Posted on 11/16/2006 5:33:58 AM PST by Mr. Brightside
WASHINGTON -- Like many fellow Democratic politicians, Sen. Barack Obama is no stranger to the pulpit.
But in December, Obama will go where few progressive Democrats usually venture--to a large, conservative evangelical church that boasts a Sunday attendance of more than 20,000 people.
Even more unusual is that he'll attend at the invitation of megachurch Pastor Rick Warren, evangelical icon and author of the popular Christian book "The Purpose-Driven Life."
Aides to Obama say he will appear at Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., on Dec. 1, World AIDS Day.
"Sen. Obama has a deep respect for Mr. Warren's commitment to fighting AIDS and poverty," said Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor.
While he was working on his latest book, "The Audacity of Hope," Obama asked Warren to help by reading one of his draft chapters. Warren issued the invitation to Obama to speak at the church next month.
The messages that Friday will focus on AIDS and HIV, a key area of ministry for Saddleback Church. While many conservative Christians have shied away from AIDS because of their discomfort with its connections to premarital sex and homosexuality, Warren and his wife, church co-founder Kay Warren, have been vocal advocates for patients living with the disease.
Shortly before the release of his latest book, Obama issued a call to progressives to shed bias against religious people and to recognize "overlapping values."
(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
He gives it away...to himself (The money goes to his organizations under his control).
I figured as much, but is there proof of that anywhere?
Jeez, are you really opposed to doing good? I am so thankful that there are people like Rick Warren in this world doing good. I don't follow him. I haven't read his book. I don't plan to - but I know how easy it is to be a critic rather than a doer.
However, I am going to give him the benefit of the doubt because I have met him and know of many fine men and women who work side by side with him, especially when those raising the doubts are the likes of the Washington Post, the Syrian Press and sadly, many who call themselves Christians here on FreeRepublic. Warren released this email today:
ABOUT SYRIA
Dear Saddleback Family
Tomorrow our team heads home from a three-nation P.E.A.C.E. plan tour of Germany, Syria, and Rwanda. Our trip began with a P.E.A.C.E. Plan briefing for 44 Christian missions organizations we'd gathered in Atlanta.
In hindsight, I wish we'd been better prepared for our visit to Syria. We would have handled some meetings differently, watched our words more closely, and been more aware of the agenda of their state press. We wanted to just slip in and out, but that's nearly impossible for me to do anymore. It's been a learning experience. Be sure to read the press release at the end of this note that gives you all the details.
Why did we go to Syria? The simple truth is that I was invited by my neighbor, Yassar. When we arrived, our first event was a home cooked meal with 20 of Yassar's family. Then, we were shown many of the historical Christian sites in Syria: the road to Damascus where Paul was converted, Straight street where the Holy Spirit led Paul, the house where Ananias prayed for his healing, the wall where Paul was let down in a basket to escape the Romans, the tomb of John the Baptist and the oldest Christian church building in existence.
Next, my neighbor arranged for us to meet some key Christian leaders, Muslim leaders, and government leaders - including the president of Syria. Franklin Graham has had years of experience with Lebanon and Syria, so I asked him what to say to the Syrian President. Franklin told me, "Thank him for protecting the freedom of Christians and Jews to worship there."
As we left, the official state-controlled Syrian news agency issued some press releases that sounded like I was a politician negotiating the Iraq war by praising the Syrian President and everything else in Syria! Of course, that's ridiculous, but it created a stir among bloggers who tend to editorialize before verifying the truth. Does it seem ironic to you that people who distrust Syria are now believing Syrian press releases?
In our meeting with the president, I explained (as usual) the Saddleback P.E.A.C.E. Plan, and he gave us permission to send teams to Syria.
Friends, I am aware that inaccuracies, misquotes, and misperceived motivations get reported about me in the press daily. Most of the time, I just ignore them. Jesus said, "If the world hates you, remember that it hated me first." (John 15:18 - NCV)
I love the paraphrase of Matthew 5:11-12 (Msg): "Count yourselves blessed every time people put you down or speak lies about you to discredit me. What it means is that the truth is too close for comfort and they are uncomfortable. You can be glad when that happens-for though they don't like it, I do! And all heaven applauds. And know that you are in good company. My prophets and witnesses have always gotten into this kind of trouble."
Just don't believe everything you read on the Internet or hear in the media.
I love you all and I'm praying for this weekend's FOR THE NEXT GENERATION OFFERING. I'm excited about getting back home to see you!
Pastor Rick
PRESS RELEASE A. Larry Ross
DR. RICK WARREN INCLUDES VISIT TO SYRIA ON THREE-NATION PASTORAL TRAINING TOUR
American Pastor Discusses Religious Freedom and Academic Exchange with Syrian Leaders
Kigali, Rwanda, November 16 - Dr. Rick Warren, best-selling author of The Purpose Driven Life and founding pastor of Southern California's Saddleback Church, concluded a four-day pastoral visit to Syria earlier this week as part of a three-nation pastoral training and PEACE Plan tour. The trip began last week in Germany, where more than 5,000 church leaders gathered to hear Dr. Warren give an overview of a plan to mobilize local churches to attack the global problems of poverty, disease, illiteracy, corruption and spiritual emptiness. Similar training with church leaders in Rwanda continues this week.
Contrary to reports by the official state-controlled Syrian news agency, Dr. Warren was in Syria to meet with and encourage the country's key Christian leaders and to promote religious freedom. Leaders who met with Dr. Warren included the Patriarchs of the Greek Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church; the leader of the coalition of Evangelical Churches of Syria; and the pastor of the world's oldest standing church dating back to 315 A.D.
Dr. Warren's visit to Syria was neither official nor political, but rather came out of a promise to his Muslim neighbor in California. While discussing over their backyard fence Warren's frequent international travel, the neighbor asked him to visit his home country of Syria, with its many sites sacred to Christians and church history that date back 2,000 years.
Let there be no doubt about our support for President Bush, our troops in Iraq and the war on terror," he said. When asked if American opinion had turned against the Iraq war. Warren replied, "Yes. The New York Times reported that 80 percent of Americans indicated in Election Day exit polls they now oppose keeping troops in Iraq." However, our team was told by a Syrian official that it would be a mistake for American troops to immediately pull out.
Many Americans don't realize that both Christianity and Judaism are legal in Syria. In addition, the government provides free electricity and water to all churches; allows pastors to purchase a car tax-free (a tax break not given to Muslim imams); appoints pastors as Christian judges to handle Christian cases; and allows Christians to create their own civil law instead of having to follow Muslim law. Every Christian with whom Dr. Warren's team met -- including those in the city of Malula, where they represent two-thirds of the population -- expressed gratitude for the government's protection of their right to worship.
Because Dr. Warren often meets with presidents of nations he visits, his neighbor also arranged a meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Dr. Warren sought counsel in advance, from Syrian experts in Washington, and was told that Syria's state-controlled media would likely distribute press releases after the meeting, which they did.
"The Syrian government has long had a bad reputation in America, but if one considers a positive action like welcoming in thousands of Christian refugees from Iraq, or the protection of freedom to worship for Christians and Jews in Syria, it should not be ignored," said Dr. Warren, noting that in terms of religious freedom, Syria is far more tolerant than places like Burma, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, and nations identified in the U.S. Commission Report on International Religious Freedom. "Muslims and Christians have lived side by side in Syria for more than a thousand years, often with mosques and churches built next to each other. What can we learn from them?
"I believe it is a mistake to not talk to nations considered hostile; isolation and silence has never solved conflict anywhere - whether between spouses or between nations," Dr. Warren continued. He further shared his experience in Rwanda, a country that is experiencing peace after years of conflict by emphasizing reconciliation instead of retaliation. He noted that, as a pastor, he always urges couples in conflict to keep talking to each other -- no matter how angry they are. As long as they keep talking, there is hope for a resolution; but if they refuse to even talk, divorce is inevitable.
Other issues Dr. Warren discussed with Syrian religious, academic and governmental leadership included the importance of civil dialogue among religions; possible student exchange and academic cooperation with Christian Universities; and Saddleback Church's "P.E.A.C.E. Plan" to train local churches to attack poverty, disease, corruption, illiteracy, and spiritual emptiness in cooperation with businesses and governments. -End-
Considering Warren is attempting to make a impact in the world over AIDS, I have no issue with whoever comes to speak to the Conference if the talk is focused on the subject. If Obama wants to come to a church and help in the cause, more power to him. But, oh I forgot, we wouldn't want to invite sinners into our churches would we? (sarc/off)
You forgot to provide a credible link :-)
Yep. We attended a small Southern Baptist church at the time when Warren was all the rage. The preacher and his wife were really pushing "The Purpose Driven Life", his wife teaching a so-called "Bible study class" directly from it. My husband was a deacon and the preacher got him into reading it. (The dirty little secret of a lot of preachers, not all, is that they have control issues and know how to make people feel like THEY have an inroad to God that the people don't have. That is power, having conceived pull with the Lord.)
My take on Warren is that he has stumbled into a real gold mine, even if he only keeps ten percent of the total and manages the other 90% in some sort of a foundation, and now worldly political pull and name-dropping is his for the asking.
These megachurches have in many cases all but dispensed with the blood of Christ and the offense of the cross. (Paul Proctor is right about that!) They're rich country clubs and increased in goods. - We go to a small country church now with just plain people, still humble enough to practice foot washing. - Thinking of the closest Willowcreeker connected megachurch to us, neither we nor the people we go to church with would feel comfortable in that rarified Yuppie atmosphere. . not because of any self-righteousness on our part, but just because the truth of the matter is that even the clothes we wear, the houses we live in, the cars we drive would not be considered to "fit in" . . and I speak from experience with that church years ago, before it became an actual megachurch; even before that it was a big old church full of "subdivision snobs".
Lord help us all to get on and keep on the narrow way.
Good evening...grew up in upstate NY myself. Got out before Hillary showed up.
I will try to find it again and get it to you.
I appreciate the good that people do but that will not get you into heaven.
Do you think that a sinner cannot do good?
I am discussing the good that Mr Warren does. I am thankful for the good that he is doing. I appreciate that he is out there.
More bad news...I had no idea Warren was a hypocrite until I found out about his trip to Syria...and now this - an invitation to someone who has no problem with abortion on demand.
He's lost his marbles...if he ever had any.
Same place Bill Clinton went to find solace and fame
Saddleback isn't a church; it's a town.
That's funny. Given the above, I thought it was a sexual position.
Amen!
John MacArthur, a conservative Baptist, has always warned us about Rick Warren.
JUST WHO'S USING WHOM FOR WHAT IN NORTH KOREA, by Paul Proctor, July 12, 2006
Check it out.
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