
Illustration: “Change” by artist Charles Criner at the Museum of Printing History in Houston, Texas. (http://www.printingmuseum.org/crinerprint.php)
At the 2008 Democratic National Convention it was Joel Hunter. At the 2009 presidential inauguration it was Rick Warren. This year it was Louie Giglio. Evangelical pastors who drew criticism for their associations with Barack Obama. The rancor is bipartisan — stones are thrown from both the right and the left. And it’s not just pastors who are targeted: anyone remember the controversies involving magazine publisher Cameron Strang or gospel singer Donnie McClurkin? Regardless of your politics, if you’re a Christian leader who has ever taken your job seriously, becoming yoked with Barack Obama can be public-relations kryptonite.
Giglio, a popular Atlanta-based pastor, was set to offer the benediction at next week’s inauguration ceremony. But he withdrew after coming under fire from gay-rights activists for a 15-year-old sermon in which he was critical of the homosexual lifestyle. For many evangelical Christians, it was just further proof of the rampant political correctness that now pervades society, making it nearly impossible for people of faith to, you know, say and do the stuff that defines them as people of faith. For many gay-rights activists, it was viewed as another victory and a message to the nation that anything smacking of homophobic intolerance will not be tolerated.
This points to the first rule any pastor aspiring to rub shoulders with the president or others in high places should heed in this age of Google and YouTube: your sermons are not just for the ears of churchgoers anymore, and they may be held against you at some future date by those who have no interest in the contextual nuances of your biblical preaching.
But is that it, then? Is the culture war settled? Have all Christians with beliefs that conflict with the agendas of certain political-interest groups been served notice that they are now persona non grata at public ceremonies like the presidential inauguration because their values are considered hateful or out of step with mainstream ideas?
Or is it possible for both Christians and their cultural opponents to extend an olive branch, seek common ground, and in the words of the Lord via the prophet Isaiah, “come and reason together”?
Obama the Reconciler
What gets lost in these sad but predictable controversies is the fact that we have a president who perhaps more than any other modern occupant of the White House has befriended a wide range of evangelical leaders. Though evangelical voters generally do not support President Obama, this hasn’t stopped him from seeking commonality with them. The president selected Giglio in part because of the work he’s done to battle child slavery and sex trafficking. In fact, someday when the first real histories are written on such matters, it might be argued that Barack Obama was not just our nation’s “first gay president” but its most evangelical one as well.
The irony of this latest debacle is that it undermines Obama’s intentional efforts to be a president of inclusivity. When you’re the nation’s first African American president, the expectation (or, unfortunately for some, suspicion) is that you’re going to be a president who promotes diversity. For the same reason, President Obama has been obliged to demonstrate that he’s the president of conservative white people too, and not just people of color or those who agree with his policies.
That’s why the lineup for the inauguration was so inspired: it offered a little bit for everyone. President Obama’s civil rights side was represented in the choice of Medgar Evers’s widow, Myrlie Evers-Williams, giving the opening prayer; his support of both Hispanics and the homosexual community was reflected in the choice of having gay Latino poet Richard Blanco recite a poem; and his identification and shared aims with evangelical Christians was reflected in the choice of Louie Giglio closing out the proceedings.
Some might say he’s a calculating politician playing identity politics, and they probably aren’t wrong. But it’s also important to recognize that Barack Obama’s background uniquely prepared him to be a president of many groups and constituencies.
One reason why many Christians have supported this president, even though they’ve disagreed with some of his policies, is because they sense that he gets it, that he’s willing to try to see the world from perspectives other than his own. He wants to understand the other point of view. Even though he might support an opposing position, he demonstrates empathy and a willingness to listen to others. This is an invaluable trait that we’ve rarely seen in other presidents. It seemed to emerge in Lincoln as both his presidency and the Civil War unfolded. FDR appeared able to step outside his privilege and display it. LBJ, for all his defects, had it enough to pass landmark civil rights statutes. Jimmy Carter has shown it more since leaving office. Both Bill Clinton and George W. Bush demonstrated flashes of it at various times, especially in the early parts of their presidencies. But Obama gets it honest because as a mixed-race kid who grew up in rural, urban, and international settings, he’s lived it. As biographer David Maraniss observed:
Obama … spent ten crucial years of his life, from the time he left Hawaii at age 17 to start college at Occidental in L.A. to the time at age 27 that he drove up to Cambridge to start at Harvard Law, trying to sort out the problems that life presented him, to work out his identity and resolve the contradictions of growing up … a mixed and cross-cultural kid. He worked his way through his problems so thoroughly and effectively that it helped him reach the White House, and once there this fact both helped and hurt him. In some sense, he thought that if he could resolve the contradictions of his own life, people and factions should be able to figure out how to resolve their differences just as he did.
There was no greater evidence of Barack Obama’s intrinsic empathy than his brilliant “race speech” in Philadelphia during the 2008 campaign. Though presented in part to do damage control after YouTube videos of his former pastor’s blistering critique of America surfaced, it became Obama’s signature statement on race relations and reconciliation in America — his most eloquent and comprehensive comment on the subject to date. “I am the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas,” he said. “I was raised with the help of a white grandfather who survived a Depression…. I’ve gone to some of the best schools in America and lived in one of the world’s poorest nations. I am married to a black American who carries within her the blood of slaves and slave owners…. I have brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews, uncles and cousins, of every race and every hue, scattered across three continents, and for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible.”
In that speech, Obama revealed the depth of his understanding of race and class in America — his empathy for the “the doctor and the welfare mom … and the former gang-banger” who all occupy pews at black churches like Trinity Christian in Chicago, as well as for “working- and middle-class white Americans” who have “worked hard all their lives … only to see their jobs shipped overseas or their pension dumped after a lifetime of labor.” No other presidential candidate has spoken with more realness and credibility about the modern American condition because he was a product of it all.
Unfortunately, both that speech and President Obama’s gestures to show inclusivity at the inauguration were politicized by warring factions. The cynicism runs so deep that it has become impossible for our nation’s political parties to view their ideological rivals as anything but the enemy.
Lincoln, King, and Our House Divided
It was announced last week that for his swearing-in ceremony President Obama will use Bibles that belonged to Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. — two leaders who thoroughly understood the importance of dialogue and conciliation with those from “the other side.” President Obama has been symbolically and directly tied to both of these leaders’ legacies from Day One for a variety of reasons. Like Lincoln, the tall and lanky law expert Obama earned his political wings in Illinois and went on to become an unlikely occupant of the White House, where he now presides over a divided nation. And journalists and scholars have written breathlessly about Obama as the human fulfillment of King’s “dream” of racial integration.
But the comparisons are not unwarranted. Lincoln presided over a nation that was ripped in half by a literal culture war whose manifold consequences continue to stymie and divide our nation today. “A house divided against itself cannot stand,” he presciently said as a candidate for the U.S. Senate, echoing the words of Jesus. He worked boldly, first to keep the Union together but later to eradicate the sin of slavery that enslaved it. Many have compared the state of contemporary American politics to that of a new civil war, with Obama charged with somehow bringing the Union back together.
And King, the southern Baptist preacher trained at northern theological schools, brought a social-gospel vision and evangelistic impulse to the challenge of leading African Americans and eventually the entire nation toward a new understanding of community and citizenship. On segregated battlegrounds such as Montgomery and Birmingham, King was able to work out the ideas of nonviolent resistance that he had studied and witnessed in the activism of Gandhi, the writings of Thoreau, and the New Testament teachings of Christ. Obama likewise has tried to work out his ideas about a multicultural citizenry in the Red State/Blue State context of our current segregated culture.
When President Obama decided upon the symbolism of using Bibles from these two great men, he surely was cognizant of their legacies, as well as the legacy he would like to leave.
Our Shrinking Humanity
The historic symbolism of the inauguration — and the tragedy of Louie Giglios’s withdrawal from it — is underscored even more by the fact that the public event falls on January 21, which this year marks the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. It has become popular to suppose which positions Dr. King would take on contemporary issues such as affirmative action, immigration, and same-sex marriage. The truth is, conjecture can be fun but no one knows for sure how King would have evolved on specific matters. I am willing, however, to go out on a limb and say King would be supportive of Barack Obama’s efforts to represent and reach out to America in all its complicated and contradictory diversity.
In Stride Toward Freedom, King said that one can only “close the gap in broken community” by meeting conflict with love. “[I]f I meet hate with hate,” he added, “I become depersonalized, because creation is so designed that my personality can only be fulfilled in the context of community.” For King, the systematic depersonalization of other human beings was at the root of our nation’s sins of racism and social inequality. It doesn’t take much effort to realize how we continue to depersonalize other human beings today through sexism and classicism, xenophobia and homophobia, and — yes — through political smear campaigns as were done on Shirley Sherrod and now Pastor Giglio.
Though his organizing committee may be backpedaling now, President Obama knew there would be stark differences in the worldviews of those he invited to participate in his inauguration. At some intrinsic level, I’m betting he saw value in putting those differing ideas on the same platform together. It’s a shame that our nation’s collective imagination and humanity are no longer big enough to tolerate an America where we can practice loving our neighbors, even as we disagree with their politics.
Ed,
Thank you for this. Reading this made me dig deep into a thought I had earlier that this division in our country–(gun owners vs. gun control, liberal vs. conservative, religion vs. secularism, etc.) is caused by the relative ease of division–throwing up walls and chanting slogans against “those people over there”. The work and the sweat comes from finding commonality and points on which we can agree upon and build upon.
Easier said than done, I know. But God help us to keep trying. Thanks for your comment, Mike.
Thank you for this article – very insightful. I would ask though, that we all remember that Christianity in America is not a monolithic entity. As a Christian minister I have had absolutely no trouble supporting Obama and the direction of his administration. A great article, but please don’t stereotype all Christians as on one side of the cultural divide.
A good reminder. Thanks, David, for your feedback.
If Pastor Giglio was a white supremacist arguing for segregation or worse, would you consider him an appropriate representative of the Christian faith at the presidential inauguration in a multicultural nation? Homophobia, like racism, is a great evil, it destroys lives, and is not an acceptable Christian option.
Thanks for your comment, Josh. I’m not so sure it’s such a straightforward comparison. I haven’t heard the audio of Giglio’s sermon, but my understanding is that his remarks were made in the context of a larger statement in which he also encouraged his church to welcome gay and lesbian people with God’s love. This makes the situation a bit more complicated and nuanced than if he were simply spouting blatant homophobic (or white supremacist) rhetoric. And that’s really my point. It’s easy for folks on either side of polarizing issues to track down old tapes and videos, play a snippet, and then proceed to judge a person’s entire character by a 30-second sound bite. If all we’re after is promoting our agenda and smearing the other fella, then that’s effective. But what good does it do? At the end of the day, we’re still going to be divided. What if we actually took the time to listen to the whole tape?
If folks on different sides of an issue immediately write the other parties off without trying to understand where they’re coming from or why they hold that view, then we’ve decided that those people on “the other side” are not important enough for us to do the hard work of listening to them, grappling with the issues, and hopefully loving them — even if we may disagree. I know this is easier to write than to live out, but I cannot see any way to move forward without treating those with whom we disagree as real people and not just depersonalized labels.
I feel it to be a very straightforward comparison. Nothing was said about dehumanizing another with whom we disagree, however, you should recognize that it is exactly what comments such as Giglio’s do to an entire category of people, comprising hundreds of millions of Gods children worldwide. If I were to lambast Black people with a ludicrous Biblical exegesis, such as Blacks are descended from Ham and therefore cursed, argue for segregation as a consequence, say that integration is destroying America, and then turn around and say we should “love” Black people- I’m sorry, if that is Love than we have a very different understanding of what Love is. In the best of the Biblical tradition, Love is recognition of the fundamental, irrevocable dignity of another, expressed in acts of compassion and justice. And If incarnate Love is at the heart of the Christian faith, which I believe it is, those in the Church seeking to overcome centuries of hatred and intolerance perpetuated in the name of the Prince of Peace represent the authentic voice of the tradition, no matter how much of a numerical minority they can at times seem. If the faith is to mean anything, Christians have to get their heads screwed on straight about these most basic issues of love and justice, spirit before letter, etc.. or else, why bother? We can love another with whom we disagree while still finding their message appalling and unChristlike, and doing everything in our power to dislodge the seeds of hatred from our hearts and public life that create unecessary suffering.
“If the faith is to mean anything, Christians have to get their heads screwed on straight about these most basic issues of love and justice, spirit before letter, etc.. or else, why bother?” I agree, Josh. What I’m suggesting is that individuals from both sides of the issue need to be willing to hear each other as real people and not react to the (dehumanizing) labels. I believe President Obama’s original plan in putting those different people on the platform together for his inauguration was a way of beginning that kind of real human engagement. I hope it doesn’t sound like I’m putting the onus on only one side — that’s not my intention. I do believe, however, that all of us could do a better job at extending grace, listening, and resisting the impulse to immediately define those with whom we disagree as one-dimensional labels.
Thank you for this thoughtful article. I found it as I was thinking through this issue this morning. I had read more of the context of the sermon after being surprised by the reactions of those who wanted to exclude Giglio. I hate that this group wanted to exclude him and wish the President’s original plans of including him had not been thwarted so that Giglio would not have been discouraged from participating.
Your point about the assumption of what Dr. King would say on this issue is poignant. I wish he were alive to speak to this stalemate today. I am a white, conservative, Southern Baptist woman in my late 30s who was born in the city where Dr. King met his untimely death. I was deeply moved by visiting the National Civil Rights Museum as a high school student, there at the site of the Lorraine Motel. Maybe it played some role in the time I lived and taught in Africa after college graduation and before starting a family though I have never considered that until this moment. I was incredibly moved by President Obama’s first national speech, prior to his presidency. Though I disagree with him on many issues politically and have not voted for him because of his political stands, I respect him and have been moved to tears by seeing his victory, the obvious love within his family, his concern for people and his desire for inclusion. He is a likable figure. I honestly WISH he had different policies so that I could have voted for him.
My favorite moment of the inauguration was when this familiar stanza of “My Country Tis of Thee” rang out so beautifully: “Our Father’s God, to Thee, Author of liberty, to Thee we sing. Long may our land be bright, with freedom’s holy light. Protect us by Thy might, Great God, our King.” May it be so. May wisdom be granted to all of our leaders, deep love for those who disagree and understanding to know how to proceed with their responsibilities in the polarized climate of our country.
Good reflections- thank you! I was going to e-mail you but couldn’t find a link.
Thought you might want to share this book trailer of “Where are the Christians?” and your opinions on it and its premises. Noticed you made a post about a similar topic. Super interesting!
Enjoy! Keep writing!
Aly
Just found your blog. Good stuff! Hoping for a new post soon. 🙂
“One reason why many Christians have supported this president, even though they’ve disagreed with some of his policies, is because they sense that he gets it, that he’s willing to try to see the world from perspectives other than his own. He wants to understand the other point of view. Even though he might support an opposing position, he demonstrates empathy and a willingness to listen to others. This is an invaluable trait that we’ve rarely seen in other presidents.”
I really enjoyed this article, and this quote. So often, people do not truly listen to other sides because they believe it is contrary to what they believe… but if they listen, they must just FIND that what that person is stating is what the believe, but worded differently. 🙂
However, in terms of Christianity from its biblical teaching and roots, it will be offensive to all human kind. The gospel indirectly and directly states that the ways that we think (Romans 12:2), the ways that we act (Romans 3) — are simply contrary to God’s ways (Isaiah 55:8). His ways are higher than are ways. God is a God of love and justice. However, in His justice wrong is wrong, and right is right; so often, our concept of justice is quite the contrary and woe to us because of that –> (Isaiah 5:20). So often, I come across passages (after reading them in context historically, exegesis, etc.) — and to be honest, I am offended because it points out my sin — but there is a healing that comes when I or anyone repents from their sin (1 John 1:9-10), and times of refreshment (Acts 3:19). Not everyone will bow at the name of Jesus, and many will find His message too offensive to be received… but the gospel is still the gospel. And in believing in it, there is hope … everlasting: “For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23) 🙂
Thank you for this blog post! Grace and peace to you!
Ashley
http://graceforthewearytraveler.blogspot.com