Wednesday, April 4, 2012

PRESIDENT OBAMA AT EASTER PRAYER BREAKFAST

 

Remarks by the President at Easter Prayer Breakfast
THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning, everybody.  (Applause.)  Please, have a seat.  Have a seat.  Well, welcome to the White House.  It is a pleasure to be with all of you this morning.

In less than a week, this house will be overrun by thousands of kids at the Easter Egg Roll.  (Laughter.)  So I wanted to get together with you for a little prayer and reflection -- some calm before the storm.  (Laughter.)

It is wonderful to see so many good friends here today.  To all the faith leaders from all across the country -- from churches and congregations large and small; from different denominations and different backgrounds -- thank you for coming to our third annual Easter prayer breakfast.  And I’m grateful that you’re here.

I’m even more grateful for the work that you do every day of the year -- the compassion and the kindness that so many of you express through your various ministries.  I know that some of you have joined with our Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships.  I’ve seen firsthand some of the outstanding work that you are doing in your respective communities, and it’s an incredible expression of your faith.  And I know that all of us who have an opportunity to work with you draw inspiration from the work that you do.

Finally, I want to just express appreciation for your prayers.  Every time I travel around the country, somebody is going around saying, we’re praying for you.  (Laughter.)  We got a prayer circle going.  Don’t worry, keep the faith.  We’re praying.  (Laughter.)  Michelle gets the same stuff.  And that means a lot to us.  It especially means a lot to us when we hear from folks who we know probably didn’t vote for me -- (laughter) -- and yet, expressing extraordinary sincerity about their prayers.  And it’s a reminder not only of what binds us together as a nation, but also what binds us together as children of God.

Now, I have to be careful, I am not going to stand up here and give a sermon.  It’s always a bad idea to give a sermon in front of professionals.  (Laughter.)  But in a few short days, all of us will experience the wonder of Easter morning.   And we will know, in the words of the Apostle Paul, “Christ Jesus...and Him crucified.”

It’s an opportunity for us to reflect on the triumph of the resurrection, and to give thanks for the all-important gift of grace.  And for me, and I’m sure for some of you, it’s also a chance to remember the tremendous sacrifice that led up to that day, and all that Christ endured -- not just as a Son of God, but as a human being.

For like us, Jesus knew doubt.  Like us, Jesus knew fear.  In the garden of Gethsemane, with attackers closing in around him, Jesus told His disciples, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death.”  He fell to his knees, pleading with His Father, saying, “If it is possible, may this cup be taken from me.”  And yet, in the end, He confronted His fear with words of humble surrender, saying, “If it is not possible for this cup to be taken away unless I drink it, may your will be done.”
So it is only because Jesus conquered His own anguish, conquered His fear, that we’re able to celebrate the resurrection.  It’s only because He endured unimaginable pain that wracked His body and bore the sins of the world that He burdened -- that burdened His soul that we are able to proclaim, “He is Risen!”

So the struggle to fathom that unfathomable sacrifice makes Easter all the more meaningful to all of us.  It helps us to provide an eternal perspective to whatever temporal challenges we face.  It puts in perspective our small problems relative to the big problems He was dealing with.  And it gives us courage and it gives us hope.

We all have experiences that shake our faith.  There are times where we have questions for God’s plan relative to us -- (laughter) -- but that’s precisely when we should remember Christ’s own doubts and eventually his own triumph.  Jesus told us as much in the book of John, when He said, “In this world you will have trouble.”  I heard an amen.  (Laughter.)  Let me repeat.  “In this world, you will have trouble.”

AUDIENCE:  Amen!

THE PRESIDENT:  “But take heart!”  (Laughter.)  “I have overcome the world.”  (Applause.)  We are here today to celebrate that glorious overcoming, the sacrifice of a risen savior who died so that we might live.  And I hope that our time together this morning will strengthen us individually, as believers, and as a nation.

In his remarks, the president does not come across like a person reading a speech written by someone else to which he has given little thought.  I have my differences with Obama, but I believe he is a man of faith.

H/T to Torey Lightcap at The Lead.

9 comments:

  1. Clearly the man is a Muslim, though!

    ;-)

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  2. Let me add, more seriously: I would that Obama had learned more about faith from Jeremiah Wright, and a bit less about politics from Chicago and the GOP.

    Which I mean not so much as a critique, either personal or political, but as a pastoral challenge.

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  3. Rmj, I agree. I was so very disappointed when Obama disassociated himself from Jeremiah Wright. The entire brouhaha over Wright was ridiculous, but it's true that it would have dogged him through his entire campaign, along with the Muslim thing and the birth certificate.

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  4. The entire brouhaha over Wright was ridiculous, but it's true that it would have dogged him through his entire campaign, along with the Muslim thing and the birth certificate.

    Well, it was always going to be something, in part because he's black, in part because he's a Democrat (it's beginning to look more and more like Clinton WAS our "first black President," isn't it?).

    I'd like to see that Obama had learned a bit more about the audacity of hope, or even the theology of scarcity (one of Brueggemann's favorite tropes, and I'm sure Wright preached on it more than once), than he apparently has. The forces of evil (what else can I call them?) that are determined to despise anything that doesn't favor the wealthy and well-connected are only going to be turned aside by courage and conviction. Obama could have learned a bit more from Wright about what to stand firm on. He still could, if his current public positions are not just for electoral purposes.

    Again, a pastoral challenge, not a critique that he isn't doing all that I would like to see done (I'm so tired of "either/or" discussions. "Either you are just like me, or you are completely wrong!").

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  5. Rmj, I did not focus so much on the quality of the sermon (which was not a sermon) as on my impression that Obama is a man of faith, that he seemed comfortable in speaking and referring to the words of scripture. People accuse him of faking his Christianity, and I don't believe that is true.

    Obama probably struck a pretty good balance for the occasion, which is both political and religious, and thankfully he did not come across as pushing his own brand of Christianity as the only way to go forward. I'm somewhat doubtful about whether the prayer breakfasts should even be happening, and I wonder how the words can be anything but bland.

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  6. I wasn't focused on the "sermon" (it was, as you said, quite good). And I certainly don't think he's faking his Christianity. His words are entirely appropriate to the situation, which I agree is actually one not in keeping with Constitutional traditions (which are the ones Presidents should be bound by).

    I was thinking more of his actions as President, and trying to offer a "pastoral" (i.e., considerate but challenging) critique. I'm wearied by the either/or critiques that all rest on "be just like me or you're wrong!". Obama isn't just like me; and he isn't entirely wrong.

    But Wright promised to challenge him, and Obama should be challenged. More's the pity Wright was so thoroughly silenced when he should have been respectfully attended to, even by those who completely disagree with him.

    Ah, well, if wishes were horses....

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  7. I was thinking more of his actions as President, and trying to offer a "pastoral" (i.e., considerate but challenging) critique.

    Oh yes! His actions as president leave something to be desired. More time with Wright could have been a very good thing.

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  8. Very nice remarks. Probably just one of his fascist-communist-Muslim-atheist tricks, though.

    Grin.

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  9. Probably just one of his fascist-communist-Muslim-atheist tricks, though.

    No doubt, no doubt. ;-)

    ReplyDelete

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