By Sean Higgins on 8.15.08 @ 12:06AM
A new book about the Democratic candidate's spirituality is long on faith -- in Barack Obama.
The Faith of Barack Obama
By Stephen Mansfield
(Thomas Nelson, 192 pages, $19.99)
Stephen Mansfield wants to believe that Barack Obama can lead
this nation to a religious revival. He wants to believe it so badly
in fact that he is willing to disregard his own reporting. Now
that's faith.
Mansfield is the author of The Faith of Barack Obama, a
book-length essay on the Democratic nominee's religious beliefs. In
many ways it's a good book and, certainly, the subject is
worthwhile.
It's just that Mansfield seems to be willing to give Obama every
benefit of the doubt, no matter what the Democratic candidate
actually says. How else to explain passages such as this one?
"The uncertainty that Obama's words inspire seems to be
intentional," writes Mansfield. "Though it does not appear that he
means to confuse, he does speak with a thoughtful lack of
clarity."
EVER SINCE HIS star-making turn at the 2004 Democratic Convention
when he said, "We worship an awesome God in the blue states!" it
has been widely presumed that Obama is a deeply religious
Christian.
The truth is a bit more complicated as Mansfield recounts,
drawing on interviews, speeches and Obama's two memoirs. In fact it
is not precisely clear what Obama believes.
Obama is, after all, the same man who, as child living in
Indonesia, occasionally "accompanied [his Muslim stepfather] to a
nearby mosque of Fridays and prayed at his side for the blessings
of Allah," Mansfield notes.
That was just one part of Obama's polyglot religious upbringing.
He also attended a Catholic school in Indonesia that included Bible
studies. His mother and the maternal grandparents who helped raised
him, one the other hand, were devout secularists.
His mother was also multiculturalist long before that was cool.
She would go so far as to take young Barack to Buddhist temples,
Shinto shrines, and Hawaiian burial sites to expand his education
-- though not his spiritual awareness.
"Religion was an expression of human culture, she would explain,
not its wellspring," Obama wrote in his memoir, The Audacity of
Hope.
"In sum my mother viewed religion through the eyes of the
anthropologist that she would later become; it was a phenomenon to
be treated with a suitable respect, but with a suitable detachment
as well."
THE CONSEQUENCE of exposing young Barack to so many religions was
that he came away with no faith of his own. After all, if all
faiths were equally an "expression of human culture" then how could
any one be the true path to salvation?
Only later as a young lawyer in Chicago did Obama join Rev.
Jeremiah Wright's Trinity United Church and become a Christian. Yet
even after that Obama is careful to say, again and again, that he
did not give up his religious skepticism.
"It came as a choice and not an epiphany; the questions that I
had did not magically disappear. But kneeling beneath that cross on
the south side of Chicago, I felt God's spirit beckoning me. I
submitted myself to His will and dedicated myself to discovering
His truth."
But wait. If there wasn't an epiphany, then how could he truly
submit himself to God's will? Obama doesn't explain.
As John K. Wilson put it in Barack Obama: This Impossible
Quest, "For Obama, Jesus isn't a magical creature to be
worshiped blindly; he's a real person to be imitated for his moral
example. What's important to Obama about Jesus is not the Night
of the Living Dead aspects of a Christian belief in
resurrection, but the moral lessons about self-sacrifice for a
larger cause."
Personally I never made the connection between Jesus and George
Romero's flesh-eating zombies before (If there is a Second Coming,
should we shoot Zombie Jesus in the head?) but Mansfield passes
over the passage with little comment.
MANSFIELD'S CRISPLY WRITTEN essay does do a solid job sorting
through the various contradictory strands of Obama's singular
religious journey. For people looking for a good one-volume summary
of Obama's religious beliefs, this is about as good as you'll
find.
(I came away with no idea what Mansfield's politics are, by the
way. He is also the author of The Faith of George W. Bush.
Make of that what you will.)
Where it falters badly is in the analysis. What is one to make
of the candidate who confesses that when tucking his daughter into
bed he responds to her questions about what happens after we die by
saying he doesn't know if there is heaven?
Why not just tell the kid there is a heaven and let her get a
good night's sleep? "Obama's own church lists heaven among the
benefits of salvation in the altar calls that close its services,"
Mansfield notes.
Mansfield concedes that Obama is "the product of a new,
postmodern generation that picks and chooses its truth from
traditional, much as a man customizes his meal at a buffet." That
this doesn't say much for Obama (or his generation) does not seem
to bother the author.
He argues that "Obama had found the answer to his soul's need
and only a cynical heart would refuse the possibility of a lonely
black man in his twenties finding faith through the preaching of
God's word."
Perhaps, but only the gullible would ignore that the fact that
Obama was also an ambitious young politician and Rev. Wright was a
well-connected and charismatic Chicago leader.
THE BOOK'S WEAKEST chapter deals with Obama and his relationship
with Wright. One gets the distinct impression that the bulk of the
book was written before their falling out and sections had to be
hastily rewritten.
Mansfield cites as proof of Obama's dedication to Trinity and
its message that "he initially stayed." Obama "initially" weathered
the political storm because "he had found a faith, a people, the
vessel for belief that he had longed for."
Trinity, you see, "had become the font of his political vision"
and helped to frame his "sense of professional calling."
Maybe. But it wasn't so fundamental that Obama couldn't drop
Trinity like a bad habit after Wright's infamous National Press
Club appearance. Mansfield simply blames it all on Wright and
assures us that the decision "came with sadness, with grief for the
loss of years and the pain that politics presses into private
life."
Despite all of this Mansfield concludes with a glimpse into the
brighter future that awaits us: "One can imagine, in an Obama
presidency, White House conferences on Faith and Poverty or
Religion's Responses to Racism that are more than time-wasting
mockeries of national ills."
Yes, that is a hopeful vision. One might even call it...
audacious.
topics:
Education, Barack Obama, Religion, Law