Obama impresses ‘faith leaders’


Published/Last Modified on Saturday, June 28, 2008 3:08 PM MDT


Steve Strang knew the ground rules for the recent meeting between Sen. Barack Obama and a flock of evangelical, Catholic and liberal Protestant leaders.


The invitation to the Chicago gathering stated, “This is an off-the-record (no media) time for questioning and listening, with no expectation of endorsement.”

But it’s difficult to keep Obama’s answers off the record. As soon as the two-hour meeting was over, some participants began talking and writing about the questions they had asked.

“I was concerned after three or four general questions that we wouldn’t ask the most important questions,” wrote Strang, the founder of Charisma Magazine. “So I raised my hand. ... I said, ‘Senator, I want to ask a question I’m sure you are expecting regarding your position on abortion.

“I represent a segment of the church where nearly everyone considers the issue of supporting life to be the most important issue and where nearly everyone would be opposed to abortion. I want to ask what your stand on abortion is and if you believe what I think you believe, how you justify that with your Christian faith.”

Strang said Obama offered a surprisingly “centrist,” 15-minute answer.

Since the evangelical entrepreneur had read Obama’s “Audacity of Hope” memoir, he recognized that the response came from its “Faith” chapter.

Thus, it’s likely that the presumptive Democratic nominee retold the story of the University of Chicago doctor who gently challenged a statement on a U.S. Senate campaign Web site pledging that Obama would fight “right-wing ideologues who want to take away a woman’s right to choose.” The doctor’s e-mail said he wasn’t asking Obama to oppose abortion, but to begin addressing “this issue in fair-minded words.”

Obama told his staff to drop the offensive language, in recognition of the fact that many abortion opponents want sincere, sober discussions instead of more shouting. About that time, a member of a polite, pro-life family protesting outside an Obama rally called out: “I will pray for you. I will pray that you have a change of heart.”

Thus, Obama wrote: “Neither my mind nor my heart changed that day, nor did they in the days to come. But I did have that family in mind as I wrote back to the doctor and thanked him for his e-mail. ... I said a prayer of my own — that I might extend the same presumption of good faith to others that the doctor had extended to me.”

After the Chicago meeting, online reports by Strang and others said the leaders discussed a wide variety of issues, from the Iraq war to same-sex marriage, from genocide in Darfur to religious liberty issues here at home. A spokesman for the Rev. Franklin Graham said that the head of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association asked whether Obama “thought Jesus was the way to God, or merely a way” — but did not report the response.

There were conflicting reports about whether Graham and Obama exchanged a hug or a handshake.

But abortion remains a high hurdle in an era when several U.S. Supreme Court justices are near retirement.

Is change possible? In “The Audacity of Hope,” Obama noted that many opponents of abortion are willing to “bend principle” in cases of rape and incest. Meanwhile, the willingness of “even the most ardent” of pro-abortion-rights advocates to “accept some restrictions on late-term abortion marks a recognition that a fetus is more than a body part.”

The key, stressed Strang, was that the Chicago meeting even took place, allowing frank discussion of such bitterly divisive issues.

Rather than merely talking to the religious left, Obama’s staff offered him a chance to talk and pray with a variety of evangelical and Pentecostal leaders — such as author Max Lucado of San Antonio, Rich Cizik of the National Association of Evangelicals, Bishop T.D. Jakes of Dallas and many others.

“Obama seemed to have the support of at least half of the 43 leaders who attended the Chicago meeting,” noted Strang. “In my opinion, he ‘made points’ with the rest.”

David Brody of the Christian Broadcasting Network was even more blunt about the meeting’s political implications.

“Folks, this is an important development,” he said. “It shows that the game has changed. Old rules don’t apply. We’re in uncharted territory. John McCain’s religious outreach team has to now step to the plate and work hard for faith voters.”

 

(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington Journalism Center at the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities and leads the GetReligion.org project to study religion and the news.)

Comments

    Mary E Hale wrote on Jul 5, 2008 7:47 AM:

    " I am for Obama. I don't believe in oborotion, but there are certain cases where it should be allowed, such as rape of a child 12 to 15 years of age. That is a child and have you seen the suffering those young girls go through to deliver a child.? and I am against late stage oborotion, as they use salt solution and the fetus suffers, it is burned from the salt solution, but the mother should have the choice if it means her life to carry the fetus another month or two. We are not the judges God is. "

    Mary wrote on Jul 3, 2008 11:33 PM:

    " @Its plain as day: What is all this SIN ideology about? Are you crazy? Haven't you looked into the eyes of children and seen the inherent innocence? I pray that people will be less dogmatic and more wise. "

    Jerry wrote on Jul 3, 2008 8:05 PM:

    " I would invite "it's plain as day" (6-29-08), Gavin (7-1-08) and those who think likewise to consider our Lord, who taught us to pray...Thy Kingdom come on earth as it is in Heaven.., that, far from being antichristian, working toward that goal is precisely what we are intended to do. James shares in 4:11 that "we should not slander one another...12 there is only one Lawgiver and Judge: but you, who are you to judge?" Our prayers should be for each other, pro-choice or pro-life, and those who lead. "

    Dawn wrote on Jul 3, 2008 6:00 PM:

    " Obama is awesome! "

    TallOne wrote on Jul 2, 2008 3:41 PM:

    " That senator Obama reached out the conservative Christian leadership, to me, speaks volumes of his willingness to listen. I, too, am pro-life/pro-choice and very much against late-term abortions (as is Obama). I also can appreciate his position of having to renounce his minister of many years because of Rev. Wright's blatant proclamations of hate, but how less hateful was Rev. Wright than has been the Revrends Falwell, Robertson, Roberts, et. al. The UCC is a denomination of extravagant welcome and acceptance; and I believe that Senator Obama reflects that in his gracious, understanding and open-minded approach to his candidacy. "

    Gavin wrote on Jul 1, 2008 4:28 PM:

    " Barak will say or do anything to get elected. This is demonstrated by his decision to become a member of the "Trinity Church of Hate". Jeremiah Wright, his pastor, mentor and spiritual leader of 20 years was either hoodwinked or complicate in Barak's ambition. Barak claims an attitude of inclusiveness yet his politics are clearly exclusive to the liberal agenda. How can religious leader's or spiritual people support a man who PROMOTES the murder of infants in the last moments of a womans pregnancy. Barak is devoid of a conscience and lies to get what he wants. "

    Its plain as day wrote on Jun 29, 2008 11:13 PM:

    " Very succintly, Sen. Obama's Jesus is not the Logos, or Word of God. His is not the right one, and the real One warned us of those who would come speaking His Name and not really be talking about Him. He is part of the antiChristian movement, to create "heaven" on earth and solve all the problems without addressing the root cause: SIN. "

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