Friday, February 6, 2015

At Prayer Breakfast, Obama Serves up Controversy


February 05, 2015 - Thursday
Family Research Council

NASCAR hall-of-famer Darrell Waltrip drove home the gospel message this morning at the 63rd National Prayer Breakfast. To a crowded room, he shared his testimony about how a serious accident “knocked him conscious” of his spiritual state of being lost. In a moving testimony, Waltrip said he asked Jesus to forgive his sins and become his Savior, a decision that transformed his life. President Obama followed the NASCAR legend on the program, and the cautionary flags came out almost immediately. “We see faith driving us to do right,” he said. “But we also see faith being twisted and distorted, used as a wedge -- or worse, sometimes used as a weapon… We see ISIL -- a brutal, vicious death cult that, in the name of religion…” If the President had stopped there or juxtaposed the present fruit of Islam with that of Christianity, we could have ended on a high note. But he didn’t.

In a speech that I can only describe as surreal, the President went on to liken Christians to the monsters behind ISIS and American racism. “And lest we get on our high horse and think this is unique to some other place, remember that during the Crusades and the Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ. In our home country, slavery and Jim Crow all too often was justified in the name of Christ.” First of all, the crusades were almost a thousand years ago. ISIS is killing today. What’s more, every true follower of Christ condemns the acts of barbarism committed under the mask of religion -- in medieval or American history. The teachings of Christianity do not call for, nor do they condone, brutality or bigotry. Can the same be said of Islam? Are Muslims around the world denouncing the ruthless and inhumane actions of ISIS?

Speaking under the influence of political correctness, the President missed an opportunity to address the growing threat that radical Islam presents to the world. He could have challenged the leaders from the 100-plus countries who were present this morning to stand united against this scourge. Let’s be clear: “faith” isn’t being used as a “weapon,” as he suggested. Islamists are using weapons to kill innocent women and children. And many of those innocent women and children happen to be Christians -- the same victims the President conveniently glosses over when he talks about persecution of other religious groups. Unfortunately, theirs is a plight that continues to be a footnote in the administration’s long chapter of religious liberty failures. While the President did manage to mention American pastor Saeed Abedini, who has been tortured for two years in an Iranian prison for his faith, he has yet to publicly demand his release. And Pastor Abedini is a U.S. citizen!

The attacks on conservatives were a bit more nuanced, but the jabs were unmistakable. Using religion as a cloak for his party’s social hypocrisy, he said, “There is a tendency in us, a sinful tendency that can pervert and distort our faith. In today’s world, when hate groups have their own Twitter accounts and bigotry can fester in hidden places in cyberspace, it can be even harder to counteract such intolerance.” As for intolerance, the President didn’t seem to recognize his own administration’s, whose policies have been used as a bludgeon against men and women with biblical views. While Americans lose their businesses for exercising the rights he claims to defend, the President insisted that he will “constantly reaffirm… the freedom of religion -- the right to practice our faith how we choose, to change our faith if we choose, to practice no faith at all if we choose, and to do so free of persecution and fear and discrimination.” The Kleins, Stutzmans, Millers, Bracys, and dozens of others long to experience that kind of freedom. Instead, they’re closing their businesses, losing their homes, and paying crippling fines simply for living according to their moral conscience.

In the end, this event was about prayer. And if anything demonstrated America’s need for it, this breakfast did.

Secretary's Day? Senate Grills Obama's DOD Pick

If you thought you had a tough job, try being tapped to sort out the mess the President has made of the U.S. military. If the Senate agrees, Ashton Carter -- the White House’s pick for Defense Secretary -- could be that man. In a day-long hearing with the Armed Services Committee, the pitfalls of the post were painfully clear.

“I must candidly express concern about the task that awaits you, if confirmed, and the influence you would have on some of the most critical national security issues facing our nation,” Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.) said bluntly. With the problems of sexual assault, suicide, budgeting, low morale, religious hostility, terrorists-for-deserters, and a volatile Middle East on the plate of Chuck Hagel’s replacement, there were plenty of issues for the committee to work through.

In just six years, President Obama has gone through three Secretaries of Defense, making this latest appointment even more crucial. “I’m confident that he has no influence whatsoever,” McCain told reporters later, “nor did his three predecessors. Because all the decisions, we know, are made by three or four people at the White House level.” As Robert Gates explained candidly in his book, that included issues like “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” where the concerns of military leaders were openly shoved aside in pursuit of a dangerous social agenda.

On the hot topic of religious liberty -- which continues to be a thorn in the troops’ side -- Carter offered a surprisingly positive take. Senator Mike Lee (R-Utah), who has been a champion on the issue, used the opportunity to question Carter about his views. “I think the ability to believe according to one’s own belief system and to express those, those views appropriately is of utmost importance to the morale of all of our service men and women and to their families. I think it is also something of a pillar of our society, something that we have always expected would be tolerated, is a diversity of religious viewpoint and religious expression. Certainly one’s religious freedoms should never be curtailed merely because one decides to serve one’s country in the military.”

Briefly, he explained the case of Army Chaplain Lawhorn, who was reprimanded for sharing his faith during a suicide prevention training. “What’s your view on religious freedom and the freedom of religious expression within the military? And, what will you do if you are confirmed as Secretary to make sure that those rights are respected and that the obligations imposed by Congress on the military are honored?”

Carter seemed sincere, replying, “There is no inherent conflict between religious expression and good order and discipline. You can have both. I don’t know anything about this particular case. If I am confirmed, I would want to see to it that no one thought there was an inherent conflict between the two.” For conservatives, it was an encouraging sign after years of hostility toward men and women in uniform. Let’s hope that if Carter is confirmed, he justifies our cautious optimism.


Tony Perkins' Washington Update is written with the aid of FRC senior writers.




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