Obama’s Pastor’s Sermon: ‘God Damn America’
Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., senior pastor, Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, March 2005. (Trinity United Church of Christ/Religion News Service)
In a fiery sermon taped and available on DVD, Barack Obama’s longtime pastor and spiritual adviser can be seen and heard saying three times: “God damn America.”
The Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., in his taped sermons, also questioned America’s role in the spread of the AIDS virus and suggested that the United States bore some responsibility for the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.
Confronting the content of some of Wright’s sermons, parts of which have been aired this week on FOX News, Obama on Friday moved to condemn the remarks in his firmest statement on the matter to date, after initially stopping short of a full repudiation.
“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.”
Obama said he never personally heard Wright preach the statements at the center of the controversy, but that he first learned of them when he launched his presidential campaign.
Click here to read the full Obama statement.
Wright’s supporters say his Afro-centric sermons accurately portray black America, and they contend his sermons are widely studied by theologians. But critics are now calling attention to his more incendiary words from the pulpit.
The pastor delivered his final sermon last month and retired as leader of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. Obama has attended the church for 20 years and calls Wright his spiritual adviser.
Click here to visit the Trinity United Church of Christ’s Web site.
In a fiery sermon in April 2003, Wright said: “The government gives them the drugs, builds bigger prisons, passes three-strike laws and wants them to sing God Bless America.
“No! No No!
“God damn America … for killing innocent people.
“God damn America for threatening citizens as less than humans.
“God damn America as long as she tries to act like she is God and supreme.”
In DVD copies of his sermons available for purchase, Wright can also be seen questioning America’s role in the spreading of the HIV virus that leads to AIDS. In another speech, made in the days after 9/11, he suggested that American foreign policy invited the terror attacks.
“We bombed Hiroshima. We bombed Nagasaki. And we nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon and we never batted an eye,” Wright said.
“We have supported state terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans, and now we are indignant because of stuff we have done overseas is now brought back into our own backyard. America is chickens coming home to roost.”
The pastor also said: “The government lied about inventing the HIV virus as a means of genocide against people of color. The government lied.”
Amid calls to fully repudiate Wright, the Obama campaign said late Thursday it has distanced itself from certain Wright comments.
“Senator Obama has said before that he profoundly disagrees with some of the statements and positions of Reverend Wright, who has preached his last sermon as pastor at the church,” Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton said. “Senator Obama deplores divisive statements whether they come from his supporters, the supporters of his opponent, talk radio, or anywhere else.”
That preceded the lengthy campaign statement issued Friday.
Last year, Obama rescinded an invitation to Wright to deliver the invocation at his announcement that he was running for president. He also issued a statement saying personal attacks have no place in politics after Wright delivered an attack on Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton.
But Obama’s longtime relationship with Wright is continuing to spark controversy.
“This is not just someone that Barack Obama has a casual relationship with,” said Tom Bevan, executive editor of RealClearPolitics.com. He noted that Wright married Barack and Michelle Obama, and Wright’s words were the inspiration for the title of Obama’s book, “The Audacity of Hope.”
“Barack Obama has not out and out distanced himself from all of these comments … ,” Patricia Murphy, editor of CitizenJanePolitics.com, said before the campaign responded Friday. “It’s unclear if he rejects all of these statements. I would assume that he does, but I think he is going to be pushed where he needs to come out and fully explain his relationship with his pastor.”
Some of Wright’s statements have raised eyebrows at a time the Internal Revenue Service is scrutinizing tax-exempt religious organizations for alleged violations of rules barring them from participating in political campaigns.
Prior to his retirement last month, Wright delivered commentary from the pulpit in which he praised Obama, as well as remarks focusing on the racial divide between Obama and Clinton.
“There is a man here who can take this country in a new direction,” Wright said during his Jan. 13 sermon.
During a Christmas sermon, Wright tried to compare Obama’s upbringing to Jesus at the hands of the Romans.
“Barack knows what it means living in a country and a culture that is controlled by rich white people,” Wright said. “Hillary would never know that.
“Hillary ain’t never been called a nigger. Hillary has never had a people defined as a non-person.”
In a Jan. 13 sermon, Wright said:
“Hillary is married to Bill, and Bill has been good to us. No he ain’t! Bill did us, just like he did Monica Lewinsky. He was riding dirty.”
So far the Clinton campaign has been quiet over Wright’s comments.
Wright has declined interview requests from FOX News.
FOX News’ Jeff Goldblatt contributed to this report.





Please go vote, whatever you believe McCain still has morals and loves the United States
I think Obama has to drop out of the presidential race because of this. His wife made some terrible statements about not being proud of America and now this…..
How can the Dems let someone run for the Presdient of the United States have these views?
He can’t back out. He has been going to this church for 20 years. This is not a one time deal.
Thank you Fox for showing the video, and this article. I don’t plan to vote
for Obama but I feel the American voters need to know about how Obama has aligned himself with Rev. Wright, Obama’s Spiritial Advisor? Give me a break!, No wonder Obama’s wife is just now proud to be an
American after attending this church all those years and listening to this
man. How could either one really love America? I think Rev. Wright is
disgusting.
If this story was about a Republican it would head-line every major news outlet. I’m curious to see how it unfolds, given the pathetic double standard applied to African Americans. And where’s the IRS on this? These aren’t sermons; they’re political rallies! But does anyone think the IRS would threaten the exempt status of this high-profile “church?” With a Republican in the White House? Get serious!
This relationship should knock Obama out of the box. If any American can still vote for him, they are just plain STUPID.
Why would any American vote for this man. He obvioulsy wants to take our country in a different direction and as a Democrat myself, I would rather vote Republican than go in the direction that Obama and his “spiritual advisor” would suggest. And what is that statement about “Riding Dirty?”
The United States government did something that was wrong—deeply, profoundly, morally wrong. It was an outrage to our commitment to integrity and equality for all our citizens… clearly racist.”
—President Clinton’s apology for the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment to the eight remaining survivors, May 16, 1997
For forty years between 1932 and 1972, the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) conducted an experiment on 399 black men in the late stages of syphilis. These men, for the most part illiterate sharecroppers from one of the poorest counties in Alabama, were never told what disease they were suffering from or of its seriousness. Informed that they were being treated for “bad blood,” their doctors had no intention of curing them of syphilis at all.
The beauty of this whole thing, Barack HUSSEIN Obama won’t be able to distance himself from him, he’s been with him 20 yrs! If he denounces him, whites won’t believe him, blacks will call him Uncle Tom, I love this, it’s Barack HUSSEIN Obama’s Howard Dean scream. I thank Barack HUSSEIN Obama, & Hillary thanks you. Barack HUSSEIN Obama is the new Messiah, don’t you watch CNN,MSNBC? Olbermann is now a complete moron. Barrack Hussein Obama: Talk, Talk, Talk. Hillary, all the way!
Connect the dots please!! This is why he does not wear the American Flag Pin, and this is why he does not salute the American Flag during the Pledge of Alliance. He has created a movement inspired by his Pastor over the past 20 year. Wake Up America !!!!
This article shows that people should really do their homework about the candidates. I think some of the statements that Obama’s pastor has made ( IF they are true ) are ANTI-American and also are racist against white people, and I would hope that Obama does not share those devisive views. Howver, since he has chosen to be a member of that church for the last 20 years, there is a very good chance that he does harbor those beliefs….If I heard those horrible things come out of my pastor’s mouth from behind the pulpit, I would be looking for a new church….Think about it. Truth be told, I don’t think ANY of the candidates, Dem. OR Rep., have the right answers for this country.