Obama, Marx, and GodIf a man says something once, it may just be a slip of the tongue. If he repeats the same phrase over and over again, he may believe it or he may be shamelessly propagandizing. But if he repeats the same idea in different words throughout his life, it is probably something he really believes.
All of us are by now painfully familiar with Senator Obama's
analysis of rural mentality:
But it isn't the first time that he has said this.
According to the New Yorker ,
And as the New Yorker article goes on to say:
So I think that we can conclude that Obama, like most liberal
Democrats, really believes that religion is primarily a solace for
economic insecurity.
However, as the house boy said to the missionary, we Christians
don't believe in that sort of thing. The Christian idea is that
religion---our relation to God and, through God, to each other--- is
the core of our existence and that our economic security (or our
lack of it) is merely a circumstance to be dealt with in terms of
our relation to God. As St. Ignatius of Loyola
put it,
In contrast, Karl Marx agreed wholeheartedly with Senator Obama. He
said, flatly, that "religion is the opium of the masses." But that
doesn't make Obama a Marxist; the philosophers of classical
capitalism said pretty much the same thing. This is why two Catholic
popes,
Leo XIII and
Pius XI, have condemned both socialism and capitalism for
considering man as merely an economic entity rather than a human or
spiritual one.
So Obama's remark doesn't mean he's a Marxist. But he isn't a
Christian either, not in any reasonable sense of the word. The
church he
has faithfully attended for decades, Rev. Jeremiah Wright's Trinity
United Church of Christ, seems to be much more preoccupied with
racist politics than with Jesus. And
numerous Christian leaders have denounced Obama as a false
Christian.
Therefore, the next time Obama says, as he has said:
just write it off as a politician on the make, trying to be all
things to all voters and displaying what might be called "crocodile
piety".
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