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Dawn Crawford vs San Bernardino's Dirty County Politicians and  Officials

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« March 2008 Archive
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Subject: Obama pastor's words spring from complex tradition
Time: 12:24:00 PM EDT
Author:  ddawncrawford71
Mood:  Chillin'


Hasselbeck Steamed Over Pastor 

Obama Would Have Left if Wright Stayed
Posted: Friday 03/28/08 10:32 AM EDT
Filed Under: Elections, Top News
Barack Obama
AP

WASHINGTON (AP) - White House hopeful Barack Obama suggests he would have left his Chicago church had his longtime pastor, whose fiery anti-American comments about U.S. foreign policy and race relations threatened Obama's campaign, not stepped down.

> Full Coverage
 
*************

Obama pastor's words spring from complex tradition

 
The Rev. Wright's mix of theology with race relations in America belongs to the 'prophetic' style of black preaching. Is he more outrageous than Frederick Douglass?
By Manya A. Brachear, Chicago Tribune
March 30, 2008
CHICAGO -- On the Sunday in 2003 when Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. shouted "God damn America" from the pulpit of Trinity United Church of Christ, he defined damnation as God's way of holding humanity accountable for its actions.

Rattling off a litany of injustices imposed on minorities throughout the nation's history, Wright argued that God cannot be expected to bless America unless it changes for the better. Until that day, he said, God will hold the nation accountable.

And that's when Wright uttered the three words that have rocked Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

Not long after a Democratic front-runner emerged from the pews of Wright's church, the pastor's long-winded oratory found itself at odds with the sound-bite culture that feeds the 24-hour news cycle and YouTube. Thirty-second snippets of 30-minute sermons led pundits to question how Obama could remain a member of Wright's flock.

Examining the full content of Wright's sermons and delivery style yields a far more complex message, though one that some will still find objectionable. For more than 30 years, Wright walked churchgoers every Sunday along a winding road from rage to reconciliation, employing a style that validated both.

"He's voicing a reality that those people experience six days a week," said the Rev. Dwight Hopkins, a professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School and a Trinity member. "In that sense, he's saying they're not insane. That helps them to function the other six days of the week."

Wright preached his final sermon at his "unashamedly black, unapologetically Christian" church in February but does not officially retire until May 31. Wright had been scheduled this week to speak publicly for the first time since debate erupted this month over his remarks, but those stops in Florida and Texas were canceled over security concerns.

Efforts to interview him for this story were unsuccessful.

Obama has denounced Wright's most provocative remarks, but in a speech on race this month he defended Wright as a person and refused to disown him as his pastor.

Wright's preaching, which mixes theology with the often troubled history of race relations in America, is in the "prophetic" tradition, one of many that have evolved in black pulpits.

Shocking phrases like "God damn America" lie at the core of prophetic preaching, said the Rev. Bernard Richardson, dean of the chapel at Howard University.

"The prophets in Scripture -- their language wasn't pleasing to hear, and sometimes we need to be reminded of that," he said.

Some pastors and scholars criticize Wright for not moving beyond the struggles of the civil rights era. Others say his messages are too divisive and political. Some say he just goes too far.

Wright "goes beyond the bounds. That's why it's so hard to translate and why excerpts don't do well," said the Rev. Martin Marty, a retired professor at University of Chicago Divinity School. "In today's world, where you can debate these things instead of blast away like the prophets did, it's sort of an alien language for most people."

But while the rhetoric may come across as harsh, experts say its goal is to convince bitter skeptics that reconciliation is indeed possible.

"The anger comes from compassion," Richardson said. "It can feel hard. It can sound hard. It's cutting. It cuts to make you whole and bruises to heal you."

Wright's sermonsclosely follow the prophetic formula. Taking a biblical text, he analyzes the history and language, highlights the personal pain likely shared by people in the pews, calls out similar injustices in today's society and emphasizes that God always provides. His delivery is often provocative, sometimes even raunchy.

But the most provocative passages often don't convey the entire point.

For example, on the Sunday after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Wright preached on the "brutally honest" final verses of Psalm 137, which he said "spotlight the insanity of the cycle of violence."

The sound bite taken from the sermon is something Wright on that day termed a "faith footnote," in which he used the phrase "chickens are coming home to roost" to sum up what U.S. diplomat Edward Peck had said in a TV interview. Malcolm X used the same phrase after President Kennedy's assassination. But a critique of foreign policy was not Wright's central topic.


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