Christianity Under Attack (CUA) Editor’s Note:
Obama continues to assert his claim and commitment to the
Christian faith. Just last week, after more than two years, Obama decided to
attend church. Now, do not get me wrong, Church attendance is not necessarily a
litmus test to one’s faith although if a person is nurturing his or her faith
in order to grow, being able to fellowship with other Christians is important
and effective.
Obama has offered any number of reasons for not attending
church up to and including not wanting to be a disruptive force to the church
proceedings. Perhaps there is another reason for Obama’s absence from church.
Could it be that living in the D.C. area means that he does not have access to
another church like his old church in Chicago ,
Reverend Wright’s church?
For over 20 years Obama attended Trinity United Church of
Christ pastored by the good Reverend Jeremiah Wright of “…God damn America and US
of KKKA” fame. Because Reverend Wright became a major liability to Obama,
during the 2008 campaign, the decision was made by Obama to jettisoned a man
who Obama himself said that he could no more disown than he could disown the
black community. So much for loyalty. In taking this action Obama expressed his
outrage over the Reverend’s divisive rhetoric, rhetoric Obama claimed that he
never heard in 20 years worth of Wright sermons. True, Obama’s position defied
logic but the public, in their zeal for a black president, decided to give
Obama a pass.
Today, questions continue to surround Obama’s religion.
Since jettisoning Wright, Obama now looks to Jim Wallis for spiritual solace
and wouldn’t you know it, Wallis, while not necessarily cut from the exact same
cloth as Wright, he does subscribe to the religious tenet of Collective
Salvation and social justice. Does anyone see a trend or consistent theme here?
If there is any doubt about Obama’s faith, knowing more
about Reverend Wright and Jim Wallis will help to understand Obama’s outlook
towards religion. The article below provides great insight into Wright and his
deeply held beliefs. Logic would dictate that there was something about
Reverend Wright that was attractive to Obama for him to remain in the pastor’s
church for over 20 years. What may have been the attraction for Obama, I’m sure,
is contained in the piece below.
The Gospel According To (Reverend Jeremiah) Wright
How much of Pastor Jeremiah Wright's race-based
"theology" does Barack Obama really share?
In 2008 America elected a president whose pastor for 20
years preached anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, advocated bizarre
pseudo-scientific racial ideas, opposed interracial marriage, praised communist
dictatorships, denounced black "assimilation," and taught Afrocentric
feel-good nonsense to schoolchildren. When Americans discovered the Rev.
Jeremiah Wright's views during the 2008 campaign, they rightly wondered if
Barack Obama, like his pastor, really believed that HIV/AIDS was created by the
American government to kill black people. Even to this day, no one knows for
sure whether Obama shares the views of Wright, whom the Chicago Sun-Times once
described as Obama's "close confidant."
Candidate Obama tried to dismiss his support for Wright,
telling Charlie Gibson of ABC News, "It's as if we took the five dumbest
things that I ever said or you ever said…in our lives and compressed them, and
put them out there, you know, I think that people's reaction, would be
understandably upset." And rightly so. In sermon after sermon, Wright's
radical black nationalist ideas were clearly and emphatically stated. They were
not an aberration, but the focal point of Pastor Wright's Trinity United Church
of Christ in Chicago ,
where Obama was an active member for 20 years.
Nor has Wright renounced any of his anti-Americanism. In a
sermon last September 16 marking the 10th anniversary of 9/11 entitled,
"The Day of Jerusalem's Fall," Wright seemed to celebrate white America 's
comeuppance. "We bombed Hiroshima .
We bombed Nagasaki .
And we nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon--and we never
batted an eye!" Wright preached. "We supported state terrorism
against the Palestinians and black south Africans and now we are indignant
because the stuff we have done overseas is now brought right back into our own
front yards." He closed, invoking Malcolm X's statement about the
assassination of J.F.K, "America 's
chickens! Coming home! To roost!" White America, he was saying, had gotten
its just deserts.
Candidate Obama tried to distance himself from Wright's more
damning comments. But, crucially, he didn't disown the pastor himself. In fact,
in his rise to political fame, he had made Wright's sermons his own, drawing on
Wright's "Audacity to Hope" sermon and appropriating its theme for
his political coming-out speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston in 2004. He even
borrowed the sermon's title for his second autobiography, The Audacity of
Hope, in a bid to get Wright and other black churches to support his
candidacy.
The question is why Barack Obama, raised without any faith
at all, chose one of the most incendiary preachers in Black America to preach
the word of God to him. Wright became, in Obama's words, "like family to
me. [Wright] strengthened my faith, officiated my wedding, and baptized my
children." Obama told a group of ministers in June 2007 that Wright helped
"introduce me to my Christian faith." But what, exactly, is Barack
Obama's faith? Just as important, what is Jeremiah Wright's?
JEREMIAH WRIGHT WAS BORN on September 22, 1941, in Germantown , a racially mixed, middle-class Philadelphia suburb. His
father, Jeremiah Wright, Sr., became the minister of the local Grace Baptist
Church in 1938 and served
there for 42 years. His mother, Mary Elizabeth Henderson Wright, was a
schoolteacher who eventually became the first black vice-principal at the Philadelphia High School for Girls, one of the city's
top-performing magnet schools.
Education mattered deeply to the Wrights. They helped their
son with his homework while they bettered themselves with part-time courses.
They enrolled him at Central
High School , an all-male
magnet establishment considered among the nation's best public schools at the
time. It was 90 percent white. The class yearbook announced, "Always ready
with a kind word, Jerry is one of the most congenial members [of his
class]." But Wright himself dismissed that period of congeniality in a
later sermon. "I used to let my behavior be determined by the white
world's expectations," he recalled ruefully.
The young Jeremiah was off to a promising start, but at age
15 was arrested for grand larceny auto theft. His parents sent him to the
all-black Virginia
Union University .
But Wright quit after two years and joined the Marines. Wright later said he
hated being educated at "black schools founded by white
missionaries." Still, during his short time at VUU he met fellow students
who made a lasting impression: a young PhD student named John Kinney who had
studied under both Martin Luther King, Jr., and James Cone, the founder of
black liberation theology; and Samuel DeWitt Proctor, a longtime friend and
mentor of King.
After quitting the Marines, Wright joined the Navy, where he
served for four years. He was stationed mostly in Washington
D.C. , and was there to help operate on
President Lyndon B. Johnson as a cardiopulmonary technician before enrolling in
college again at Howard
University , earning a
bachelor's degree in 1968 and a master's in English in 1969. At Howard, Wright
heard firebrand Stokely Carmichael, a.k.a. Kwame Ture, lecture on black power.
He was further influenced by Cheikh Anta Diop's racialist tomes advancing
Afrocentrism, the theory that Africa was the
cradle of modern civilization. After that, it was off to the University of
Chicago Divinity School for six years. Then Wright, 31, joined Trinity United
Church of Christ as pastor on March 1, 1972. In his provocative words,
"the fun began."
Trinity, on its last legs when Wright joined it, was an odd
choice. After all, as Bill Moyers of PBS recalls in his new book, Bill
Moyers Journal: The Conversation Continues, Wright "could have had his
pick of large, prosperous congregations, but instead chose one with only 87
members in a largely black neighborhood" of Chicago. Wright often compared
Chicago to apartheid-era South Africa : "Just as Blacks could not be
caught inside the city of Johannesburg
after dark…the same held true for Blacks on the Southside of Chicago."
Breaking with his parents' Baptist denomination, Wright recognized that at
Trinity he could have complete authority to implement his vision.
There were, of course, impediments to that goal, not least
his white colleagues. Many couldn't understand his love of black-style worship
or emphasis on the role of Africans in biblical history. Wright recalls nearly
coming to blows in 1978 with a white associate minister who called his church a
"cult" and derided him for having a "big ego."
TWENTY-TWO BLACK church members who did not like the
direction in which Wright was taking Trinity lodged a complaint with the UCC,
then left the church. Wright attacked them as Uncle Toms "running to ‘massa ' to tell a white
man what they thought was happening to their Negro church." He had nothing
but contempt for these middle-class blacks. They were, he noted, "bourgeois
Negroes who wanted to be white." Wright considered himself a "new
Black who is not ashamed of his Blackness."
Wright had come under the sway of the writings of James
Cone, a professor of divinity, father of the black theology movement and author
of the seminal Black Theology and Black Power (1969). Cone taught
that Christianity needed to be freed from "whiteness." He and Wright
conceived of a Christianity in which black rage and the black power ideology
fused with Marxist thought. According to Cone, "black people must find
ways of affirming black dignity which do not include relating to whites on white terms."
Integration was impossible because it was brought about by "black
naïveté" and "white guilt." Cone approvingly quoted Malcolm X:
"The worst crime the white man has committed has been to teach us to hate
ourselves." Freeing blacks would require getting them to love their inner
African and Wright would do just that--Trinity's longtime parishioners be
damned.
Trinity gave Wright a chance to introduce ordinary blacks to
these writings. During the initial media dustup over Wright's views in 2007,
the media couldn't understand Wright's, or Obama's, Christianity because they
couldn't understand the underlying phenomenon of black liberation theology.
It didn't help that the mainstream media had decided to take
the issue of Obama's faith off the table. The New York Timesludicrously
editorialized in 2008 that Obama's "religious connection" with Wright
"should be none of the voters' business." Unlike George W. Bush,
Obama wouldn't "carry religion into government," the Times promised.
In fact, Obama often invokes religion in areas--health care and
economics--where it isn't normally mentioned. An analysis by Politico found
that Obama invoked Jesus far more than George W. Bush did, and cited the Sermon
on the Mount to make the case for his economic policies.
Wright was Obama's missionary in a sense, so it is worth
looking at how he educated his parishioners. "I had as my goal in starting
a weekly Bible class the idea of connecting the study of God's Word to where it
is we lived as Black people in Chicago
in 1972," he recalled. It would be the Gospel according to Wright.
Trinity's slogan would be "Unapologetically Black and Unapologetically
Christian." It was to be black first and Christian second. Preaching black
theology, Wright made his dashiki-wearing flock the largest--and
blackest--church in the largely white UCC.
In his church-associated Kwame Nkrumah
Academy , the
congregation's children learned such canards as the claim that
"[h]istorically, Europeans tried to build themselves up by tearing down
all that Africans had done." Obama biographer David Remnick notes that
Obama approved of this "African-centered" grade school, where
Wright's God loves all people, but black people especially. And why shouldn't
he? Jesus, Wright taught, was "an African Jew," as were most of the
figures of the Bible. As Wright said in Africans Who Shaped Our Faith (1995),
"evidence exists within and outside of the Bible to support the notion
that the people of Israel …were
of African descent!"
It is in this context that Wright's comments on Zionism
should be seen. Attacking Israel 's
right to exist, Wright held that "[t]he Israelis have illegally occupied
Palestinian territories for more than 40 years now." America , by
defending Zionism and its apartheid-like regime, had too long practiced
"unquestioning" support of Zionism. Given his hostility to Zionism
and non-"African" Jews, it wasn't surprising that Wright's
anti-Semitism reared its ugly head in June 2009. "Them Jews ain't going to
let him talk to me," he told the Daily Press of Hampton Roads,
Virginia. They were "controlling" Obama and therefore preventing the United States
from sending a delegation to an anti-racism United Nations conference. (America
boycotted it on the grounds that it would descend into an anti-Jew hate fest as
it had in previous years.)
Wright remained loyal to Malcolm X (Trinity United Church
celebrates his birthday) and to Louis Farrakhan.
Wright even joined Farrakhan on a trip to meet with the
latter's benefactor, Muammar Gaddafi, in 1984. (Wright has also routinely
bragged about his trips to Castro's Cuba
and Ortega's Nicaragua .
He predicted that his trip to Libya
would cause trouble for Obama in 2008: "When [Obama's] enemies find out
that in 1984 I went to Tripoli
to visit [Gaddafi] with Farrakhan, a lot of his Jewish support will dry up
quicker than a snowball in hell," he said.)
To further his claim that the white man was an active enemy
of the black man, Wright has often recommended a favorite book of the Nation of
Islam, Emerging Viruses: AIDS and Ebola: Nature, Accident, or Intentional? (1996),
a self-published screed by Leonard G. Horowitz, a conspiracy theorist and
former dentist, who argues that HIV began as a biological weapons project.
"Based on this Tuskegee
syphilis experiment and based on what has happened to Africans in this country,
I believe our government is capable of doing anything." As white people
were responsible for the makeup of its government, white America bore a
collective guilt, Wright said. It could not accept a black man as president of
"this racist United States of America ,"
"the United States of White America," and "the U.S. of
KKK-A."
WRIGHT GOT ON OBAMA'S BUS early, in the mid-1980s, when he
supported Obama's efforts to organize blacks for "social change"
(i.e., to increase government welfare), and only left in 2008 when there was an
increasingly serious chance of his winning the Democratic nomination and
becoming president. It was, after all, Hillary Clinton--not John McCain--who
used Wright as a campaign issue against Obama.
Wright had remained on the bus for so long because his
friendship gave Obama an authenticity on the South Side that he otherwise
lacked as a highly educated black man who grew up in white and multiracial
environments. Had Obama not successfully defined himself as an ordinary African
American, had he not worked the streets on poverty wages, his political career
probably would have gone nowhere.
Obama came to join Wright's church in a roundabout way, as
Stanley Kurtz argues in his well-researched Radical-in-Chief(2010). We
don't know if he encountered Wright before he moved to Chicago , but it seems safe to assume he had.
David Remnick recounts a significant meeting between the young Obama and Pastor
Alvin Love of Lilydale First Baptist
Church in Chicago . Obama and Love had organized blacks
through the churches starting in 1985, so "[Obama] knew it was
inconsistent to be a church-based organizer without being a member of any
church, and he was feeling that pressure," according to Love. "He
said, 'I believe, but…I want to be serious and be comfortable wherever I
join.'" A pastor whom Love recommended--Pastor L. K. Curry--suggested that
Obama meet Jeremiah Wright. Obama apparently liked what he saw at their meeting
and he began to attend Trinity in 1988.
Obama's decision to join Trinity was very much one of
convenience. Even though he plotted his every move, we're supposed to believe
that he just happened to join the largest black church in America , whose
pastor had a record for getting blacks elected to higher office. (In 1983,
Wright led a coalition of black churches to help elect Harold Washington as the
first black mayor of Chicago.) Obama liked to try out his ideas on Wright.
"What I value most about Pastor Wright is not his day-to-day political
advice," he told theChicago Tribune in January 2007. "He's much
more of a sounding board for me to make sure that I am speaking as truthfully
about what I believe as possible and that I'm not losing myself in some of the
hype and hoopla and stress that's involved in national politics." Wright
was a means to an end.
Steeped in Marxist thought and the community organizing
tactics of the radical Saul Alinsky, Obama was probably comfortable with the
view that religion was the opiate of the masses and black liberation theology
the opiate of blacks. Trinity
Church is a place where
black movers and shakers congregate. "My commitment is to the church, not
to a pastor," Obama said in May 2008. But left unsaid was just what the
members of that church believed.
According to Wright, leading members have included Jawanza
Kunjufu (author of Countering the Conspiracy to Destroy Black Boys, which
blames, among other things, interracial marriage), Iva Carruthers (who coined
the term "Afrocentric" and whose work at the Jew-hating Durban
Conference on Racism Wright enthusiastically endorses), and Bobby Wright,
psychologist and author of The Psychopathic Racial Personality, which
argues that white attitudes toward blacks are psychopathic. Other influential
members include the black entertainment elite, like the rapper Common and Oprah
Winfrey.
Winfrey, who joined the church in the mid-'80s, eventually
left in the early '90s. An article entitled "Something Wasn't Wright"
in the May 12, 2008, issue of Newsweek explains that she knew
Wright's rants were too radical for her fans. Interestingly, though Oprah
endorsed Obama and helped catapult his books to the top of the bestseller
lists, she has declined to endorse him for 2012.
Common frequented Wright's pews, occasionally rapping for
its congregants. With Wright's approval, Common even "free-styled
sermons" against interracial marriage in 2005 when the Obamas were
attending Trinity nearly every Sunday. (Perhaps that's why Michelle Obama
invited Common to perform at the White House in May 2011.)
Growing up in a heavily "segregated" Chicago , Common noted,
you had to "enforce" black culture.
Ironically, Wright's Afrocentrism, implicit segregationism,
and explicit reverse racism didn't prevent him from retiring to a $1.6 million
home his church built for him in the lily-white Tinley Park neighborhood in 2008. The
luxurious four-bedroom house features an elevator, a butler's pantry, exercise
room, four-car garage, master bedroom with a whirlpool, and spare room for a
future theater or swimming pool. It abuts the Odyssey Country Club and golf
course. (Its mortgage was paid for by the corrupt ShoreBank, with which Wright,
along with most of the Chicago
black elite, always had a cozy relationship before it went bust in 2010.)
WHERE DID OBAMA FIT in all of this? It seems he too rejected
assimilation in favor of Wright's separate-but-equal-yet-superior status for
black Americans. A December 1995 article, "What Makes Obama Run," by
Hank De Zutter in the Chicago Reader, a local black newspaper, suggests as
much in its profile of Obama's first bid for the Illinois Senate. Obama, thanks
to Reverend Wright's Trinity
Church , "learned
that integration was a one-way street, with blacks expected to assimilate into
a white world that never gave ground." Obama bristled at the
"unrealistic politics of integrationist assimilation which helps a few
upwardly mobile blacks ‘move up, get rich, and move out.'"
Obama was merely following the teachings of Wright when he
railed at Trinity against corporations that, Wright explains in his history of
Trinity, "discriminated against women, corporations that discriminated
against Blacks and Browns, corporations that supported sweatshops in Third World countries and corporations which stood in
direct opposition to the Gospel of Jesus Christ." Capitalism was part of
what led to slavery, Wright had argued. He often mentioned the black
sociologist Chancellor Williams's jeremiad, The Destruction of Black
Civilization, which argues that African civilization was destroyed by the
acquisitiveness--the capitalist nature--of white European civilization.
But when Wright became too embarrassing, it was time for
Obama to distance himself from him. That was the not so subtle message behind
Obama's "More Perfect Union" speech in March 2008 in which he
rejected Wright, not because he disagreed with him, but he had to protect
himself from the charge that Wright and Trinity disliked white people.
"Not once in my conversations with him have I heard him talk about any
ethnic group in derogatory terms, or treat whites with whom he interacted with
anything but courtesy and respect," Obama improbably claimed. The speech,
much celebrated and quickly forgotten, did what it had to do: it derailed the
whiteness issue as a campaign issue.
And yet Obama never explicitly rejected the black power,
anti-capitalist core of Wright's teachings. That includes beliefs like Wright's
credo that "White folks' greed runs the world in need." For all
Obama's talk, he can't claim to never have heard Wright say it. Obama titled
his second book, The Audacity of Hope, after the very sermon where that
line appears. Candidate Obama's declared intention to "spread the wealth
around" echoed what he had absorbed at those Trinity sermons. Now
President Obama's thinking clearly shows the same imprint, as when he preaches
that "at a certain point you've made enough money."
"Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright, Jr., took me on another
journey," Obama once said. He merrily went along, every step of the way.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Charles C. Johnson is the winner of this year's Eric
Breindel Collegiate and ISI's Devos Leadership awards. He is also a recent
Robert F. Bartley Fellow at the Wall Street Journal, and a Robert Novak
Fellow at the Phillips Foundation.
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