Obama's Inaugural Prayer Team: Where's the (Religious) Diversity?

January 13, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

When it comes to President-elect Barack Obama's inaugural prayer team, there's one thing we can all agree on: It's diverse (with one side effect being a propensity for creating controversy). The motley crew includes:

1. Rick Warren. The evangelical megachurch pastor, scourge of the gay rights movement, and frequent George W. Bush sidekick will deliver the invocation on Inauguration Day.

2. Joseph Lowery. The cofounder—with Martin Luther King Jr.—of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, dean of the civil rights movement, and Methodist minister will deliver the benediction at Obama's swearing-in.

3. Eugene Robinson. The first openly gay bishop in the U.S. Episcopal Church will give the invocation at the official inauguration-week kickoff this Sunday.

4. Sharon Watkins. The president and general minister of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) will be the first woman to deliver the sermon at the national prayer service, which takes place the day after the inauguration.

For all its diversity around ideology, race, gender, and sexual preference, however, Beliefnet's Steven Waldman points out that this foursome is all Protestant. No Catholics here, let alone Jews or Muslims. This plays directly into a fear of religious minorities: that religious outreach is code for Christian outreach.

What's surprising about this is that Obama's faith outreach on the campaign trail and throughout his White House transition has been pretty inclusive, with Catholics and Jews especially well represented.

At the same time, it's worth noting that Obama has pledged to remake America's image in the eyes of Muslim world abroad. Doesn't that start at home, by including some prominent Muslims in the White House or at the inauguration? Are there such figures that I'm forgetting about?

Tags:
Judaism,
Christianity,
Rick Warren,
Inauguration,
Islam,
religion,
Barack Obama

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What's the change we really need? Find plenty of examples at: http://obamaprayers.blogspot.com

Rick Garner of MD 1:49PM June 30, 2009

was great. It included everyone and was a prayer of repentance and well given. If atheists don't like it, shut your ears.

we have freedom to express our feelings and prayer as much as you

have the right to protest but you do not have the right to take away my right to pray when and how I want.

I felt the prayer did not slander or harm anyone but it lifted and

encouraged.

Our Lord is in His heaven and keeps us day and night.

abby of IN 4:22PM January 20, 2009

I think someone has confused different political views within Protestant Christianity with "religious diversity." I am a Christian, but feel much more comfortable with the idea of including those of other religions than merely having different types of Christians. I think the latter creates much more controversy--almost seems like a move designed to create a stir--while including other religions would be much more respectful and logical.

Very odd.

A. Hostetter of NV 11:40AM January 14, 2009

God & Country

Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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