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Dobson:  Obama is “Dragging Biblical Understanding Through the Gutter”

Orginally published on Tuesday, June 24, 2008 at 7:21 AM
by Todd Rhoades

The AP reports that James Dobson, is accusing Barak Obama of distorting the Bible and pushing a "fruitcake interpretation" of the Constitution.

According to the article, "the criticism, to be aired Tuesday on Dobson's Focus on the Family radio program, comes shortly after an Obama aide suggested a meeting at the organization's headquarters here, said Tom Minnery, senior vice president for government and public policy at Focus on the Family.

The conservative Christian group provided The Associated Press with an advance copy of the pre-taped radio segment, which runs 18 minutes and highlights excerpts of a speech Obama gave in June 2006 to the liberal Christian group Call to Renewal. Obama mentions Dobson in the speech.

"Even if we did have only Christians in our midst, if we expelled every non-Christian from the United States of America, whose Christianity would we teach in the schools?" Obama said. "Would we go with James Dobson's or Al Sharpton's?" referring to the civil rights leader.

Dobson took aim at examples Obama cited in asking which Biblical passages should guide public policy - chapters like Leviticus, which Obama said suggests slavery is OK and eating shellfish is an abomination, or Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, “a passage that is so radical that it’s doubtful that our own Defense Department would survive its application.”

“Folks haven’t been reading their Bibles,” Obama said.

Dobson and Minnery accused Obama of wrongly equating Old Testament texts and dietary codes that no longer apply to Jesus’ teachings in the New Testament.

“I think he’s deliberately distorting the traditional understanding of the Bible to fit his own worldview, his own confused theology,” Dobson said.

“… He is dragging biblical understanding through the gutter.”

Here’s a link to the whole article from the AP...

What do you think?  First of all, is Dobson right?  And secondly, are you comfortable with him speaking for you as a Christian?


This post has been viewed 1000 times so far.


  There are 36 Comments:

  • Posted by Peter Hamm

    I’m not totally comfortable with the idea of Dobson “speaking for me” as a Christian… He doesn’t.

    but…

    he’s right when he says Obama is “deliberately distorting the traditional understanding of the Bible to fit his own worldview, his own confused theology”. A little like Nancy Pelosi quoting imaginary scriptures in the Bible when speaking to Congress.

  • Posted by

    This ain’t new is it?  Haven’t we heard this from politician’s who try yo get the “religious"vote?  Dobson does not speak for me but that does not make him incorrect in what he says.

  • Posted by

    Dobson absolutely DOES NOT speak for me.  He works hard to persuade the public that he does though, because unless he speaks for all American evangelicals he has no power.  This makes him nothing more than a lobbyist, and a manipulative one at that (I guess manipulation and lobbyist go hand in hand).  I find that the whole thing reprehensible.

    Yes, his critique is correct of Obama’s theology.  But here’s the problem, unless he publically analyzes McCain’s theology every time he refers to the bible or comments on the Christian faith, through his (Dobson’s) silence he communicates that anything he (McCain) says about Christianity and faith is correct . . . which is why it’s counterproductive to our mission to merge politics with our theology.

    Wendi

  • Posted by Peter Hamm

    Wendi,

    excellent point!

    But I suspect that Dobson is going to be equally hard on McCain (he has been) as he is not exactly supporting him either.

  • Posted by ck

    He is speaking the truth regardless of whether he is speaking for ‘us’.

    And he has been just as hard on McCain, even publicly saying that he won’t vote for him as it stands right now.

    The big difference is that Obama took a shot at Dobson publicly , so Dobson is publicly responding to him.

  • Posted by

    Peter –

    We’ll see if Dobson is as hard on McCain’s theology as he is on Obama.  True enough, he was very hard on him during the primaries.  However, now that the choice is between McCain and Obama, I’m not sure he wants his influence to persuade people away from his beloved Republican party, so he might become quiet about McCain’s questionable theology.

    Can’t remember, did Dobson put out much negative press about the theological problems with our Mormon candidate Romney during the primary season?

    And CK – I think Obama’s point is correct, not really a shot at Dobson.  If America became a “Christian nation,” whose flavor of Christianity would it represent?  Like it or not, there are big differences among us (a cursory glance at MMI proves that).  This is why Jesus never intended we spread Christianity by creating Christian governments or nations.  We should have learned this lesson with Constantine.

    Wendi

  • Posted by ck

    There is a big difference between Romney’s flawed theology and Obamas.  Romney’s Jesus is a little different than Dobson’s… Obama’s Jesus is WAY different than Dobson’s.

    But what you are missing is something Dobson said 29 years ago in Cincinnati.

    He said publically that he will NEVER vote for a proabortion candidate.  His opposition to both are in line with this belief.

    Though Obama is pro-abortion where as McCain is pro-states right to decide (which is honestly an easy way to say I don’t object to abortion all to much).

    I think if McCain came out and made a declaritve pro-choice statement he would get a vote from Dobson.

  • Posted by

    Wendi, Dobson has been quite vocal in his criticism of McCain. Earlier in the campaign he said he’d never vote for McCain, and he’s backed down from that statement. A McCain staffer recently asked to have face time between McCain and Dobson, and Dobson declined. I think that refutes your statement about giving silent approval to McCain.

    And Dobson hardly ‘works hard to persuade the public’ that he is a spokesman for Evangelicals. He’s a child psychologist and is at his best when he sticks to that topic, but he does have millions of loyal supporters who agree with him on a variety of topics, including public policy.

  • Posted by

    whoops, sorry, i ment to type that Dobson has not backed down from his statement that he’d never vote for McCain.

    And Wendi, where do you get that the GOP is ‘beloved’ by Dobson? He cricitizes both parties when they act (in his opinion) unbiblically.

  • Posted by

    Actually, Obama is speaking and sounding more like a Muslim every day.  It is quite normal for a Muslim to embrace Jesus, not the Jesus of the Bible, but the good prophet Jesus.  When you look at Obama’s statements about there are other paths to Heaven, it shows he’s completely thrown-out the Biblical Jesus, and all that Scripture teaches about the Christ.  In actuality, he’s sounding more like a Muslim every day-he distorts Scripture, He denounces Scriptural teaching about Jesus, he’s abandoned Biblical morality under the guise of tolerance, and he’s willing to embrace and defend every Muslim leader and terrorist, under the guise of “negotiating”. 

    For Obama to claim he’s a Christian, while he spends a lot of time denouncing most of Christian teaching, has about the same ring of truth and sincerity as a Nazi concentration camp guard claiming the death camps were Jewish weight loss centers.  Unfortunately, the world didn’t see through the Nazi propoganda until it was too late, either.  And I truly believe that if Obama’s elected President, by the time the Christian Church awakens to find that the Bible declared “hate speech”, because of its position on immoral behavior; and the Constitution is trashed with the loss of free speech and religious freedom, and many other “Inalienable Rights"through the court systems, because of the Judges that Obama will nominate to the Court System; we will find ourselves in a very similar position as it was in 1936 Germany.  In 1936, by the time the German Church woke-up to what the Nazi propogand really meant, it was be too late it was too late to alter their tragic history.

  • Posted by

    This is a bit of side note to the main issue of this post (I’m really not a fan of any thought process that God’s work is so tied up in government....), but I thought it interesting timing that you make this comment, Jim:
    “When you look at Obama’s statements about there are other paths to Heaven, it shows he’s completely thrown-out the Biblical Jesus, and all that Scripture teaches about the Christ.”
    With the just-released Pew Forum survey showing that 70% of people with a religious affiliation and 57% of Evangelicals saying the same thing, is Obama really that out of step with American Christian culture? Maybe some Muslims would say that, but almost 2/3 of (admittedly self-identified) Evangelical Christians say the same thing. (And if you look at some Barna research over the last few years, more and more regular self-identified Christians believe what you see in Obama.)
    Just thought that was an interesting note…

  • Posted by Carole Turner

    Dobson gets on my nerves way more then Obama does.

  • Posted by Daniel

    Jim, how much do you know about Islam? You’re ringing up a 3000 on the ignorance-meter right now, and about a 2000 on the fearmonger-meter.
    Dislike Obama’s politics if you must. But leave your un-Christian labeling out of it.

    I personally care no more for Dobson’s Christianity than I do for Obama’s.

  • Posted by

    Daniel, I would agree that there is much about which I’m not aware, but I’m not out in left field about the Muslim sounding Obama.  I’ve studied in Israel under both Christian and Islamic teachers, and have Arab/Christian friends in Israel.  I also had an Pastor was from Turkey who, as a child, watched his mother and grandmother butchered by Muslims in front of him, because they would not denounce their Christian faith.  So, I would agree that I’m not well versed on many issues, but I would bet you that Obama will, if elected, proclaim himself a Christian, but he will become very open to the Muslim world, and more critical of the Christian community, as he is already declaring.  He declared Israel to be a stain in the Middle East, and that there will never be peace as long as Israel exists (wow! that’s an insightful statement), he’s willing to talk to and negotiate with Iran’s leader (does anyone remember the great negotiator Neville Chamberlain of Great Britain prior to WWII?), who is trying to build atomic bombs to finish off the Jewish and Christian communities around the globe, and he’s never met an Arab/Muslim he’s not willing to embrace.  Don’t forget, when he was a child, he was registered as a Muslim as a student. 

    Daniel, if I’m wrong, then we have absolutely nothing to worry about and, I, as many others, will just be labeled to be alarmists.  However, if all of the cultural experiences I’ve enjoyed through the years that are warning me about this man, and he’s elected President, then it will be too late to restore the freedoms he will destroy that our Constitution protects.  Oh, and let me add, I’m about as excited about John McKain as I am Obama.  I will vote for McKain, but I will hold my nose while doing it.

  • Posted by

    Perhaps Mr Dobson should take the Jesus test at http://www.sentforlife.com/jesus.html

    He would probably fail miserably,

  • Posted by

    I’m not at all comfortable with Dobson speaking for me.  As Wendi said, Obama’s comment is correct.  If we had only Christians in this country, we would still have terrible fighting over various interpretations of the Bible as it relates to public policy.  I’m not concerned about Obama’s comment because I’m not electing a theologian, I’m electing a president, who has to make policy decisions that affect both Christian and non-Christian citizens.

  • Posted by Donnie Miller

    “I think he’s deliberately distorting the traditional understanding of the Bible to fit his own worldview, his own confused theology,” Dobson said.

    Wow, if that’s not the pot calling the kettle black! 

    This is from the same James Dobson who tries to enforce morality in a very Pharisee-like way (that enraged Jesus) while saying that taking care of the planet isn’t a moral issue. 

    Whew.  When will we learn to appreciate the wonderful family-enrichment ministry of Dobson while ignoring his incredibly un-Christlike political involvement?

  • Posted by

    Dave, you might want to backtrack that URL for the Jesus test.  Looks like a bunch of New Age junk to me.  My magic word to send this is return99.  Go figure.

  • Posted by

    I am utterly amazed at the lack of awareness of the founding of this nation.  When I read some of the posts, I’m amazed at the venom that is aimed at Dobson, because he engages in the political arena for his moral beliefs.  Yet, Obama, who will embrace every immoral position and attack the moral positions gets not only a pass, but defended.  The quote, “I’m not voting for a theologian, but for a President who represents the whole country” assounds me. 

    If you are aware that the Founders of the nation were Christian men who broke away from England because of moral issues-the issue to self-governance, which is a theological position of Luther, then you will begin to understand that most all of our Constitional guarantees, and especially the first 10 of our Bill of Rights, were based on Scriptural principals. 

    For example, the freedom of speech, which Obama’s hate crimes legislation and fairness doctrine will destory, was based on the Biblical principle that all men are created equal, and that was not found in any other view of man, except for the Bible.  If we are created equally, then we all have the right to speak our positions in public.  Why?  Because we are equally created.  In fact, the U. S. Supreme Court in 1803, I believe it was, upheld the conviction of a man in New York for taking the Lord’s name in vain.  John Jay,the first Supreme Court Chief Justice, wrote that by taking Jesus’ name in vain, the man was attacking the very foundation of the Constitution.  Sounds pretty theologically based to me.

    If you want to know what the schools never taught you about the founding of this country, pick-up David Barton’s books, or Peter Marshall’s books on the Founders.  Plus, David Barton has a website called: Wallbuilders, where he discusses in great depth the Founders writings and our Christian heritage.  You will learn things you have never heard of before, and it comes directly from the Founders writings.

    When I first started reading the Founding Fathers writings about ten years ago, I was absolutely amazed at what ten years of Seminary education had neglected in Christian History, especially our own.

  • Posted by

    Jim - What if, hypothetically, over the course of the next few decades the demographics of this country changed so that the majority were now Buddhist.  Would you want your president to enact laws and make policies based upon Buddhist doctrine, or in a way that was fair and protected everyone under the law, regardless of whether or not they shared the religious conviction of the majority? That’s why I made the statement regarding not electing a theologian.

  • Posted by

    I’ve never been impressed with Obama as a theologian.

    Oh, wait, he’s not a theologian.  He’s a politician.  Riiiight, so I shouldn’t listen to Obama for my theological guidance. OK, got it.

    He is, at least theoretically, a Christian and that is something I like in a candidate. Although according to Jim he’s apparently really a Muslim and no one in his church has noticed.  And James Dobson doesn’t seem to like him much, which is a plus for Obama in my book.

    But, then again, George Bush is theorectically a Christian and that hasn’t worked out so well. He’s cut programs to care for the widows and orphans (the poor), started an unwarranted war, and failed to be a good steward of the earth.  But, of course, that’s just my opinion.  grin

  • Posted by

    I don’t think dobson is wrong here.  It is not about Obamas theology but about his pandering to different groups.  My problem with Obama is he is all over the map and comes across as a guy who will say whatever to whomever to get elected.  If I wanted that I would just have another clinton in the office. 

    I also think some of you are unduly harsh on Dobson.  I think he is a genuine man who has done so much good.  He does not speak for me but he represents my thoughts better than obama does. 

    He is not just a 2 issue guy, he is a guy who feels very strongly about the family and those 2 issues (abortion and homosexuality) are in his field. 

    Obama says… I am a Christian.  Does his voting record and his politics reflect a blending of his faith and of his life?  I find him to be inconsistent with biblical Christianity.  I am not asking him to be a theologian, I am asking him to be consistent with his beliefs and politics.  If he is being that then I would need to hear his definition of Christian.

    You do not have to legislate morality but at least be who you claim to be.  if that is a measurment at all, I think dobson is more like he claims to be than obama

  • Posted by Daniel

    Jim.

    Don’t make wild claims without backing them up. Lying has never been Christian.
    Obama has never said anything of the sort about Israel.

    Neville Chamberlain was an ‘appeaser’ because HE GAVE LAND to Hitler. It had nothing to do with MERELY TALKING. Talk about guilt by association! Sheesh!

    “McKain” is spelled with a ‘C’ (as in, McCain).

    Many of the founders weren’t Christian. They were Deists. But that’s beside the point. Ever notice that that whole thing about ‘God’ endowing ‘man’ with rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness includes neither women nor nonwhite men? Hmm… real ‘Christian’ thinkin’ you got there.

    Please don’t repeat alarmist nonsense. There are plenty of cogent arguments not to vote for Obama. Use those instead of the nonfactual fear-fueling nonsense you’ve given us so far.

    For my two cents, evangelicals care far too much about the U.S. of A., and far too little about the Church. I’d rather vote for a non-Christian, because at least then the rest of the world wouldn’t be tempted to think that whatever the U.S. does is what ‘Christians’ are doing. Talk about dishonoring the name of God!!

    Peace,
    -Daniel-

  • Posted by

    Daniel, actually Obama did say that, and it was shown on Fox New just within the last few months.  In addition, there is a video of him saying something very similar re. Israel in 2006, as he was beginning his run for the White House.

    In addition, I know you and I were taught that the Founding Fathers were Deists, but that isn’t true.  Go the website: http://www.adherents.com/gov/Founding-Fathers-Religion.html, and you will discover that of the 204 Founding Fathers, 88 were Anglicans/Episcopalians; 30-Presbyterians; 27-Congregationalists; 7-Quakers; 6-Dutch Reformed or German Reformed; 5-Lutheran; 3-Catholics; 3-Hugenots-French Protestants; 3-Unitarians or Deists; 2-Methodists; and 1-Calvanist.  There were only three proclaimed Deists in the Founders, and the rest were members of Christian Congregations.  Of the original signers of the Declaration of Independence, only Jefferson and Franklin were Deists, the rest were Christians.  If you doubt me, go the the website: The American Colonial Library, and their original writings are there to read.  George Washington’s diary is also at this sight, and he wrote some of the most beautiful prayers I’ve ever read, and all to his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.  Pretty interesting that a Deist would write Christian prayers.  Also, pick-up Peter Marshall’s book, The Light and the Glory.  Peter allows the Founders to speak for themselves, and the real story of the nation is absolutely fascinating.  Daniel, most of what we’ve been taught about our own history in the schools has been altered, and is untrue.

    My wife is a history teacher, and once she began reading Peter Marshall’s books, and the Founders own writings, she was furious at how the true history of our nation has been altered beyond recognition.

  • Posted by

    Jim, I’ve searched Fox’s archives and can’t find where Obama said that. 

    What I did find that Obama said is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a “sore” that is affecting the entire Middle East and our foreign policy.  Not that Israel is a stain and should not exist.

    Get your facts straight, I have to agree with Daniel that you’re pegging way up there on the ignorance/fear-monger meters.

    I’m not all-in for Obama, but I do think electing a black president would at least cause people in the US to take a harder look at the race problems that still exist here.

    Not that I give him much of a chance.  Once the political machines get going they’ll smear him every which way.  As one GOP operative said to Time Magazine, “It’ll be Swiftboat times five.”

    Between being labeled an anti-Semite and enemy of Israel, being black, having a foreign/Muslim sounding name, and having the GOP ramp up their smear machine, I don’t think there are enough people in this country who will actually listen to what he has to say to make it much of a contest.  There are just too many blocks of voters he won’t have any chance of reaching.

    As for James Dobson, he doesn’t speak for me but I would like some real examples of things Obama has said indicating flawed theology.  I think political candidates need to be very careful when they start making statements based on a certain theology.

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