Pontifications

Obama at Georgetown blasts a culture of "instant gratification"

Tuesday April 14, 2009

His speech at the Jesuit university today on the economy (he is speaking as I write) evokes the themes of personal responsibility and the similarly "old-fashioned"--dare I say conservative?--values that he has reiterated since his inauguration. (It has been an interesting shift, his campaign rhetoric of hope--which was often derided as shallow--to the governing language of responsibility. It is well done, in my view, and a natural development.)

Politico has a report and excerpts of the speech, titled "A New Foundation," and the NYT has the full text.

In the speech, Obama also gets scriptural, saying the nation "cannot rebuild this economyl on the same pile of sand." Is he channeling the Messiah again?! Actually, he may be channeing Muhammad. He follows the Sermon on the Mount reference with an exposition of the "five pillars" of the new economy. Five pillars?! Yikes. I expect a spike in that Obama-is-Muslim stat.  

In any case, these are the kind of opportunities we as a church would miss if the "bar Obama" voices were to prevail. But they keep on keeping on. Randall Terry et al planned to lead protests at Georgetown:

"The University has deliberately poked its finger in the eye of the Bishops and faithful Catholics who have condemned President Obama's appearance at Notre Dame. But far worse - they have cast aside the unborn who will perish under President Obama's policies. They have put prestige ahead of life. Georgetown's attitude seems to be: Germany's leaders built great roads in the 1930s, they helped save the banks, and they rebuilt the economy. Let's focus on their economy - not that whole genocide thing."
Just finished listening. Good speech. Very good.
 
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Comments
Iris Alantiel
April 14, 2009 7:46 PM

Man. You know your argument is seriously weak when you have to compare your enemies to the Nazis. Just sayin' . . .

Tim
April 14, 2009 10:44 PM

What Terry also knows but won't acknowledge is that the Nazis limited free speech, just like he wants to do. For Terry and other zealots, speech is only free if you agree with them.

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David Gibson is an award-winning religion writer who specializes in writing about the Catholic Church, which he joined as a convert at the age of 30. He is the author The Rule of Benedict: Pope Benedict XVI and His Battle with the Modern World. He also wrote The Coming Catholic Church: How the Faithful are Shaping a New American Catholicism. He has written about Catholicism for leading newspapers and magazines, including the New York Times, Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, New York magazine, Boston magazine, Fortune, Commonweal, and America. Gibson worked in Rome for Vatican Radio for several years and traveled frequently with Pope John Paul II. He later covered religion for The Star-Ledger of New Jersey. He has co-written several recent documentaries on Christianity for CNN. For further information check out his website at dgibson.com.

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