be before us."

<snip>

Well aware of the concerns, Obama's transition team has pledged to listen to and consider all points of view.

"We look forward to working with a range of partners in the faith community, who will have an opportunity to offer their views and input," spokesman Nick Shapiro said.

Even Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission and a stalwart social and fiscal conservative, tends to agree that some criticism is premature.

"That's the intriguing thing about President-elect Obama," Land said. "He is in many ways an unknown quantity."

mbrachear@tribune.com
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noiretextatique Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-19-08 07:07 PM
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1. your reign of terror is ending
:nopity:
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