Why black liberation theology fails
I was thrilled to be a guest on Glenn Beck’s show on the Fox News Channel yesterday discussing liberation theology and social justice and how they compare to orthodox Christian belief. I was reminded that others have highlighted flaws mentioned by Beck. In my book Liberating Black Theology I also present the analysis of Alistair Kee, professor emeritus of theology at the University of Edinburgh. In his book The Rise and Demise of Black Theology, Dr. Kee concludes the following regarding the demise of black theology:
“There is the arrogance of Black Theology repeating year after year the same essentialisms and stereotypes which are frankly embarrassingly naïve in academic circles. There is a need for proper analysis of the worsening situation of Black poverty, a little more humility in view of the fact that ‘we are more confused than ever about the reasons for it’ . . . the forces of oppression and exploitation are increasingly taking control of the world through the processes of global capitalism. They cannot be successfully opposed simply by progressive Europeans. . . . Black Americans could play a vital part, if they read the new context and move their agenda forward.”
In fact, Kee views the plight of the black poor in terms of economic bifurcations, not racial variance. He writes, “In the present context the issue is the suffering of poor black people which no longer arises predominantly from race but from the inherent inequities of American capitalism.”
According to Kee, in 2006, blacks are no longer victims of oppressive American life, “they are beneficiaries. The rising black middle class has done very well in recent years.” Blacks in America are no longer victims because they now assume a commonality of interest with whites when U.S. companies strike deals with corrupt foreign regimes or decimate the environment of desperately poor communities. Kee goes on to argue that as American citizens, voters, and consumers, blacks should be able to have more influence in American policies toward Africa.
Again, one of Kee’s primary critiques is that black theology fails to address the issues of class that are far more pervasive than race because of the new realities of this era. Racial discrimination and racial oppression are not the conditions that poor blacks find themselves in today. Poor blacks are not in their condition because or racism and racial discrimination.
Finally, Kee also notes that black liberation theology remains locked in the past. Now in many university posts, the second generation of black theologians employs a methodology that shackles black thought into historical sources, doing nothing more than regurgitating past formulas and critiques. You will find this often in the words of men like the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton.
I discuss this more detail in my book on black theology, but at the end of the day it is difficult to explain all of the problems in the black community today on race or the legacy of racism. While it is important to acknowledge that the past affects the present, Kee and others point out that black theology fails because it singles out race to explain many issues in communities that can only be remedied by the gospel, not the federal government.
(Editor’s note: Portions of this commentary were adapted from Anthony’s book Liberating Black Theology).

















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back to top69 Comments to “Why black liberation theology fails”
Usually I stay out of discussions here at WorldMagBlog having to do with race and with sexuality. I am from the south and have found throughout my life that the minute I open my mouth with a thought about race I am declared at RAAAACCCCIST. My first experience with that was at the University of Maryland. I have sat here in South Alabama day after day and month after month reading Anthony’s articles and saying well that really doesn’t effect me. I am staying out of it, but reading the post and seeing the video from last night and reading the post this morning I had to open my eyes and say yes I have been effected by it. Well, really not me so much as my grandparents whose daughter’s life hung in the balance on February 14, 1972. My dad and his brothers and sisters were effected as they say around my grandmother’s house
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waiting for news from the hospital if their sister would live or die. My cousin was effected because she was too young to ever remember her mother holding her or picking her up and finally to me who sat beside my father at his sister’s funeral in 1995 when they played a song about “walking the streets of gold and standing in the presence of God” and my father and my uncle both started sobbing.
You see, Valentine’s Day and Mardi Gras day fell on the same day in 1972. A black man who was out on parol walked into a savings and loan to rob them and locked 8 people in a bathroom and started shooting through the door. My aunt was one of the survivors. My grandfather owned parking lots in downtown Mobile and the bank backed up to his lots
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Interesting, I think Bradley should tell us more about classism!
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He was one of the first on the scene. The front page of the Mobile Press the next morning above the fold was him and my aunt being loaded into the ambulance.
The black man who shot her? Well his defense was that God sent him here to kill all the white people he could.
This is scary stuff people.
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Class, not race?
You have to admit that raises some other, equally uncomfortable policy choices: how do we mitigate the adverse impact of class? Or do we let this one slide?
I think opening this can of worms makes the turn to race the easier, if not necessarily true option.
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Anthony, as I mentioned on a couple of threads last night, I saw the program.
I know that Beck is a Mormon, and I will disagree with him on lots of things. However, I listened closely to his explanation of the gospel. If he believes what he told us, he is a brother in Christ. I was, in fact, happy to see that on a popular news program. It was seen by many who never go to church nor listen to radio preachers.
As for “Liberation Theology”, I have heard of it in Latin America as some spin off of Catholicism and never paid much attention to it.
I appreciated your input to the program.
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As for the race issue: I can remember when Anthony and I couldn’t go the the same restaurant. But it has changed now, and he has as much, or more, opportunity that I would have.
During my career, I have had a black boss man and a black boss woman. We got along well.
When I was in the Air Force, I had a black buddy from Athens, Ga., we called “Georgia”. He taught me to bowl. But when we went off base, he went his way, and I went mine. No discussion about it, we just did.
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As for class, Harris, class is usually created by choices that people make. I was raised lower class. Whatever I am now is the result of the grace of God, hard work, persistence, and some wise choices.
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Not meaning to pick on you, CHAS, but any Mormon who has anything more than the most superficial understanding of his religion isn’t a brother in Christ. If they were, we may as well excise all the doctrinal particulars the writers of scripture were so scrupulous to make clear.
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If by using Kee to criticize black theology, I wonder if Bradley approves of his class based analysis. Racism can and does distract people from their class based interests but I wonder if Bradley approves of this analysis.
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10. I had the same question.
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8. My family came up from barefoot and hungry poor to working class to middle class. Now my nieces and nephews have choices we never had and my father could only dream of. So far some have made good choices and some bad. I predict there will be some class differences between them in the next decades or two, but they all had the same chance.
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Romans 10:9, “If you confess with your mouth,’Jesus is Lored’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved”.
If Glenn Beck believes what he said, he is saved. That makes him a brother in Christ because he’s part of the family of God.
I can’t understand Harris and HRW bringing “class” into this. I, as well as lots of other people, probably including Anthony Bradley, was lower class. But not any more.
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Chas (#13),
You said:
Romans 10:9, “If you confess with your mouth,’Jesus is Lored’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved”.
If Glenn Beck believes what he said, he is saved. That makes him a brother in Christ because he’s part of the family of God.
I say: absolutely!
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This is why I referred to a “superficial” understanding of the religion. Professed adherence to a single verse of scripture doesn’t provide near enough information to tell what one believes about God. If Glenn Beck has a deficient view of Christ–not even acknowledging Him as eternally united with the Father and Holy Spirit–he believes a different gospel. We should be careful reassuring people they are at peace with God when we, ourselves, have only a superficial understanding of what those people believe.
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I heard an ex-Jehovah’s Witness say that a good indicator of whether or not you are a Christian is how you answer the question “Who is Jesus?”
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Chas
Kee uses class analysis to argue against “black” theology. Bradley uses his argument but makes no comment regarding the class based premises.
kbells
The question now is the amount of class mobility. From the 50s to 80s, income and class mobility was fairly large with freguent movement up and down between generations. However, in the US it appears to have solidified and become more rigid to such extent that most European nations enjoy far higher income and class mobility.
http://www.economicmobility.org/assets/pdfs/EMP%20American%20Dream%20Report.pdf
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MAC (#15),
If you watch Beck’s show for a couple of weeks, you will easily perceive that his scriptural understanding is far, far more than superficial.
However, Romans 10:9 is unambiguous!!!
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I think any theology that proclaims “It’s not your fault! You are today living amidst X, Y, Z not due to your or your parent’s bad choices but because of whitey..” will have a few willing listeners/believers.
Broken families, fatherless homes are key indicators of poverty, bad educ outcome and incarceration. This was driven home to me by Theodore Dalrymple a British MD who has had an extensive practice amidst the Brit underclass most of whom are all caucasian.
Bill Cosby has spoken out forcefully against a lot of the pathologies he sees regularly in black culture. God bless him for saying so.
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That would be a great question, KBells, so long as one probed deeply enough. If you asked that question of a Mormon, you’d get both of the following answers:
• Jesus is God (sounds good to me).
• Jesus was created in the same essence as Lucifer (how’s that sound?)
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Well, what do you think the tea party is all about! People who have worked to improve their economic circumstances are seeing it all going down the drain.
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Rondu: I don’t dispute that Mormon doctrine speaks on many subjects in very orthodox terms, but it doesn’t take much scratching the surface to tell that underneath, it’s a counterfeit gospel. I encourage you to research it.
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Let’s not get sidetracked on Glen Beck’s religion. Let’s discuss black theology.
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17. Personally I think a lot of the recent lack of class mobility is due to a couple of generation of entitlement. I have worked with so many young people who think they are owed a promotion or a raise just because they have been there a certain amount of time. They don’t get that just showing up is not enough.
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Agreed,Kim, which is why I suggested pursuing the matter elsewhere. I just want onlookers who may be unclear to know that sound doctrine is important.
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What is meant by ‘black theology’ anyway? Is it substantially different from orthodox Christian theology? I can understand that people come to the gospel from where ever they are–both individually and culturally. But do people of other races and cultures see orthodox Christianity as ‘white theology’?
There’s only one gospel, but it seems to take many theologies to explain it.
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And is ‘black theology’ different from ‘black liberation theology’? I was assuming a difference, but maybe they are the same?
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Classism? Anything for an excuse. When race can no longer be exploited because racism is dead legally and culturally (though not quite eradicated in some ignorant individuals), some other reason must be concocted to hide a person’s own lack of ambition, initiative, or effort.
Americans are class mobile with “E’s”: Effort and Ethics will change Educational or Economic outcomes.
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kbells
Personally I think a lot of the recent lack of class mobility is due to a couple of generation of entitlement.
Although anecdotal evidence suggests this may be true and we all like to complain about how easy the younger generation have it, the research doesn’t confirm this. In Scandinavian countries where entitlements are far more than they are here, class mobility is greater.
An other interesting fact coming from my link in 17 is the rise in productivity. For a variety of reasons, productivity has never been higher and continues to climb yet income which usually rose with productivity has not kept up and in fact has stagnated since the late 70s.
NJL
Well, what do you think the tea party is all about! People who have worked to improve their economic circumstances are seeing it all going down the drain.
If this is true (and I don’t doubt lowering economic conditions motivates many), the tea partiers should direct their anger at the neo-conservative economic policies pursued since the late 70s. If class motivates the tea party, supporting the Republican party is not a good idea.
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The fact that racism isn’t the issue anymore is more or less proven by the fact that all of my adult life poor people have come here from Africa and done well, even if they don’t speak English very well because it isn’t their first language. Black Americans who make an effort also can do well today, but cultural pathology is difficult to overcome. (Even making an effort may not be enough if one has little real education–but today poor schooling isn’t the results of racism, but a broken, dysfunctional culture without fathers or many strong role models.) Where are the middle-class black people in these kids’ lives? Usually nonexistent–get ahead if you can and get out, and make snide comments about white people who invest in their lives instead. Those who do go on for higher education get degrees for work in social services (often government jobs) in very high numbers, and fail to see that government simply won’t solve the problems.
Neither will false religion.
True religion–orthodox theology coupled with ministry to orphans and widows, but supported by strong marriages and families–really holds the only answer. But I’m convinced Satan hates black people, has a strong foothold in many black cultures, and manages to offer just about any solution but this.
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Scandinavian countries are under a different economic system where class mobility is given not earned.
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“However, Romans 10:9 is unambiguous!!!”
But the Mormon’s understanding of it certainly is…..
I’d have to hear what Chas heard in order to tell. What Mormons mean by certain words, doesn’t necessarily coincide with the way I understand them…
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As for the race and class issues, what do either of those have to do with the Gospel?
Hmmmm???
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#9
I totally disagree. He may have the most flawed theology in the world. But, if he has asked Christ to forgive and accept him, and Christ is Lord of his life, then he is a brother in Christ…no matter how wrong the rest of his theology.
It is man who puts the extra shackles on. Christ saved the thief on the cross with the barest of understandings of who He was, and with no baptism, and no theology classes no less!
We will find many people in the Kingdom whom we were not expecting.
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HRW, the WHOLE Congress, whatever party, is responsible for this mess. They are all self-important idiots willing to spend money we don’t have on things they don’t have the constitutional right to even contemplate. And that’s what this is about. And Willis is no different.
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What I saw can be seen as a link on the “Anthony Bradley on Glenn Beck” thread just below today’s WV.
One thing a generation of Great Society entitlements has shown is that giving people money does not raise their class standing.
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Scandinavian countries are under a different economic system where class mobility is given not earned.
I don’t think every person in Scandinavia is given a job/income higher and with more prestige than their parents. No economic system can do that. However, by providing free health care and education they are giving each person the opportunity to pursue an income higher than their parents. They still have to earn it. And they do earn it — which leaves me to question those who think the welfare state discourages class mobility.
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HRW, the WHOLE Congress, whatever party, is responsible for this mess. They are all self-important idiots willing to spend money we don’t have on things they don’t have the constitutional right to even contemplate. And that’s what this is about. And Willis is no different.
And the fact the tea party began as a mass movement after Obama won the election is just a coincidence?
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One thing a generation of Great Society entitlements has shown is that giving people money does not raise their class standing.
Actually the New Deal and then the Great Society preside over the largest expansion of the middle class in American history.
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“And the fact the tea party began as a mass movement after Obama won the election is just a coincidence?”
It wasn’t just that Obama won. The liberal spendthrift democrats also control congress. Also remember the Religious Right movement began during the Carter administration, right wing talk radio during the Clinton administration. Stupid Democrat presidents doing stupid things always cause some sort of rebellion.
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Hi Tammy: If you’re interested in a response to your post 34, I could provide it in today’s Whirled Views. Let me know!
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I’ve often wondered why the democrats would nominate such an unqualified person such as Barack Obama. I am beginning to wonder if it wasn’t just so they could squash all criticism of him with cries of racism.
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So did the economic meltdown. They thought the “change” was going to be someone listening. That’s not what they got.
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It’s not going to work, KBells. People are losing everything, and the Congress has done nothing. Do you see Fannie and Freddie being fixed? No. But HRW would rather call people racist than take a long hard look. These idiots are going down.
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Tammy (#34) et al.
I have to say something about Mormon beliefs. The basic problem with Mormonism is that their God is very different, as is their Jesus. You can’t say that they are the same Person – at all.
Their Jesus was conceived in a physical union between Mary and a physical Father God. Before that, as a spirit child, along with Lucifer, he was conceived by a physical union between God the Father and one of His wives.
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The LDS (Mormons) believe that everyone on earth was conceived in a physical union in heaven between God the Father and his wife/wives. They became spirit children and then are born on earth into earthly bodies. Jesus was the first spirit child and Lucifer born soon after.
A recent LDS prophet, who is assumed to be speaking for God, said “As man is, God once was. As God is, man may become.” That summarizes LDS theology and is the reason that they have no commonality with orthodox Christianity, even if we have many areas of common ground in moral and social matters.
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After seeing many good men get LAYED-OFF work during the time CEOs were hiring companies to analyze how to run a “more efficient” company, I think THAT time period had a lot to do with lack class mobility.
I saw men who were LOYAL and had moved up to “middle-management” get “layed-off” and the CEOs got a raise for “saving the company money”. Many of those men have not come back from that body slam. After that they began making them work lots of over-time without pay “or else” we will find someone else who will.
A lot of these men were 45+ at the time. How do you go out and compete for a job? “You’re over qualified.” OR something they can’t say: “You’re too old.”
Now they say that people are afraid to take vacation time.
What has America come to?
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kbells and NJL
I didn’t mention race and nor was I thinking about it. I just find it remarkable that a Democrat gets elected president and instantly there is a backlash. My suggestion is that the Tea Party is astroturf funded by groups and individuals such as Dick Armey and Freedom Works along with media cheerleader FOX.
Democrats controlled the house in late 2006 but the demand for bank bailout came from the White House, the Treasury and the Fed prior to November. Regardless, the current Republican party has aligned itself with the banking interests in opposing reform while the current Democratic president and congress are attempting to implement regulations which will prevent the need for an other bank bailout.
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#47
Correct, note this corporate downsizing took place from the 80s to the present under the ideological framework of neo-conservative economics. Prior to this, corporations viewed themselves as a part of American society producing something of value and contributing to society – in the golden age of American capitalism from 1950s to 70s there was an implicit understanding that corporate America would play a “good citizen” role.
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Believe what you want. Leftys always do. It’s easier than reality.
There was nothing “instant” about it. It’s not a Republican reaction.
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OBAMA AVOIDS BIBLE VERSES !
Here are some Bible verses that Pres. Obama avoids:
Proverbs 19:10 (NIV): “It is not fitting for a fool to live in luxury – how much worse for a slave to rule over princes!”
Also Proverbs 30:22 (NIV) which says that the earth cannot bear up under “a servant who becomes king.”
And Ecclesiastes 5:2-3 (KJV) advises: “let thy words be few…a fool’s voice is known by multitude of words.”
Although Obama is not descended from slaves, he may feel that he’s destined to become a black-slavery avenger.
Or maybe an enslaver of all free citizens!
Also Google “Mayor ‘Napoleon’ Bloomberg.”
[I just ran into the above offering while webbing!]
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“but the demand for bank bailout came from the White House,”
This may be another reason for the tea party movement. Between that and the nomination of the barely Republican John McCain many conservatives feel like they can’t count on the Republicans to control spending either. The Republican party was well on it’s way to becoming noting more than Democrat lite.
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Actually McCain was a Republican — in the Eisenhower tradition whereas the modern Republican is nothing more than a corporate lackey. The Democrats aren’t sure if they should become – Republican lite or be a real alternative.
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“Kee and others point out that black theology fails because it singles out race to explain many issues in communities that can only be remedied by the gospel, not the federal government.”
That is true.
“Again, one of Kee’s primary critiques is that black theology fails to address the issues of class that are far more pervasive than race because of the new realities of this era.”
That is false.
Classism or class warfare are the drumbeats of social progressives. Disparity between social groups is supposedly an evil to be eradicated. This is a fundamentally materialistic philosophy where equal opportunity is defined as everyone having the same stuff and same benefits. A conservative defines equal opportunity as everyone playing by the same rules, not that everyone receives the same outcome.
On the contrary, the Bible is rigorously anti-materialistic. Life consists not in the abidance of things which we possess. Whether one is rich or poor is irrelevant. Someone who is content is wealthier than all of the glittering class who crave more and more yet are never satisfied. Instead, we lay up treasure in heaven.
The religion of liberals is materialism and their mission is the redistribution of wealth.
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HRW (53): Actually McCain was a Republican — in the Eisenhower tradition …
Frank: … except for that whole pesky “we must guard against … the military industrial complex” thing.
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Al Qaeda has been killing people for years. But now that they have killed some black folks the White House calls them racist.
Apparently killing whites is no cause for alarm, but kill a black man and suddenly you are a racist.
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Obama thinks Al Qaeda is racist?? If so, it’s something they appear to have in common.
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Norlou, not sure what you mean he “avoids Bible verses.” I myself haven’t quoted any of those verses in the last two years (longer than his term in office), if ever. Am I thus avoiding them?
Christians do our testimony a disservice when we start passing on made-up information about whether a president likes a given Bible verse. (There were some dumb ones along that line with Clinton and Gore, including some rumor about one of them, Gore I think, being so biblically illiterate that he cited John 16:3 instead of John 3:16–and sorry, but no reasonably educated adult in America is that stupid, so comments like that simply make Christians look like irresponsible rumor-mongers who care more about being anti-Democrat than about being honest.)
Also your post (which seems to copy an e-mail written by others) could reasonably be interpreted as saying that since he’s black he should be a servant and not a leader, which is probably not what you intend to say. But this is where biblical principles to respect our leaders even when we disagree, and even when we must voice that disagreement, comes into play.
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Both parties are virtually the same in action. They represent corporate interests and nit the people. Please admit it.
The Dems bailed out banks while CEOs got bonuses, but they won’t pass unemployment for real people. Repubs are just as bad. More foreclosures are coming, but you don’t see them helping people, just business.
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except for that whole pesky “we must guard against … the military industrial complex” thing.
of course Eisenhower was better at being Eisenhower.
Both parties are virtually the same in action. They represent corporate interests and nit the people. Please admit it.
I did. However, there are factions in both parties. Clinton and the DLC is corporate, moveon and democraticunderground are not. social conservatives are not corporate but the rest of the Republican party is but even within the business establishment types there are differences between Eisenhower types who see gov’t as a servant of the people and Cheney type who would like to loot the treasury in the interests of corporate America.
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56
Xion
The message was intended for Africans not Americans. The US gov’t should play up this “blacks as cannon fodder” all over Africa as counter-propagdna and make recruiting more difficult for al-queda
BTW
its true Arab Muslims have very little respect for African Muslims. If the west plays this up, it will work to our advantage.
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#61 HRW Good point. Though I am getting tired of the White House accusing pretty much anyone they don’t of racism these days.
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‘anyone they don’t like’
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If you’re concerned about Glenn Beck’s salvation, check out at least the first few seconds here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1YFpmPP5gY
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See the full show here:
http://watchglennbeck.com/video/2010/July/glenn-beck-show-july-13-2010-collective-salvation/
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CherylD (58) -
Avoids scripture? Check out the first few seconds here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1YFpmPP5gY
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Herb, I have no way to watch video on my computer or any other. So it would be helpful to tell me how those videos prove that he avoids those specific Scriptures (is there a video in which he reads every verse before and after and pretends those verses don’t exist, for instance?)
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The two clips show Obama stating that our individual salvation (his individual salavation in one clip) is dependant on “collective salvation”. It would be very hard to come up with scripture to back that up.
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Any discussion of Black/Liberation theology has to mention Marxism and Communism. In Latin America, Liberation theology was simply the communists’ way of using the local Catholic churches to drum up support for their violent takeover. Similarly in North America, the black theologians like Cone were simply marxists with a few Bible verses thrown in to make it sound churchy. They didn’t care about personal salvation, or even about other people beyond their own race. Kee is the same: his blame is on the imperialist, capitalist system, which he sees as evil. This is the same boilerplate condemnation that all communists are taught to use.
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