2008 Dec 20

written by Sherri Joubert

I am truly shocked and extremely angry that President-elect Barack Obama would extend an invitation to as divisive a pastor as Rick Warren of Saddleback Church in California to give the invocation at his inauguration.

The civil rights leader and minister, Rev. Joseph E. Lowery (age 87), who will give the benediction, has been completely overshadowed because of the Rick Warren miscalculation. Rev. Lowery is a progressive minister who prefers to err on the side of inclusion when ministering to God’s children. He welcomes all people into his ministry and beliefs, including gays and lesbians. He preaches God’s love over specific Bible quotes others use to exclude people from their ministries. Being African American and from the civil rights era, he knows just how Bible verses can be used to exclude and denigrate people. Rev. Lowery is the kind of minister who should be giving the invocation at President Obama’s inauguration. The first voice of faith we should hear is the voice of love, compassion and inclusion. We should not hear the voice of intolerance, exclusion and hate from Mr. Warren.

The following video sums up the issue well:


Mr. Warren equates gays and lesbians with pedophiles and incest, has announced on Dateline NBC in an interview with Ann Curry that he has some rather depraved sexual appetites of his own, runs a “cure for being gay” ministry program, and does not allow gays or lesbians to become members of his church. Rev. Warren is more than against gay marriage rights. He is clearly against gays and lesbians period and his church demonstrates he is completely intolerant.

On an unrelated, but much more disturbing, note, Mr. Warren has called for the assassination of the President of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. In an era when our country greatly desires and needs better relations with Iran, Mr. Warren has been so bold as to pass judgment (a death sentence) on President Ahmadinejad. How are we to improve relations with Iran and the rest of the world if America continues to put people of intolerance and hubris at the forefront of important public events?

Mr. Warren equates the legal procedure of abortion and a woman’s right to choose to the Nazi Holocaust. The Holocaust murders were directed at Jews, gays, the mentally ill, the elderly, non-Aryans, and anyone who didn’t meet with Hitler’s world view. The Nazis did not allow abortions for ethnic Germans of Aryan descent. A single Aryan mother of an Aryan child was supported by the state. All women of Aryan descent were encouraged to have Aryan children, married or not. If a woman became pregnant by a non-Aryan, she was granted an abortion and if the father could be found, he was placed in a concentration camp. If a child was born to Aryan parents with some defect, the child was murdered and the parents sterilized or worse, sent to a concentration camp while their Aryan heritage was investigated. It was believed if you were of truly Aryan roots, you could not have defective children, and if you did, you must not be Aryan after all.

I wonder if Mr. Warren believes himself and his followers to be superior to the rest of us in the eyes of God? Perhaps if a couple in his following has a gay or lesbian child, they must not be true Christians in his definition of the word? Perhaps he will go further in his intolerance and remove parents of gays and lesbians from his congregation?

Mr. Warren believes only 2% of the population is gay (science measures it at 10%) and he believes being gay is a disease. Believing being gay is a disease that can be cured is nothing less than quackery. The American Psychiatric Association, American Medical Association, American Psychological Association and the American Pediatric Association have clearly shown and have rewritten their diagnostic guidelines stating that being homosexual is a normal part of being human and is not a deviant behavior or a disease of any kind. It may not be the average human experience, but it is normal and natural that some people are gay and that it isn’t a choice. Mr. Warren also does not believe in evolution. What happened to science being a guiding principal in the Obama administration?

President-elect Obama says he is a staunch supporter of gay and lesbian equal rights, though he has said he is against gay marriage rights. Which is it, Mr. President-elect? Are you for or against equal rights for gays and lesbians?

Replace “gay and lesbian” with “black” or “interracial” and see how you feel. I do not believe the President-elect would invite a neo-Nazi or racist to pray at his inauguration. Why is he inviting a bigot who hates gays and lesbians?

I suggest President-elect Obama and his transition team check their math. I believe they have grossly underestimated the feelings of LGBT Americans, their supporters, and liberals and progressives who worked so hard to get Mr. Obama elected. We are not in the mood to be marginalized in the name of “inclusiveness” when that means someone who hates gays and lesbians, and believes we are equivalent to child molesters and a disease that needs to be eradicated is what is meant by “inclusive”.

This whole thing smacks of the Jeremiah Wright debacle from which Mr. Obama had to distance himself. How many times will Rick Warren rear his ugly head and how much negative press does that man have to bring in the coming month before Mr. Obama will dismiss him? Only time will tell.

I also suggest President-elect Obama give the honor of the invocation at his inauguration to Rev. Lowery, and if he must keep Mr. Warren in the inauguration day line-up, have him give a short benediction and be ready to cut him off if he strays into intolerant territory. I, and many others, would prefer that Mr. Warren be dropped from the program and the honor of both the invocation and benediction be given to Rev. Lowery.

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5 Responses to “President-Elect Obama: Give Invocation to Rev. Lowery”

  1. President-Elect Obama: Give Invocation to Rev. Lowery Says:

    [...] Read more here:? President-Elect Obama: Give Invocation to Rev. Lowery | [...]

  2. Guy Blaise Says:

    By inviting him at the inauguration, the president-elect is making a calculated move. He is building a coalition with both people who agree and disagree with him. Clearly Warren is an extremist. But, I don’t see the invitation as “reward” for his views but rather a way to teach him a lesson about tolerance. How many preachers speak on behalf of God and are intolerant? Who gave them a mandate to judge the world?
    Guy Blaise

    Guy Blaise’s last blog post..Nobody wages war with ghosts.

  3. joubess Says:

    Hi Guy,

    Thank you for the comment. You have a very valid point and I’m beginning to see that this calculation may be a long-term good thing even though it seemed a negative blow at first.

    Warren has already changed his website removing the language that unrepentant gays and lesbians are unwelcome to become members of his church. Whether that is real or just a more tolerant public face, it is a start. There has been one change, however small. We won’t know if it has any real meaning for quite some time.

    If we can start to win over the author of “The Purpose Driven Life”, we can make big gains in tolerance toward gays and lesbians within the far right. That may be the huge social victory that may change a lot of minds faster than I first thought.

    One of the things that seems to be a myth within the far right is that gays and lesbians are as a rule promiscuous. We are not. Just as many of us (percentage-wise) have monogamous relationships or are celibate as heterosexuals are. This is a big reason we seek the civil right to marry. Another myth the far right believes is we chose to be this way. Science and the medical community have clearly found this is not a choice and humans are not the only population that demonstrates gay behavior. Getting Mr. Warren to start to accept science and facts may have a lot of good consequences in the future.

    I’m also speaking as a scientist, and I have a far bigger problem with the far right over their chosen ignorance and disbelief of science than I do with their beliefs about gays. Even the Roman Catholic Church teaches evolution, the big bang theory and fundamental science as fact and does not mix it with creationism. I know this because I tutor students in all high school math and science and most of my students are from Catholic schools.

    I believe in Barack Obama as a leader, and I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. I do expect to see him put action where his mouth is when it comes to hate crime legislation, equal rights as far as he’s said he would go, and repeal of don’t-ask-don’t-tell.

    In the meantime, the gay rights community needs to be much more assertive in the activism and legal processes to gain the rights we deserve. Once we can win in the courts and not be overturned, we will either have rights based on precedent or it will pave the way for Constitutional Amendments granting the rights the courts award. Doing away with racial segregation had to happen in the courts before it happened in the legislature (Brown v Board of Education and Loving v Virginia are classic cases of this process).

  4. Flashmob Says:

    Great read! thx

  5. CorineMM Says:

    I think Obama is getting a good job ang gets a lot of undeserving flak!