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Barack Obama
Related: About this forumThe quiet impact of Obama's Christian faith (Obama group cross-post)
cross-posteed in "good reads", but I thought this group would be interested, too.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/national/2015/12/22/obama-faith/?hpid=hp_hp-top-table-main_obamafaith_1140am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory
This long article includes the backstory of Obama's magnificent eulogy of Clementa Pinckney. . ..as well as this paradox:
Obama did not grow up in a religious household and became a practicing Christian as an adult. He has written more extensively about his spiritual awakening than almost any other modern president, addressing it in two books before he was elected to the White House and in more than a dozen speeches since. His faith had been central to his identity as a new kind of Democrat who would bring civility to the countrys political debates by appealing to Republicans through the shared language of their Judeo-Christian values.
With just one year left in his second term, Obama now holds a different distinction: No modern president has had his faith more routinely questioned and disparaged. Recent polls show that 29 percent of Americans and nearly 45 percent of Republicans say he is a Muslim.
He has repeatedly said in recent months that one of his biggest regrets is that he will leave behind a country that has grown more polarized and distrustful during his two terms in the White House. Theres all this goodness and decency and common sense on the ground, and somehow it gets translated into rigid, dogmatic, often mean-spirited politics, Obama said in a recent interview.
To understand why he so deeply believed that he could close that gap and why he largely has been unable to do so, it is essential to understand his faith and how it shapes his politics. That faith also explains why he has not given up.
With just one year left in his second term, Obama now holds a different distinction: No modern president has had his faith more routinely questioned and disparaged. Recent polls show that 29 percent of Americans and nearly 45 percent of Republicans say he is a Muslim.
He has repeatedly said in recent months that one of his biggest regrets is that he will leave behind a country that has grown more polarized and distrustful during his two terms in the White House. Theres all this goodness and decency and common sense on the ground, and somehow it gets translated into rigid, dogmatic, often mean-spirited politics, Obama said in a recent interview.
To understand why he so deeply believed that he could close that gap and why he largely has been unable to do so, it is essential to understand his faith and how it shapes his politics. That faith also explains why he has not given up.
The refusal of his opponents to acknowledge fundamental facts of Obama's life - his birthplace, his strong family, and, yes, his faith, are illustrative of the larger problem: the refusal of too much of our country to just listen to this man. That is our shame, not Obama's.
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The quiet impact of Obama's Christian faith (Obama group cross-post) (Original Post)
MBS
Dec 2015
OP
Iliyah
(25,111 posts)1. Thats called prejudice
yallerdawg
(16,104 posts)2. Faith is the belief in what has no proof.
That President Obama still believes "in goodness and decency and common sense" from the people is a testament to his unshakable faith.
"Our shame." Yes.
Very good read!
Happy Holidays, MBS!
MBS
(9,688 posts)3. yes, belief in goodness and decency and common sense
that IS the real leap of faith these days, isn't it?