On page three of this thread Steve posted an entry I reproduce here in full:
Doctor Fate wrote:geojanes wrote:"[Pastor Smith] talked about how his baby grandson's gurgling is actually "talking" because he is saying 'I am here ... they tried to write me off as 3/5 a person in the Constitution, but I am here right now ... and is saying I am not going to let anybody from stopping me from being what God wants me to be.'"
That is not racial hatred.
It ain't racial love.
“Racism is how this country was founded and how this country is still run!… We [Americans] believe in white supremacy and black inferiority and believe it more than we believe in God.”
“Anytime you can have the kind of hate-mongering that continues in the hallowed halls of talk radio it show that Barack’s presidency has not solved the problem,” Smith said in 2010.
“Now Jim Crow wears blue pin stripes … and he doesn’t have to wear white robes anymore, because now he can wear the protective cover of talk radio, or can get a regular news program on Fox. He doesn’t have to wear his white garments anymore.”
He continued: “Even such venerable saints as Rush Limbaugh know the lines they are not to cross. But any of their constituency can hear clear the same vile filth spewing forth in their statements that was once the purview of Robert Shelton and members of the Ku Klux Klan and the White Citizen’s Council.”
Some observations: why did Steve fail to provide a source for these quotes? Only the first one, regarding the baby, is from the Easter service Obama attended. All the bottom comments about talk radio were made
over a year ago, and perhaps not in church. As regards, “Racism is how this country was founded and how this country is still run!… We [Americans] believe in white supremacy and black inferiority and believe it more than we believe in God.” - that was not said by Pastor Smith but
in fact by Rev. Jeremiah Wright over three years ago.
The main thrust of this thread for Steve, insofar as I can discern, is that talking race politics in an Easter sermon is unchristian and Obama is to be faulted for attending a church where that happens. But all we have from that sermon is the third-hand report from James Parker Steve cited in his opening post. So it was on the basis of the baby comment that Steve wrote: "I think it is a bit impolitic of [Obama] to go to another church that is so race-conscious. Easter is the most important day on the Christian calendar. The Resurrection is central to the Christian faith. To hear a pastor talking about race on that day . . . hmm." In his next post Steve accuses the church of being, "preoccupied with the matter of race." Next post after that Steve says it's, "a church that focuses on race." Also: "To blast Limbaugh on Easter Sunday misses the mark, to say the least." But we now know that the talk radio remarks were made some time before January, 2010. Steve continues: "Every Christian ought to be against slavery. Every Christian ought to be against racism. However, every Christian preacher ought to be preoccupied with the Resurrection on Easter Sunday, not on social justice. The Resurrection is the most important matter of the faith. Furthermore, a personal attack on anyone from the pulpit is unseemly. A pastor may not like Rush Limbaugh or Keith Olbermann. The pulpit is no place from which to blast them." Note the mention of the resurrection, to which I shall return. As for the rest, Steve clearly was misled by the
Morning Rush piece into thinking the talk radio quotes were made in front of Pres. Obama last week. The vid of Smith in question has a text overlay that reads, "Windows on the World" and identifies him as the President of the Palmer Theological Seminary. I don't think this is a vid of him giving a church sermon. A few more posts down Steve says Shiloh Baptist, "teaches hate." A few more posts down, now on page two, Steve says, "...anyone who cared would have been able to easily find out what sort of message Smith was likely to 'preach' [at Shiloh Baptist]." Note the relevance to the ease of research.
So in truth all this vilification of Shiloh Baptist is based on the baby statement and the mistaken belief that these other things were said on Easter in front of the President. Perhaps Steve would like to withdraw the "teaches hate" comment?
Now the baby comment is third hand, and attributed to an unnamed pool reporter. Let's see just how easy internet research is these days. Using Google News, I searched on "write me off as 3/5 a person" and immediately found
THIS story in USA Today. It includes somewhat more of the pool report(s). My underlining is added to help Steve assess the degree to which Shiloh and Smith are "preoccupied with" and "focused on" race as opposed to the resurrection:
From the pool report:
Readings from Old Testament -- Jeremiah 31:1-6 and New Testament - John 20:1-18.
Gospel choir and soloist Dawn Robinson sang He Would Not Come Down From The Cross.
Title of Smith's sermon: "The Resurrection Changes Everything" appears as Powerpoint projection on the left and right walls.
Smith said when understanding Easter, it's hard for adults, just like little children to get past the candy -- the "candy-coated cliches" ... but the resurrection changes that.
He recounts the verses in John 15 and 16 when Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and started crying when she saw it empty because she believes that someone has stolen the body. Jesus then greeted her and she realized it was him and said, "Rabboni, teacher."
In an aside, Smith decries Dan Brown, author of The Da Vinci Code, for depicting Mary Magdalene as Jesus' girlfriend.
Smith says he knows that "sex sells" but says Mary Magdalene should be remembered for being Jesus' colleague who "walked with him and talked with him."
He said John and Peter had previously come into the tomb but all they saw was tattered linens. Mary saw two angels who comforted her before Jesus called her name.
She had gone in prepared to deal with death but "the resurrection made the difference," he said.
He talked about how his baby grandson's gurgling is actually "talking" because he is saying "I am here ... they tried to write me off as 3/5 a person in the Constitution, but I am here right now ... and is saying I am not going to let anybody from stopping me from being what God wants me to be."
Smith talked about his own mother's death and how she passed peacefully after he prayed for her to recover.
Toward the end of the sermon. Smith refers to the Visa commercial and how resurrection is priceless.
POTUS sits through service listening with his arm around Malia, nodding.
Service ends with the song Victory Today is Mine.
Smith thanks them for coming and says he hopes it won't be the last time and escorts him out at 11:59. POTUS shakes hands before leaving.
Motorcade leaving Shiloh en route to White House. Crowd of about 25 people is gathered outside the church to see POTUS depart. One women in a large white hat yells out to the motorcade, "Praise the Lord!"
Would Steve now like to withdraw the "preoccupied with" and "focused on" race remarks? In fact, is there
anything left of Steve's arguments? He failed to do the sort of research he assumes the White House didn't do. The White House may know (and have known) a lot more about Smith's sermons than Steve. The right-wing press, Fox, Rush, etc. have worked strenuously to make a mountain out of a molehill and Steve's reaction is precisely what they'd hoped to achieve. By reinforcing his anti-Obama preconceptions they strengthen customer attachment and loyalty.
Google-news "shiloh baptist" and the very first hit (at the moment) is of
THIS piece in the
Washington Times. Mr. Kuhner says Obama, "sat in the pews nodding in approval as Mr. Smith peddled his racialist vitriol." Bottom line: "Mr. Obama has black nationalist sympathies." All this on what turns out to be one somewhat weird comment about the baby in the midst of a sermon focused on the resurrection. I find it shameful that next to the online text of Kuhner's misinformed piece the WT, with the simple caption "Illustration: Presidential seal", displays this graphic:

Has the President, in his policies and official work, really earned this? The clenched fist, as noted in
THIS essay, represents "rebellion and militance (sic)". Has Obama borne out the fears (which I once shared in part) that he was a revolutionary and anti-American, committed to the destruction of the republic? Get real.
You can fool all of the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time, but eventually Americans in general are going to catch on to the tactics of the nasty right. Obama's release yesterday of his long-form birth certificate will convince many Americans that the nasty right's smearing of Obama is fantasy-based. This Shiloh Baptist story has no legs. How many other smears fit that description? Americans will catch on sooner or later. I hope the Republican candidate for Prez in 2012 realizes that, and rises above this sort of thing. One can focus on Obama's policies and official performance and make a good case he should be replaced. I'll vote for a Republican who does that; I will not vote for one who lowers him- or herself to baseless fear-mongering. I hope I'm not alone in that.