Monday, June 29, 2009

Obama Family Chooses A Church

From Time:

For the past five months, White House aides and friends of the Obamas have been quietly visiting local churches and vetting the sermons of prospective first ministers in a search for a new — and uncontroversial — church home. Obama has even sampled a few himself, attending services at 19th Street Baptist on the weekend before his inauguration and celebrating Easter at St. John's Episcopal Church.

Now, in an unexpected move, Obama has told White House aides that instead of joining a congregation in Washington, D.C., he will follow in George W. Bush's footsteps and make his primary place of worship Evergreen Chapel, the nondenominational church at Camp David.

A number of factors drove the decision — financial, political, personal — but chief among them was the desire to worship without being on display. Obama was reportedly taken aback by the circus stirred up by his visit to 19th Street Baptist in January.
....

Each week, regardless of whether the President is on-site, Evergreen Chapel holds nondenominational Christian services open to the nearly 400 military personnel and staff at Camp David, as well as their families. A music director from nearby Hood College coordinates adult and children's choirs (Clinton sang occasionally with the choir when he visited). In December, the kids in the congregation put on a Christmas pageant and the chapel holds a candlelight service on Christmas Eve.


A wise decision, I believe. Had he chosen a DC church, he would have created a media circus each time he attended, and he and his family would have had no privacy in their worship.

Camp David's current chaplain, Lieut. Carey Cash, leads the services at Evergreen. If the White House had custom-ordered a pastor to be the polar opposite of Jeremiah Wright, they could not have come as close as Cash. (As it is, the White House had no hand in selecting Cash. The Navy rotates chaplains through Camp David every three years; Cash began his tour this past January.) The 38-year-old Memphis native is a graduate of the Citadel and the great-nephew of Johnny Cash. He served a tour as chaplain with a Marine battalion in Iraq and baptized nearly 60 Marines during that time. Cash earned his theology degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth — and, yes, that means Obama's new pastor is a Southern Baptist.

Johnny Cash's great-nephew? I don't know about you, but I find that exciting, inveterate celebrity-watcher that I am. Kinship counts, you know.

Let's all hope that Obama doesn't make a habit of following in George W. Bush's footsteps.

H/T to Nicholas Knisely at The Lead at the Episcopal Café.

UPDATE: Paul the BB posted this link from a diary at Daily Kos concerning Lt. Carey Cash in the comments. I don't much like his ideas about evangelization.

UPDATE 2: "Not so fast", says Nicholas Knisely at The Lead, with a link to the Christian Science Monitor:

“The President and First Family continue to look for a church home. They have enjoyed worshipping at Camp David and several other congregations over the months, and will choose a church at the time that is best for their family,” Deputy White House Press Secretary Jennifer Psaki said in a statement.

7 comments:

  1. "Evangelize and Disciple All Enlisted Members of the US Military. Utilize Ministry at each basic training center and beyond. Transform our culture through the US Military."
    --Lt. Carey Cash

    "First we get the military, then we get the nation"
    --Cash again

    I am, needless to say, not encouraged at all. He's a Campus Crusade for Christ type, military version. My flesh is crawling.

    Let's all hope that Obama doesn't make a habit of following in George W. Bush's footsteps.

    While he is moving in some very good directions he is taking his cue from Bush far too often (military tribunals, detention without charges or recourse, signing statements, DOMA). But I'll try to rant at my own place and not here.

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  2. Paul, I posted the link to Kos in an update, but I posted a further update from the WH press office, noting that the Obamas have not made a final decision - or perhaps they read Kos and are having second thoughts?

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  3. No, the correction is correct. They have not decided. I found another update on Daily Kos.

    Even if it were true that they would be worshiping there, I give them credit not to buy the guy's obnoxious evangelicalism. But I hate to see him given any cred by the Obamas. So I am relieved.

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  4. Presidents are damned if the do, damned if they don't on this particular matter. I remember the snarkiness thrown the Reagans' way because of not attending a DC church regularly. Whatever!

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  5. If you lived in DC, would you be thrilled if the Obama family chose your church? Of course, churches should welcome all comers.

    Having said that, the Obamas should do whatever they think is best for their family.

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  6. Our Prime Minister and his family worship in our church if he is in Sydney for the weekend (There is a house for him here as well as his main home in Canberra). Nearly every Sunday night the news shows him being door stopped by reporters at the door of his usual Anglican church in Canberra. I know he will be at our church if the TV cameras are at the door when I arrive. I do not remember any of the previous prime ministers regularly attending any church in my lifetime. Two were open atheists and they all tried to spend Sunday away from the press.
    However, except for the TV cameras and 2 security men, he does not stand out from the rest of the congregation.

    ReplyDelete

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