The Theology of Barack Obama
By Ben Domenech Posted in 2008 | Barack Obama | Obamafiles | religion | Rev. Jeremiah Wright — Comments (0) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
RS's own Dan Spencer (California Yankee), who now blogs over at the Examiner, was kind enough to host a piece I wrote on what the Rev. Wright debacle tells us about the theology of Barack Obama. An excerpt:
Barack Obama is the evangelist of the betterment of man. His religion is one of an almost overriding humanism, to the exclusion of the divine: hope is his signet, change his golden cross. He brings salvation to the masses via the empowerment of government, government under his leadership. His followers are not the Southern pro-American Carter voters, and they may carry iPhones instead of the hoes of the agrarian south, but the message is striking for its similarities. Where Carter constantly used Protestant religious terminology to describe the healing that needed to take place in the wake of Watergate, Obama's solution for the Iraq war and the other sins (as he sees them) of the George W. Bush administration is to say: trust in me – untested, inexperienced, poll-driven me – as you trust in yourself.
Yet there are small differences as well, and those are key to understanding the Senator. The language Obama uses may still be that of prayer, but it is prayer not directed toward a creator, but to his audience itself. Faith turns inward, and becomes an infinite loop. So Carter's "We can neither answer all questions nor solve all problems" becomes "Yes we can." And so the old sung tones of "Wait upon the Lord" morphs into "We are the ones we've been waiting for." From Obama's perspective, as opposed to Carter's, it is only the bitter, the nervous, the threatened, or the uneducated who cling to religion.
We know how this ended the first time: the infamous malaise speech of 1979. As the eloquent Steve Hayward put it in his biography of President Carter, the man ran for office promising "a government as good as the people" ultimately ended his term in office by saying that the people were no good. If they took such bets in Vegas, one could get a fine margin on picking the month of his term where President Obama would announce the same realization.
