In recent years, Democrats have been depicted as the party lacking
in spiritual principles. This was done even while Ronald Reagan, who
did not attend church regularly, was in office. The irony is that this
year, when both Democratic candidates freely talk about God – they even
participated in a forum in Pennsylvania Sunday on the subject – their
religious beliefs get marred in political mudslinging. Last week
in this space, I showed how several of the most inflammatory sound
bites of Rev. Jeremiah Wright were taken out of context (the column is
posted on my Web site, www.georgecurry.com). Even after Obama
denounced some of the rhetoric of his former minister, while not
denouncing the man, “Slick Hillary” continues her attempt to use
Wright’s words for political gain. ''He would not have been my
pastor,'' Clinton recently told reporters. ''You don't choose your
family, but you choose what church you want to attend.'' In the
brouhaha over Wright, one central point keeps getting lost – Obama
credits Rev. Wright with leading him to Jesus Christ. The sideshow over
invective language amounts to, as Jesse Jackson likes to say, majoring
in the minor. Increasingly, Black pastors are defending Wright
and the prophetic tradition. Strong columns have appeared in the daily
press in Dallas and Seattle. It’s encouraging that more and more White
ministers are also stepping up and taking on Wright’s critics. Dean
J. Snyder is the senior minister at the Foundry United Methodist Church
in Washington D.C., where the Clintons worshipped during the White
House years. Snyder issued the following statement: “The Reverend
Jeremiah Wright is an outstanding church leader whom I have heard speak
a number of times. He has served for decades as a profound voice for
justice and inclusion in our society. He has been a vocal critic of the
racism, sexism and homophobia which still tarnish the American dream.
To evaluate his dynamic ministry on the basis of two or three sound
bites does a grave injustice to Dr. Wright, the members of his
congregation, and the African-American church which has been the
spiritual refuge of a people that has suffered from discrimination,
disadvantage, and violence. “Dr. Wright, a member of an
integrated denomination, has been an agent of racial reconciliation
while proclaiming perceptions and truths uncomfortable for some white
people to hear. Those of us who are white Americans would do well to
listen carefully to Dr. Wright rather than to use a few of his quotes
to polarize. This is a critical time in America's history as we seek to
repent of our racism. No matter which candidate prevail, let us use
this time to listen again to one another and not to distort one
another's truth.” On the other side, the Internet is carrying stories that a former pastor of the Clintons has been convicted
of first-degree sexual abuse for touching a 7-year-old girl in the
wrong place. Actually, the minister in question, Rev. William
Procanick, 54, is a former pastor of Resurrection Assembly of God
Church in Clinton, N.Y. Thus, the confusion over his being “a former
Clinton pastor.” Hillary is a Methodist and not a member of the
Assembly of God denomination. Inasmuch as Slick Hillary could pick her pastor, but not her relatives, what does her pastor say? The
New York Sun contacted Rev. Edward Matthews, the former pastor of First
United Methodist Church in Little Rock who served as the Clintons’
pastor in Arkansas during the last two years of his governorship.
Hillary still maintains a membership there although she has not lived
in Arkansas in 16 years. “We preachers get pretty irresponsible,”
he said, referring to Wright’s most quoted sound bites. “...If we had
it so say over again we probably wouldn’t say it the same way.” Even
so, he said in the interview, Wight’s sermon in which he said “God Damn
America” was “a totally different animal when you look at its full
context.” He added, “I’ve come pretty close to saying in some
sermons, I guess, what Jeremiah Wright did.” Matthews noted that his
anti-war sermons during the Vietnam era and those of Wright today share
the common theme “that America’s going to have to get its act together,
you know, that if we’re going to be a leaders, we can’t just say,
‘America right or wrong.’” Rev. Matthews said he heard Rev. Wright deliver a sermon in Arkansas during Black History Month. ''If
you are very close-minded, you would have gotten up and walked out of
that. But I appreciated what he was saying.'' Rev. Matthews said. ''I
wouldn't have said it that way. I wouldn't have been so animated.'' He noted that he favors same-sex marriages and opposes the death penalty – positions that Clinton, oppose.“ He said, “She's disagreed with me on several things, but she remained a member of the church.”
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What Rev. Jeremiah Wright Really Said
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