Black Pastors' reason to back Bush is baffling.
Thursday, September 2, 2004 at 05:50PM
TheSpook
- Originally published in the Alameda Times-Star September 2, 2004
Copyright 2004 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers
WHEN the president decided to join the Christian Right's fanatical dogma
by supporting a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, I thought it
was nothing more than a politician's desperate attempt to secure his
base.
Never in my wildest dreams did I believe it would be an effective recruiting tool to lure African Americans
into the GOP. But recently I was reminded by a group of black pastors
representing churches in Oakland that the more I engage in the human
adventure, the less I know.
While standing
on the corner of 34th Street and San Pablo Avenue, a haven for drugs
and prostitution and one of the most violent areas in the city,
according to Oakland police, a group of black pastors, citing biblical
opposition to same-sex marriage, openly declared their support for
President Bush in the November election.
I have no problem with the pastors in question supporting the
president; there is nothing to suggest African-American politics should
be monolithic in its support, but how can same-sex marriage be THE
issue?
The pastors, in taking a position to the right of Vice President Dick
Cheney, were concerned that Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John
Kerry favors letting states decide whether to allow same-sex marriages.
It
is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than to amend
the Constitution -- the latter has only happened 27 times in our
history.
Perhaps the pastors were unaware
that, before, the Senate used three days of the people's business to
debate a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage that most knew it had
no chance of passing.
Kerry's position is
identical to that of many conservatives: A ban on same-sex marriage
does not rise to the level of a constitutional amendment, thereby
making it a nonissue that should be left up to the states to decide.
Assuming
that I understand the argument of the pastors correctly, they have
opted to use some of their leadership capital to support the
president's re-election based solely on his rhetoric on a nonissue.
The
pastors must somehow be convinced that the possibility of a second term
that would allow Bush to nominate another Clarence Thomas, Antonin
Scalia or some combination thereof to the Supreme Court is a risk worth
taking.
How can the pastors give this
single nonissue greater importance than the candidates' positions on
aid to poor children, military spending, stem cell research, education,
labor and environmental protections on trade agreements, health care, a
livable wage or corporate welfare?
I would
also be interested to know if the pastors, after making their remarks,
walked along San Pablo Avenue to ascertain the five most important
issues to the residents of that community. If so, how many cited a
constitutional ban on same-sex marriage?
Perhaps my greatest confusion lies in their use of biblical justification to support their position.
While
the pastors have several scriptures that validate their position, there
is a lot hidden between Genesis and Revelation that had to be ignored
in order to myopically conclude George W. Bush was their man.
I
am quite certain somewhere in the Bible it reads, "Thou shall not
kill." Moreover, I believe it also says, "Men and women will beat the
swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks: nation
shall not lift up a sword against nation, neither shall they learn war
any more."
President Bush has used our tax
dollars to learn war with such precision that he is a dissertation away
from a doctorate. Using misleading and woefully inaccurate reasoning to
justify war, he has sent nearly 1,000 innocent men and women to their
deaths, 5,000 soldiers to be maimed, and roughly
10,000 Iraqis know firsthand what can happen when our "smart bombs" lose some of their IQ.
Yet,
these pastors believe that our future depends on the unlikely
possibility of a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage. Only the
pastors know within their hearts whether this nonissue is indeed the
genesis of their support for the president.
Given
the importance of this election, I'm just saddened that they could not
have held out their endorsement for something more meaningful.
- Byron Williams is an Oakland pastor and syndicated columnist.
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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