Barack Obama's presidential campaign plans to strike at the heart of the
Republican base by attempting to woo Evangelical Christians and Roman
Catholics to his side.
The Christian Broadcasting Network's David Brody first broke the story on
his blog "The Brody File." Obama's campaign for the conservative Christian
vote, which has largely gone to the Republican presidential candidate in
recent elections, has been dubbed the "Joshua Generation Project." Joshua,
Moses' successor, led the Israelites into the Promised Land. It wasn't the
group that fled Egypt in the Exodus, though. They died in the wilderness,
lacking faith in God's promise. It was the next generation that Joshua led
into Canaan. Apparently, if we have enough faith in Obama, he will lead us
all into a new America, but if we vote for John McCain, we will demonstrate
a lack of faith (in Obama) and die in the political badlands.
Obama is better at biblical language and imagery than any Democrat in modern
times. He certainly beats Howard Dean, now the chairman of the Democratic
National Committee, who once offered Job as his favorite New Testament book.
This is cynical manipulation of the devout and it is no better when
Democrats do it than when Republicans use religious language for partisan
advantage.
Obama has declared himself a committed Christian. He can call himself
anything he likes, but there are certain markers among the evangelicals he
is courting that one must meet in order to qualify for that label.
Some insight into Obama's "Christianity" comes from an interview he gave in
2004 to Chicago Sun-Times religion editor Cathleen Falsani for her book,
"The God Factor: Inside the Spiritual Lives of Public People."
"I'm rooted in the Christian tradition," said Obama. He then adds something
most Christians will see as universalism: "I believe there are many paths to
the same place, and that is a belief that there is a higher power, a belief
that we are connected as a people."
Falsani correctly brings up John 14:6 (and how many journalists would know
such a verse, much less ask a question based on it?) in which Jesus says of
Himself, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the
Father except through me." That sounds exclusive, but Obama says it depends
on how this verse is heard. According to Falsani, Obama thinks that "all
people of faith - Christians, Jews, Muslims, animists, everyone - know the
same God." (Her words.) Continued... |