Obama Rejects Anti-U.S. Sermons From Pastor Who Was ‘Like an Uncle’

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Barack Obama denounced controversial sermons Friday by his pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., shown here at a funeral service at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago in December 2000. (AP Photo)

Barack Obama describes longtime pastor Jeremiah Wright Jr. as “like an uncle” and a spiritual mentor, but the presidential candidate rejected Wright’s fiery anti-U.S. and politically divisive sermons after days of mounting pressure to do so.

Obama told FOX News Friday that he could no longer lay low as Wright’s past sermons, where he condemned the United States as institutionally racist and blamed the government for HIV and the Sept. 11 attacks, were played in heavy rotation on national television.

“Once I saw them I had to be very clear about the fact that these are not statements that I am comfortable with,” Obama said. “I reject them completely — they are not ones that reflect my values or my ideals or Michelle’s.”

Obama called his remarks “inflammatory and appalling” in a written statement Friday.

Though Obama has known Wright for 20 years, he said the pastor has never been active in his campaign and that he is no longer on his African American Religious Leadership Committee. The campaign said Wright left his unpaid post on the committee Friday, but did not elaborate.

Obama, in the interview Friday with FOX News’ Major Garrett, said he has been a member of the church since the early 1990s after working with the congregation as a community organizer on the south side of Chicago.

Obama married his wife Michelle at Wright’s Trinity United Church of Christ, had his children baptized by Wright and donated money to the church, but he said he first learned of many of the pastor’s controversial statements, which FOX News reported on a year ago, only when they were aired in the media in recent days.

“None of these statements were ones I had heard myself personally in the pews,” Obama told FOX News.

He said the sermons now sparking controversy didn’t resemble the sermons he remembers from Wright, which, Obama said, stuck to messages of faith, values and helping people in the community.

Obama’s response came as critics called on the Illinois senator and Democratic presidential candidate to do more to distance himself from Wright, who, in a fiery sermon recorded and available on DVD, can be seen and heard saying three times: “God damn America.”

In his recorded sermons, he also questions America’s role in the spread of the AIDS virus and suggests that the United States bore some responsibility for the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

Obama issued his more forceful statement against the sermons Friday afternoon.

“Let me say at the outset that I vehemently disagree and strongly condemn the statements that have been the subject of this controversy,” he said in the statement. “I categorically denounce any statement that disparages our great country or serves to divide us from our allies. I also believe that words that degrade individuals have no place in our public dialogue, whether it’s on the campaign stump or in the pulpit. In sum, I reject outright the statements by Rev. Wright that are at issue.”

A year ago, Wright defended his beliefs in an often contentious interview on FOX News’ Hannity & Colmes.

“If you’re not going to talk about theology in context, if you’re not going to talk about liberation theology … then you can’t talk about the black value system,” Wright said on the show’s March 1, 2007, broadcast.

Wright said his teachings are based on black liberation theology, which he summed up as “Africans speaking for themselves.”

Wake Forest University professor Terry Matthews, says in a lecture reprinted on the university’s Web site that black liberation theology “seeks to find a way to make the gospel relevant to black people who must struggle daily under the burden of white oppression.”

Wright’s supporters say his sermons accurately portray black America, and they contend his sermons are widely studied by theologians.

“I’ve been at some of those sermons,” the Rev. Dwight Hopkins, a member of the church, told FOX News. “The majority of Wrights’ sermons speak to healing, he challenges the black community … to be more responsible.”

Wright delivered his final sermon last month and retired as leader of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.

Obama told FOX News he wouldn’t have quit Wright’s congregation if the pastor’s more controversial statements were isolated, but if that became “the tenor or tone on an ongoing basis of his sermons” Obama said he would have quit.

“Obviously they are ones that are from my perspective completely unacceptable and inexcusable,” Obama said.

With the pastor retiring from the pulpit Obama said he doesn’t see an issue in his family remaining part of the congregation.

“If I thought that was the repeated tenor of the church then I wouldn’t feel comfortable, but frankly that has not been my experience at Trinity United Church of Christ.

After the interview was broadcast Friday night on “Hannity & Colmes,” Ari Fleischer, former press secretary for President Bush, suggested on the show that the controversy and the timing of Obama’s disavowal show him to be little more than a shrewd politician.

“I think there’s a reason Republicans I talk to are increasingly looking forward to running against Barack Obama,” Fleischer said.

Click here to read Obama’s full statement on Wright.

FOX News’ Jeff Goldblatt contributed to this report.

 

 

 

1624 Responses to “Obama Rejects Anti-U.S. Sermons From Pastor Who Was ‘Like an Uncle’”

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Comment by Pat Aronson

I do not think that Barack Obama was being honest when he indicated that he was not aware of the views of his pastor. These comments were, obviously, not isolated events and his hatred for “white America” is too evident to be hidden from those who know you best. I am very disappointed in Obama. Loyalty is one thing, but this man is running for President of the United States of American and he should be willing to represent all of us. It seems that he is into the old thing “politics as usual.” Too bad. This is more than scary.

The Clinton campaign must love this.

 
Comment by Craig Ihde

Obama said he was not in church on any of the days the “reverend” delivered his inflamatory anti-American speeches. However, he attended that church for 20 years and had to know what the culture was regardless of whether or not he was in church on any given day. So I don’t buy his “explanation”.

 
Comment by Carolyn Putman

You only have to watch Obama’s body language when responding to Major Garretts questions to know he is trying to have it both ways with regards to his pastors comments. He has had a steady diet of that vitriol for 20 years and now that it is public, he wants us to believe that “he didn’t hear it.” Nonsense, I say.

 
Comment by Linda

Does Obama really expect me to believe that in 20 years he (or his wife) NEVER heard ‘of’ even one of his pastor’s blasphemous sermons, especially with the comments his wife has made about a ‘mean’ America? I believe it as much as I believe that he’s only going to raise taxes on the rich, when just a day or so ago both he and Hillary voted to raise taxes on incomes as low as $31,OOO. I guess all their wonderful government assistance proposals will justify taxing lower income families.

It’s a shame how many people are blindly believing the ‘Change they can believe in’ is one that can be detrimental to their well-being.

 
Comment by Frannie

FOXNEWS is a steadfast and supportive surrogate for the neocons and hate mongers hence they have never been fair and balanced, especially when they have used hate filled words like “hitler” to describe Mr. Obama.

If cameras were present in most of these highly paid pundits, politicians and public places of worship every sunday, I wouldn’t hesitate to wager the most of it would have to be “repudiated and rejected” by those self-righteous hypocrites that now try to lambast Mr. Obama on his RETIRED ministers rhetoric.

It is also time for FOXNEWS and their beligerent talking heads to inquire about why HRC is not raked over the coals for her campaign accepting money from a Turkish anti-semite, unsubmitted tax returns and Mr. Bill’s attachment to foreign financing for his Presidential Library from questionable sources. How is the New York Senator writing 5 million dollar checks to her self to finance her campaign for President. If that had been Mr. Obama, you wouldn’t have let it rest badgering him relentlessly.

 
Comment by Miriam Dickerson

I’m sorry, but I believe that the comments made by Mr. Obama’s minister were a reflection of his true feelings. I don’t believe that his rhetoric is not anything new. When a person spews out as much hatred as reflected by his comments, I believe them to be a true expression of his inner feelings. If Mr. Obama has not heard these comments before, he must have been wearing ear plugs and blinders.

 
Comment by Mike Denhof

Obama was making an analgy to the “slightly crazy” uncle (who you tolerate, despite his flaws).

Your headline is a distortion.

By the way, belonging to a church is about much more than just the minister: its about contact with friends and community members; its about a peaceful place to pray; its about accepting people regardless of their faults (or distorted views); its about recognizing the good in people despite the bad; its about not throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

 
Comment by charles zueck

I can’t believe there are no comments on this subject. This man has known this pastor for 20 years. In that length of time any person knows a friends beliefs! We all tend to associate with people who believe as we do. Obama can’t just reject these comments and hope we are all gullible enough to believe he does not think the same way as his friend. Wake up America, this man is not what we need for America!

 
Comment by Scarlete

Truth hurts????Check your history out.The facts-not on Fox and the other media sources.

 
Comment by Soffitrat

Obama took to long.

Obvious coaching has resulted in this rehearsed response.

 

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