James Dobson's recent diatribe launched against Obama drew fire from a host of Christian leaders. Black United Methodist Pastor Kirbyjon Caldwell has now joined the band of Dobson critics. He recently launched a website entitled James Dobson Doesn't Speak for Me. Caldwell offers this reason for the site:
We are a coalition of pastors and other Christians, led by Pastor Kirbyjon Caldwell who are standing up for our Christian faith and supporting Barack Obama. We are signing in our individual capacities and not on behalf of our churches or denominations.
There was recently a Time Magazine article that implies this website was part of a premeditated plan to attack Dr. James Dobson. Unfortunately, I was never contacted or given an opportunity to comment on the article. Nothing could be further from the truth. This website was created to directly respond to comments made by Dr. Dobson in his June 24 broadcast and to set the record straight about Senator Obama and his deep Christian faith. It was created to respond to Dr. Dobson in a spirit of love and lift up a candidate we think is the best choice for our country. The reason over 10,000 individuals have signed up is because they believe in a positive, affirming vision of the United States, not because they believe in attacking Dr. Dobson.
Sincerely,
- Kirbyjon Caldwell
Of course Caldwell fails to speak for all United Methodists including yours truly. But, he illustrates a salient issue I addressed in a previous article. Obama comprehends evangelical rhetoric and does a yeoman's job at expounding on the bible. His public persona and apparent Christian demeanor appeals to a significant group of Christians, particularly evangelicals. Although I share a theological and social kinship with James Dobson, I believe he and other evangelicals will make a fatal mistake if they attack Obama on religious grounds. Much like then Southern Baptist Jimmy Carter in 1976 Obama seems more at home with Christian leaders than does his opponent. Dobson serves as a striking example of the public predicament awaiting those who attack Obama on religious grounds. It will only serve as fodder for the liberal media who salivates with eager anticipation at the thought of an evangelical demise.
Those opposed to Obama must address his vulnerability on three fronts. First of all, he lacks experience and perhaps wisdom for the massive undertaking of running a country. Victor Davis Hanson recently offered his conservative take on the issue:
Some wrote that I was obsessed with Obama. Curious is a better word. I can’t think (readers help please) of a presidential candidate in the 20th century (not Carter, not Harding) so unprepared to be president.
The comparison with the young Congressman, Senator, student of history, and war veteran JFK proves the opposite.
By the same token, I persist in thinking that the novels, plays, and films comparing Bush to a Nazi or in some way deserving of assassination were both reprehensible and unprecedented, surely more than the hatred expressed for Nixon, Reagan, or Clinton. And I think such genres should and will stop with Obama. Indeed, one of the most startling developments in recent memory will be the utter about-face (compare already the Obama rejection of beloved federal campaign financing, his backtracking on the war timetable, etc.) of the liberal media. It would be incensed if one did to a President OBama what has been done to Bush. Suggesting that the Right in this instance does the same I don’t think is persuasive. Even the mainstream hysterical Clinton haters, here or abroad, did not write columns praying for a John Wilkes Booth to return.
Second Obama speaks like a New Dealer which has now become the old deal, an anachronistic, socialistic political philosophy. Economist and best selling author of The Forgotten Man, Amity Shlaes, had this to say about the matter in a recent interview:
LOPEZ: Does Barack Obama sound like someone who appreciates the New Deal’s shortcomings?
SHLAES: Hardly. The New Deal exists principally on an emotional plane for Obama. To him the New Deal is something you play like a song, to make you or your constituents feel better. Let me be clear: It’s too early to judge Obama on economics. But he does seem unaware of the economic consequences of government expansion that happens under the New Deal name.
Politicians generally act as if there is no cost to reconnecting with voters by building new New Deals. But the whole exercise of writing law out of New Deal nostalgia is a form of national narcissism. Call it New Deal narcissism.
We could afford to burnish our social contracts if there were no competition from abroad. But there is.
LOPEZ: What would The Forgotten Man want us to never forget as we mark this anniversary?
SHLAES: That New Deal nostalgia is expensive. Too expensive for younger Americans to afford.
Finally, we know Obama has a history of surrounding himself with nefarious characters. Critics need to press Obama on these issues and persuade naive evangelicals to see the ominous clouds surrounding New Deal collectivism, immaturity, and wrongheaded mentors. We discovered long ago with Jimmy Carter that born again evangelicals might not always make good presidents.