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McClatchy: Obama's church pushes controversial doctrines [View All]

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rodeodance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-22-08 12:32 AM
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McClatchy: Obama's church pushes controversial doctrines
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Obama's church pushes controversial doctrines
By Margaret Talev | McClatchy Newspapers

* Posted on Thursday, March 20, 2008

This article appeared in the mainstream news today.
McClatchy actually reported that Obama's church merges
Marxism and Christian Gospel and preaches that the white
church in America is the Antichrist because it supported
slavery and segregation. And, the founder of the modern
black liberation theology James Cone announced that Obama's
Church most embodied his message.

McClatchy reported:

Jesus is black. Merging Marxism with Christian Gospel may show the way to a better tomorrow. The white church in America is the Antichrist because it supported slavery and segregation.

Those are some of the more provocative doctrines that animate the theology at the core of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, Barack Obama's church.

Obama's speech Tuesday on race in America was hailed as a masterful handling of the controversy over divisive sermons by the longtime pastor of Trinity United, the recently retired Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr.

But in repudiating and putting in context Wright's inflammatory lines about whites and U.S. foreign policy, the Democratic presidential front-runner didn't address other potentially controversial facts about his church and its ties.

Wright has said that a basis for Trinity's philosophies is the work of James Cone, who founded the modern black liberation theology movement out of the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. Particularly influential was Cone's seminal 1969 book, "Black Theology & Black Power."

Cone wrote that the United States was a white racist nation and the white church was the Antichrist for having supported slavery and segregation.

Today, Cone, a professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York, stands by that view, but also makes clear that he doesn't believe that whites individually are the Antichrist.

In an interview, Cone said that when he was asked which church most embodied his message, "I would point to that church (Trinity) first." Cone also said he thought that Wright's successor, the Rev. Otis Moss III, would continue the tradition...


http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/31079.html


And one final tidbit in the McClatchy article...
plagiarism, borrowed or what?

But Cone stands by his message, and sometimes Obama echoes it.

Consider this passage: "Hope is the expectation of that which is not. It is the belief that the impossible is possible, the 'not yet' is coming in history."

Those words sound as if they were pulled from Obama's latest campaign speech. Instead, they're from a memoir Cone wrote in the 1980s. In it, Cone said blacks shouldn't limit their hope to what the Republican and Democratic parties stand for. Then he posited a thought that voters are unlikely to hear from Obama:

"Together, black religion and Marxist philosophy may show us the way to build a completely new society."
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