Source: AMERICAN SPECTATOR
I'll be the first to admit it: evangelicals can be gullible.
That's
odd given the Good Book's admonition to trust no man. "Beware lest
anyone cheat you through philosophy and empty deceit, according to the
tradition of men," writes Paul (Colossians 2:8, NKJV). That verse
appears to have fallen on deaf ears when it comes to Barack Obama.
Mesmerized
by the kid from Honolulu, some evangelicals, particularly young
"moderates," are tempted to break ranks and defect to the Obama
bandwagon. At least, that's what media pundits would have us believe.
Polls still show that conservative Christians favor McCain, but Obama
is faring better than Kerry did in 2004.
And no wonder. Obama's campaign isn't afraid to target
more rural areas awash with religious voters. Unlike past Democratic
presidential nominees, he's not schizoid when it comes to talking about
his own faith (which, admittedly, is a clash between the bizarre and
the watered-down). He's even set up a website to lure young evangelicals into the fold.
Granted,
Obama's attempted coup of the evangelical right is hardly a universal
success. He continues to tick off conservative mainstays like James
Dobson, who can see past the senator's rock star persona and occasional
biblical references to his liberal core. But others are not so wise.
Rick Warren, for example.
The purpose-driven pastor is hosting a two-hour forum August 16 for both Obama and McCain. According to a Saddleback Church press release, topics of the day will include "poverty, HIV/AIDS, climate and human rights."
What
a lineup. Obama will have yet another opportunity to espouse his
Marxism-couched-in-religion talking points, and Warren a chance to
solidify his role as the "new evangelical," concerned more with global
warming than abortion (it's only the slaughter of 47 million cellular globs, after all).
Warren
says he's organizing the event to bring light instead of heat to the
political process, but what's the real message the world-famous pastor
is sending to evangelicals, many of whom respect him as a legitimate,
Bible-believing minister of the gospel? It's that Obama may be liberal
on abortion and marriage redefinition, but he's still a great guy.
Maybe you should even vote for him.
The rub is that some
evangelicals will buy the line, and Obama is a master at delivering it.
Take his speech at a Planned Parenthood event
last year. Appearing before an adoring crowd that could barely contain
its uproarious applause at several points, Obama talked about his
commitment to "choice," but he blunted his remarks by saying many
pro-lifers are people of "good will." He also chided those who stand in
the way of finding commonality on the abortion issue.
"They want
us to believe that there is nothing that unites us as Americans --
there is only what divides us," he said. "They'll seek out the
narrowest and most divisive ground. That is the strategy to always
argue small instead of looking at the big picture. They will stand in
the way of any attempt to find common ground.... Their days are growing
dark. It is time to turn the page."
So, what would "common
ground" on abortion look like in Obama's administration? He answered
that question later in the speech. "The first thing I'd do as president
would be to sign the Freedom of Choice Act," he said, referring to legislation
that would wipe out all state and federal abortion restrictions, even
the partial-birth abortion ban supported by the vast majority of
Americans.
Way to reach out, Barack.
Later, he showed
again his magnanimous olive branch to conservatives by pledging to gut
federal abstinence education programs and indicating that sex education
for kindergarteners "is the right thing to do." After a pause, he
qualified the statement with the terms "age-appropriate" and
"science-based" (I wonder if Obama thinks those terms apply to Planned
Parenthood's explicit website for teens, crammed with how to's on an assortment of sex acts?).
Such
examples show Obama's duplicity. He tries to snooker evangelicals into
believing he's a different kind of candidate, but when it comes to
actual policy, he's just as liberal as the next guy. Even more so.
To
some evangelicals, though, it won't matter. He talks a good talk, and
that's enough for them. Warren, for one, is doing his part to give
Obama a platform. It's part of a strategy that might work, given the
current state of Christianity in America. Obama might be the most
pro-abortion presidential candidate ever nominated, but that's all
right because he's a smooth talker.
The Apostle Paul gave us a warning about something like that, if we stopped to read our Bibles as the minister of change exhorts.