Focus on the Hypocrisy
Sean reports...
Dr. James Dobson of Focus on The Family said the following on the radio yesterday in response to a speech (link to text) by presumptive Democratic Party nominee Barack Obama to the Call To Renewal's Building A Covenant For New America on June 28, 2006:
"He's deliberately distorting the traditional understanding of the Bible to fit his own world view, his own confused theology."
Dobson, Tom Minnery, and Dr Bill Maier go on to talk about how Obama talks about the application of Bible teachings from Leviticus and Deuteronomy in the Old Testament. Both Dobson and Minnery talk about how the Levitical law no longer applies today because it was only meant to apply to the Israelites after they came out of the desert. And in the same breath they say that the principles - such as on the issue of same-sex marriage - still apply.
HUH?
Does that make any sense? Aren't these two then doing what they are accusing Obama of doing?
Dobson even says that he isn't a reverand and a Bible expert but then responds to Obama like he is. For me I thought faith was a personal gift to yourself; a tool guided by your personal covenant with God and your own intrepretation of his vessels/prophets dictating a higher power's word - be it the Jewish God, the Catholic God, the Protestant God, the Islamic God, Buddha, Vishnu, or what even being your faith recognizes (Not to leave other faiths or Jewish/Christian/other denominations/sects out, I do want to say I am condensing here). In the end it is all a personal interpretation of how to live one's life well with the people and environment around us. My personal view in this instance is in deference to Jesus Christ's declaration of a Golden Rule in the Bible's New Testament, "Love thy neighbor as thyself."
I respect Dobson's right to give his opinion and have it heard. Many Christians utilize 1 Corinthians by Saint Paul as a counter to Levitical Law and maybe this is where Dobson and Minnery are coming from. But is it right to accuse people of hypocrisy and commit it in the same breath using his own interpretation? Funny how people don't even listen to their own voice sometimes.
For instance, Dobson and Minnery agree there are other faiths in America but since Christianity is the majority their views and morality should take precedence.
On the other side, Dobson and Minnery take presumptive Republican presidential nominee to task for not villifying same-sex marriage stong enough and supporting anti-gay marriage amendments on the state ballot in several states in November. So no side is left out in criticism from Dobson's moral view in this radio presentation.
It's funny to listen to someone feign that he isn't an expert than go on like he is and at the same time accuse someone of reinterpretation of the Bible while doing it in the same breath.
I will let you decide though in your own mind if Dobson is right or not. In deference to Dobson, here is a link to the full radio show. I am all for at least respecting disparaging views even though I think they are without real reason and hypocritical.
Comments
You are correct, Sean, Dobson cherry picks at scripture, selecting those passages and interpretations that favor his own preconceived notions on what life should look like.
Most importantly though is how Dobson misses Obama's main point.
Sigh...
I have to say that I am not an Obama devotee BUT he was correct when it comes to Christianity. If we allow one religion with MULTIPLE denominations and teachings to rule our nation - which version do we pick? LOL, I loved it when he asked if it was JAmes Dobson's christianity or Al Sharpton's version.
Dobson is a massive cherry picker of scriptures. I love it that he uses Leviticus to condemn homosexuality but chooses to ignore it when people point out the rest of the idiotic laws in that book. LOL, I am wearing polyester and cotton today. I am also on my period and around men. According to the leviticus rules - I am going to burn!
Romans 3:23 says that ALL have sinned and come short of the glory of God. We must be very careful on whom we judge. He that is without sin cast the 1st stone. Christ said that! I am a gay man that is leaving that part of me behind and I do not agree with gay marriage; HOWEVER,NO ONE can judge another on any particular wrong in their life. WE ALL SIN EVERYDAY! Yet God loves us ALL still. Sean,if I can say one mo' thing to you. Develop yo own relationship with God. Believe that He loves you in spite of.....
I have developed my own relationship with God and he and I have made peace with my sins and my life. If God made me in his own image than why should I live a life of self hatred? I attend and keep in touch with the Metropolitan Community Church (MCC) in my area and discuss my faith with many of my friends. I have struggled from a young Catholic boy and become one planted in a personal morality that is mine and discussed daily with God.
Faith is about loving thy self and thy neighbor and developing the best path or paths to salvation; religion is more an organized community based around a generalization of personal faiths which parallel each other. This is my definition of course based on my experience of course, maybe it is right or maybe it is wrong but it is my central thought about how I see those two words and their power. But in the end both are flawed. Faith can be violated by broken trust and the temptation of free will. Religion is open to be victimized by generalization itself as well as majority rule. What is most true though is what in you is love.
It is that love that makes you one with God as long as you beleive in him. Now I will say Stefan is Jewish and is not a follower of Christ. He is not a practicing Jew but he lives his life according to a more liberal form. I will say that on his behalf he is one of strong moral and personal faith and makes me try and work hard on my own everyday. It is people like him in my life who make me shudder at the thought that Christianity's "club" continues to lessen their beliefs and faiths for the sake of its own.
What is important in all of this is that Stefan and I are proud of ourselves and love ourselves enough to realize that truth, honesty, wisdom, and personal responsibility to ourselves and others is what makes one ultimately "good" and in conversation with a higher power. Our being gay is only an adjective in consequence. We make no excuse with being honest with ourselves and with God.