President-elect Barack Obama promised to make his inaugural events the most inclusive ever — and he is making good on his promise. Just over two weeks after gay rights activists condemned his choice of Saddlebackpastor Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at the ceremony itself, the President-elect and his inaugural committee announced the choice of Bishop Gene Robinson, the openly-homosexual Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire, to open the mass event at the Lincoln Memorial with prayer.
Predictably, the committee insisted that the invitation has nothing to do with the furor over naming Warren, who angered homosexual activists and their allies by supporting Proposition 8 in California. “They called up and said this has actually been in the works for a long time,” the bishop told The New York Times. He added that the committee also expressed, “and at the same time, we understand that people in the [lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender] community have been somewhat wounded by this choice, and it’s our hope that your selection will go a long way to heal these divides.”
The event Bishop Robinson will open with prayer will be a huge opening rally featuring major entertainment figures and a mass gathering on the mall. Artists invited to perform at the event include Bono, Stevie Wonder, and Bruce Springsteen, along with the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington.
The choice of Bishop Robinson is not a complete surprise, since the President-elect had met with the bishop during the campaign. Of course, Bishop Robinson is one of the most controversial figures in the entire history of the Episcopal Church. Controversy over his election has led to a schism in his church and a rupture that threatens to unravel the world-wide Anglican Communion.
One interesting facet of the controversies over Warren and Robinson is the fact that the inclusion of the one does not placate the critics of the other. Homosexual activists are still angry over the choice of Warren to deliver the invocation on January 20. A host of others will be offended by the choice of Bishop Robinson. These two responses illustrate the depth of the divide over the issue of homosexuality. The question cuts to the heart of issues including biblical authority and the very nature of humanity. Representation is undoubtedly symbolic, but Rick Warren and Gene Robinson represent radically divergent worldviews and incommensurate goals. They are not two very different representatives of one religion. They are instead two very symbolic representatives of two very different religions.
That point is made clear courtesy of Bishop Robinson. Consider this section of the report in The New York Times:
Bishop Robinson said he had been reading inaugural prayers through history and was “horrified” at how “specifically and aggressively Christian they were.”
“I am very clear,” he said, “that this will not be a Christian prayer, and I won’t be quoting Scripture or anything like that. The texts that I hold as sacred are not sacred texts for all Americans, and I want all people to feel that this is their prayer.”
Bishop Robinson said he might address the prayer to “the God of our many understandings,” language that he said he learned from the 12-step program he attended for his alcohol addiction.
Keep in mind that this man is the Bishop of New Hampshire for the Episcopal Church. He is “horrified” by the character of previous inaugural prayers as “specifically and aggressively Christian.”
We can be fairly sure that, for Bishop Robinson, “specifically” and “aggressively” mean more or less the same thing. A review of most recent inaugural prayers reveals virtually nothing that could be fairly described as “aggressive” and remarkably little that can be described as “specific.” The last two inaugurations have included prayers with greater specificity, to be sure.
The bishop’s comments reveal just about everything one needs to know about his theology. He pledges that “this will not be a Christian prayer” and he “won’t be quoting Scripture or anything like that.” No, nothing like that.
Recent controversies over praying in the name of Jesus Christ will not be a factor here. Instead, the bishop said he might address his prayer to “the God of our many understandings” — an expression calculated to be vague. Bishop Robinson says that he learned the language in a 12-step program he attended after developing an alcohol addiction.
“The crisis in the Church of England,” wrote Clive James in The Dreaming Swimmer, “is that too many of its bishops, and some would say of its archbishops, don’t quite realize that they are atheists, but have begun to suspect it.”
The “God of our many understandings” is a confused composite — a very postmodern idol. Clive James is quite right about the theological crisis of unbelieving bishops – but you need go no farther than New Hampshire to find an example.
Albert Mohler’s blog…..
If I may add….
Rick Warran needs to make a bold statement to not only Barack Obama, but to the entire world by politely stepping down from giving the invocation on January 20th. If he were to do that, he would send shock waves across this country as to the importance of not uniting with a heretic such as Barack Obama and Bishop Robinson. For Barack Obama to say he is a Christian and to have an openly gay Bishop say a non-Christian prayer at his inauguration all the while to have a prominent Christian theologian also speak is just outragious. I know the importance of there being at least one Christian influence in the opening inauguration of Barack Obama, but to be the one among many strong anti-Christian people is to give a sense that there is unity here. The unity of secularized Christianity and Orthodox Christianity and it sends a message that it is okay….
It’s not!
Matt
January 16, 2009 at 2:18 pm
As tempting as it is to criticize and judge others, we are specifically told throughout the Bible that we are not to do so. It is not for me to judge who is the better Christian Rick Warren, Gene Robinson or you. It is for me – and you – to reach out to others in love. This is what Jesus instructed us to do in the New Testament. This is what God instructed us to do in the Hebrew Scriptures.
God is the one true judge. The rest of us together don’t know enough to judge ourselves, let alone others!
Rev. Toña
blessingcasters.wordpress.com
http://www.blessingcasters.org
January 16, 2009 at 4:21 pm
Tell me then blessing, Is God going t o hear the Gay Bishops prayer if he is not going to pray in Jesus name in the mindset of praying to Jesus. God will not hear this prayer. It will not reach His ears. I don’t believe that I have judged him either. I think most of us have a misconception of judgement. I have not judged him. My prayer is that this bishops eyes are open one day. All I have done is discern the non-christiainlike behavior that this Bishop openly expresses and made a determination in my mind and don’t hesitate to pass on to others. To beware of people like him that say they are Christian, but openly, we’re not talking about someone who is hiding this, but openly does what he does. I know we are all sinners. I am the biggest sinner there is in my mind, but I am not condoning my own sin and will not condone his either.
January 18, 2009 at 8:33 pm
Are you sure that God only hears Christian prayers? God’s hearing is so feeble that God cannot hear a person who does not pray in Jesus’ name?
When you call someone “a so-called Christian bishop,” you are making your disapproval and disrespect for that person known to all.
Rev. Toña
blessingcasters.wordpress.com
http://www.blessingcasters.org
January 21, 2009 at 12:58 pm
I did not say that God only hears Christian prayers, but God will only consider a prayer to him if it is made in the midset that Jesus is the connection with which that prayer will be heard. Jesus said, “I am the way the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father but by me.” You can’t come to the Father unless it is through Jesus Christ. If you just blurt out a prayer to the wind, to the wind it goes. But, if you prayer to the Father with Jesus in mind, you are connected. To say the words, “In Jesus name”, is not a pre-requisite. They are not magic words, but your prayer with the mindset of Jesus is an affective prayer. God will answer that prayer if the request is one that is in His will for you.
Since the Gay Bishop prayed a prayer and expressed empatically that it would not be a Christian prayer, then that prayer was said into the wind and that’s as far as that prayer went. To my knowledge, the speakers did not even hear it or take it to the ears of the audience either. Divine intervention I guess.
January 19, 2009 at 1:20 pm
This is in the language of the 12 Steps, “the god of our many understandings,” as Robinson said he learned in alcohol rehab circles.
Make not mistake: The 12 Step system of AA is a prototype-at the very least-of the coming one world religion.
John
http://mywordlikefire.wordpress.com/2009/01/19/gay-bishops-inaugural-prayer-in-aa-language/