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Home > 2008 > OctoberChristianity Today, October, 2008  |   |  
Preach and Reach
Despite his liberal record, Barack Obama is making a lot of evangelicals think twice.



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Winning Missouri worked twice for President Bush's White House ambitions. Barack Obama seems to have taken notice. For the past three months, the Democratic presidential nominee has been spending significant time in Missouri. In all but one election during the past century, Show-Me State voters have sided with the winner in presidential elections.

Just before Independence Day in Independence, Missouri, Obama delivered a speech on patriotism to counter perceptions that he is less loyal than Republican nominee John McCain, who has 17 military awards and decorations and was a Vietnam-era prisoner of war for five years.

"I will never question the patriotism of others in this campaign," said Obama, who had an Iraq war veteran introduce him. "And I will not stand idly by when I hear others question mine." Obama stressed that no party has a monopoly on devotion to the nation. "Patriotism can never be defined as loyalty to any particular leader or government or policy," he said inside the cramped gym at the Harry S. Truman Memorial Building, where four American flags served as a backdrop.

Obama's general election campaign with running mate Joe Biden, Delaware's senior senator, is built on the rhetoric of "change you can believe in," mixed with passionate words about God and country. As the junior U.S. senator from Chicago, Obama has for years been beholden to working-class voters, African Americans, feminists, gay-rights groups, and pro-choice advocates. But for the first time since Jimmy Carter ran in 1976, a presidential candidate from the Democratic Party is enthusiastically courting evangelicals and Catholics.

This effort is showing results: An August poll by the Barna Group shows McCain with greater support among self-identified evangelicals, but by only two percentage points (39 to 37 percent) over Obama. (Among Christians who meet Barna's stringent nine-point classification as evangelicals, McCain holds a commanding lead of 61 percent to 17 percent over Obama.)

To gain a clearer perspective on these developments, this summer Christianity Today conducted in-depth interviews with a broad range of evangelicals, including Ron Sider, Richard Cizik, Kirbyjon Caldwell, Jim Wallis, Tom Minnery, and Tony Campolo, to see how they assess the Obama for President campaign.

Getting Evangelicals' Attention

Rather than criticizing his Republican opponent for pandering to the Religious Right, Obama hopes to siphon off sufficient evangelical votes to put him over the top in November. It helps that he speaks the language of faith comfortably. Speaking to CT recently, Ron Sider, founder of Evangelicals for Social Action, said Obama "understands evangelicals better than any Democrat since Carter."

In June, Sider was among the 40 Christians invited to a private, off-the-record Chicago meeting hosted by Obama. Other attendees included Cizik, Franklin Graham, T. D. Jakes, Eugene Rivers, Max Lucado, and CT editor in chief David Neff. Cizik, vice president for governmental affairs for the National Association of Evangelicals, says that Obama's invitation was the first time a Democratic presidential candidate had requested a meeting with an nae official in the 28 years Cizik has worked there.

He says he found Obama reflective and willing to bridge divisions. Cizik told CT, "He's willing to tackle problems that the Bush administration hasn't, like health care and climate change." The nae has been receiving weekly communication from the Obama camp, but nothing from McCain.

"The very fact that Obama is holding such meetings is positive," says John C. Green, senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. "If the campaign doesn't make the effort, then there can be no success. But it doesn't guarantee they will get the exact results they want." Green notes that no Democrat has garnered more than one-third of the white evangelical vote since Carter. (In 2004, Bush received 78 percent of white evangelical votes.)





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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 131 comments.See all comments
rhonda cooper   Posted: October 06, 2008 9:36 PM
i THINK IT WOULD PROVE INTERESTING FOR THE READERS OF THIS ARTICLE TO READ "CAL THOMAS.COM" AND CLICK ON COLUMNS- THEN CLICK ON "OBAMA IS NO jOSHUA" TO SEE AN INTERVIEW HE GAVE TO A PERSON WRITING A BOOK. tHE INTERVIEWER QUOTES HIM SAYING HE FEELS THERE ARE MANY DIFFERENT WAYS TO GET TO HEAVEN- IF HE IN FACT IS A CHRISTIAN, AND I HOPE FOR HIS SAKE HE IS,REGARDLESS OF POLITICAL OPINION- HE WOULD KNOW THERE IS ONLY ONE WAY- THROUGH JESUS CHRIST. AND IT SO PUZZLES ME HOW A CHRISTIAN CAN BE FOR ABORTION ON ANY LEVEL, MUCH LESS CIVIL UNIONS FOR GAYS AND LESBIANS. THIS, I FEAR, IS PANDERING TO SOCIETAL PRESSURES AND SIMPLY TO GET THEIR VOTES- ALTHOUGH HOW HE ACTUALLY FEELS OR BELEIVES---- ONE WILL NEVER KNOW. WE REALLY NEED TO PRAY FOR OUR COUNTRY, PRAY FOR THE CANDIDATES, EVEN THE ONES YOU DO NOT BACK- AND PRAY FOR OUR CONGRESS.

Anonymous Posted: October 06, 2008 1:04 PM
@CT, Here are the Barna 9-point evangelical distinctives (WHICH YOU CALL STRIDENT) --Believing that when they die they will go to Heaven because they had confessed their sins and had accepted Jesus Christ as their savior. --Believing a personal commitment to Jesus Christ that is still important in their life today. --Believing their faith is very important in their life today.--Believing they have a personal responsibility to share their religious beliefs about Christ with non-Christians. --Believing that Satan exists. --Believing that eternal salvation is possible only through grace, not works. --Believing that Jesus Christ lived a sinless life on earth. --Believing that the Bible is accurate in all that it teaches. --Believing God as the all-knowing, all-powerful, perfect deity who created the universe and still rules it today.

Miley   Posted: October 06, 2008 10:25 PM
America Rise up!! This man is for everything we (those of us that call ourselves christians) should be taking a stand against. I'm a 32-year-old married mother of three - nothing will convince me to vote for this man, I want a SAFE America for my children to grow up in. God have mercy on our country.

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