Via the most recent Econ/youov interactive poll, only 14% of respondents when asked if they thought Obama was religious, thought he is.
You wrote: “Via the most recent Econ/youov interactive poll, only 14% of respondents when asked if they thought Obama was religious, thought he is.”
That poll reflects people’s “gut instinct”, which is usually right. bttt
The Gospel According to Obama (It’s now impossible to be a functioning religious institution.)
National Review ^ | 02/10/2012 | Charles Krauthhammer
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/290699/gospel-according-obama-charles-krauthammer
At the National Prayer Breakfast last week, seeking theological underpinning for his drive to raise taxes on the rich, President Obama invoked the highest possible authority. His policy, he testified as a Christian, coincides with Jesus teaching that for unto whom much is given, much shall be required.
Now, Im no theologian, but Im fairly certain that neither Jesus nor his rabbinic forebears, when speaking of giving, meant some obligation to the state. You tithe the priest, not the taxman.
The Judeo-Christian tradition commands personal generosity as represented, for example, by the biblical injunction against retrieving any sheaf left behind while harvesting ones own field. That is for the gleaners the poor and the alien (Leviticus 19:10). Like Ruth in the field of Boaz. As far as I can tell, that charitable transaction involved no mediation by the IRS.
But no matter. Lets assume that Obama has biblical authority for hiking the marginal tax rate exactly 4.6 points for couples making more than $250,000 (depending, of course, on the prevailing shekel-to-dollar exchange rate). Lets stipulate that Obamas prayer-breakfast invocation of religion as vindicating his politics was not, God forbid, crass, hypocritical, self-serving electioneering, but a sincere expression of a social-gospel Christianity that sees good works as central to the very concept of religiosity.
Fine. But this Gospel according to Obama has a rival the newly revealed Gospel according to Sebelius, over which has erupted quite a contretemps. By some peculiar logic, it falls to the health-and-human-services secretary to promulgate the definition of religious for the purposes, for example, of exempting religious institutions from certain regulatory dictates.
Such exemptions are granted in grudging recognition that, whereas the rest of civil society may be broken to the will of the states regulators, our quaint Constitution grants special autonomy to religious institutions.
Accordingly, it would be a mockery of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment if, for example, the Catholic Church were required by law to freely provide such health-care services (in secularist parlance) as contraception, sterilization, and pharmacological abortion to which Catholicism is doctrinally opposed as a grave contravention of its teachings about the sanctity of life.
Ah. But there would be no such Free Exercise violation if the institutions so mandated are deemed, by regulatory fiat, not religious.
And thus, the word came forth from Sebelius decreeing the exact criteria required (a) to meet her definition of religious and thus (b) to qualify for a modicum of independence from newly enacted state control of American health care, under which the aforementioned Sebelius and her phalanx of experts determine everything from who is to be covered, to which treatments are to be guaranteed free-of-charge.
Criterion 1: A religious institution must have the inculcation of religious values as its purpose. But thats not the purpose of Catholic charities; its to give succor to the poor. Thats not the purpose of Catholic hospitals; its to give succor to the sick. Therefore, they dont qualify as religious and therefore can be required, among other things, to provide free morning-after abortifacients.
Criterion 2: Any exempt institution must be one that primarily employs and primarily serves persons who share its religious tenets. Catholic soup kitchens do not demand religious IDs from either the hungry they feed or the custodians they employ. Catholic charities and hospitals even Catholic schools do not turn away Hindu or Jew.
Their vocation is universal, precisely the kind of universal love-thy-neighbor vocation that is the very definition of religiosity as celebrated by the Gospel of Obama. Yet according to the Gospel of Sebelius, these very same Catholic institutions are not religious at all under the secularist assumption that religion is what happens on Sunday under some Gothic spire, while good works are social services that are properly rendered up unto Caesar.
This all would be merely the story of contradictory theologies, except for this: Sebelius is Obamas appointee. She works for him. These regulations were his call. Obama authored both gospels.
Therefore: To flatter his faith-breakfast guests and justify his tax policies, Obama declares good works to be the essence of religiosity. Yet he turns around and, through Sebelius, tells the faithful who engage in good works that what theyre doing is not religion at all. You want to do religion? Get thee to a nunnery. You want shelter from the power of the state? Get out of your soup kitchen and back to your pews. Outside, Leviathan rules.
Charles Krauthammer is a nationally syndicated columnist
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Not to miss:
Obama, Abortion and Infanticide
By Andrew C. McCarthy February 9, 2012 6:00 P.M.
http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/290712/more-obama-abortion-and-infanticide-andrew-c-mccarthy
In addition to what I just posted-— [HERE] http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/290707/when-obama-voted-infanticide-andrew-c-mccarthy -—about the facts that were already known about Obamas abortion extremism before the 2008 election, here are two other essays worth reading from October 2008 both by our friend Robby George, both available at the Public Discourse website from The Witherspoon Institute:
The first is Obamas Abortion Extremism. http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2008/10/133
The second, which Robby wrote with Yuval, is Obama and Infanticide. http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2008/10/282