Who said church goers had faith in him?
End of story ~ an apostate church into killing babies is probably not going to survive.
The election results, for one.
Any person who supported or voted for Obama, who made clear his affinity for not just abortion but partial birth abortion, is a questionable Christian.
It is not my job to judge them, but I personally question the authenticity of their Christianity....I’m Catholic and that includes the 54 percent of Catholics that sit next to me.
All Christians that voted for Obama are in need of serious repentance imo.
Most mainstrean liberal churchgoers and most black churchgoers have more faith in Obama than God. I was even told more than once that God sent Obama to “save America” from the white man.
Our same catholic church that in the fall gave lukewarm warmed-over fuzz to confuse voters enough to think Obama was an acceptable vote now is in full-tilt mode on Freedom of Choice Act, and will have letter-writing campaigns against it.
The mind boggles at the myopia - didnt these knuckleheads REALIZE he was a pro-abort extremist the whole time?!?!?
Reaganites for Obama? - Sorry, McCain. Barack Obama is a natural for the Catholic vote. - By Douglas W. Kmiec, Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2008, at 1:29 PM ET
Beyond life issues, an audaciously hope-filled Democrat like Obama is a Catholic natural. Anyone seeking "liberty and justice for all" really can't be satisfied with racially segregated public schools that don't teach. And there's something deeply hypocritical about being a nation of immigrants that won't welcome any more of them. And that creation that God saw as good in Genesis? Well, even without seeing Al Gore melt those glaciers over and over again, Catholics chose Al to better steward a world beset with unnatural disasters. Climate change is driven by mindless consumption that devotes more ingenuity to securing golden parachutes than energy independence.
The end of the Catholic vote - Obama's lead among Catholic voters may signal a profound shift. - By Tim Rutten, October 29, 2008
In fact, nearly one-third of all Pennsylvanians are Catholics, and in recent weeks, McCain's candidacy has received a major boost from their clerical leaders. Last week, Cardinal Justin Rigali of Philadelphia wrote in his archdiocesan newspaper: "The transcending issue of our day is the intentional destruction of innocent human life, as in abortion ... [and] no intrinsic evil can ever be supported in any way."Yet Barack Obama continues to lead McCain by double figures in every reliable Pennsylvania poll. In fact, according to a recent New York Times/CBS poll, Obama holds a commanding 59% to 31% edge over McCain among Catholics nationwide. What's significant about that is that at least 50 of the country's 197 Catholic bishops recently have published articles or given interviews in which they argued that abortion, more than any other issue, ought to determine how members of their flock cast their votes. Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput and St. Louis Bishop Robert Hermann have been two of the most forceful voices in this regard, but polls now put Colorado in Obama's column and have him slightly ahead in Missouri.