INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.salon.com/2009/11/24/praying_for_obama_death/
Tuesday, Nov 24, 2009
09:24 AM +0800
Praying for Obama’s death
Pastors are invoking Psalm 109 --
"May his days be few" -- in hopes of saving our country, and our
souls
Pastor
Wiley Drake preaches on most Sundays in a church tucked in between California’s
big amusement parks, a place some people refer to as “Wiley World.”
The
particular Sunday I visited First Southern Baptist Church was the weekend
following the Fort Hood tragedy, when U.S. Army psychiatrist, and Muslim, Maj.
Nidal M. Hasan, shot and killed 13 people.
“Ladies
and gentlemen,” Drake said as he addressed the group of about 60 gathered in
Buena Park that evening, just down the street from Knott’s Berry Farm. “If
they’re a Muslim, they’re a danger to this country.”
Statements
like these are a dime a dozen in “Wiley World.” Political correctness isn’t a concern
to Drake. And yet, his assertions about Muslims are far from his most
controversial. What has garnered him the most media attention is what he said to national radio talk show
host Alan Colmes in June.
“Are you praying for his death?” Colmes asked Drake, referring to President Obama. “Yes,”
Drake replied. “So you’re praying for the death of the
president of the United States?” Colmes asked. “Yes.”
“You would like for the president of the United States to die?” Colmes asked
once more. “If he does not turn to God and does not turn his life around, I am
asking God to enforce imprecatory prayers that are throughout the Scripture
that would cause him death, that’s correct.”
Drake
says he regrets the media frenzy caused by the Colmes interview, but he stands
by his use of imprecatory prayer, a form of prayer he says is biblically
mandated — an appeal to God that is, unlike most prayers, a request not for
something positive but for misfortune, a kind of curse meant to fall on those
considered evildoers.
With
his gray hair slicked back and a slightly pinkish complexion, Drake sported
suspenders and glasses as he explained that his decision to use imprecatory
prayers stemmed from a desire to better organize his early morning telephonic
prayer meetings. Drake decided praying the Psalms would be one way of
redirecting these sessions. But soon, he came to Psalm 109: “May his days be few; may another take his place of
leadership. May his children be fatherless, and his wife a widow.”
“That’s the one that got me in trouble,” Drake says now.
The
problem is that Drake began to recite this prayer, and others like it, while
keeping certain people in mind. In the case of Psalm 109? President Barack
Obama.
Persecute them. ... Let them be put to shame
and perish. ... Let his children be fatherless, and his wife a widow. ... Let
his children be continually vagabonds, and beg. Let there be none to extend
mercy unto him, neither let there be any to favour his fatherless children. –
Wiley Drake
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.azquotes.com/quote/1228101]
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But
Drake is far from alone in his use of imprecatory prayers. Pastor Steve
Anderson of Faithful World Baptist Church in Tempe, Ariz., also incorporates
this form of prayer in his worship. In fact, Frederick Clarkson of Religion
Dispatches surmises that Anderson inspired one regular attendant of Faithful
World Baptist, 28-year-old Chris Broughton, to show up to a speech by the
president with two guns in hand when he issued the following sermon:
“You’re going to tell me that I’m supposed to pray for the socialist
devil, murderer, infanticide, who wants to see young children, and he wants to
see babies killed through abortion and partial-birth abortion and all these
different things,” Anderson
said, referring to President Obama. “Nope. I’m not
gonna pray for his good. I’m going to pray that he dies and goes to hell.”
There
are other signs imprecatory prayer is growing in popularity. Beliefnet’s Rabbi
Brad Hirschfield writes that Psalm 109 is now a top Google search; it’s even
inspired a line of bumper stickers and T-shirts that sinisterly read “Pray for
Obama,” while pointing to the Psalm, and in particular, the passage that calls
for an end to present leadership, though Gawker
recently noted that CafePress, popular purveyor of homemade T-shirts, has
stopped selling the items.
But
what is it, exactly, that unites people who pray for the death of the
president?
Most
likely, it’s a rabid antiabortion stance. Drake “prayed” for abortion doctor
George Tiller, and reacted to Tiller’s murder by noting that his death was an answer to those prayers.
Drake
insists this isn’t as evil as it sounds.
“I’m not for a Christian or anybody killing somebody,” he told me. “That’s
God’s business.”
Tiller’s
death, then, according to Drake, must have been God’s will, and his prayers
simply aligned with God’s providence.
When
speaking about Obama, Drake often refers to “baby killing.” Anderson is also
pro-life. And both men believe homosexuality is a sin — views that fit neatly
into not only certain religious camps but political parties as well.
Anderson
is a member of the Constitution Party, which is, according to its own site, the third largest political
party in the United States in terms of voter registration — a party that is
pro-life, pro-gun and anti-gay. The monthly newsletter, Ballot Access News,
puts the party’s voter registration total at more than 400,000 or .44 percent.
This is considerably less than the numbers Democrats, Republicans or
Independents boast, but still greater than the numbers on record for the
Libertarian Party or the Green Party. And Drake himself ran for vice-president
of the United States on Alan Keyes’ 2008 ticket as a member of the American
Independent Party, the California affiliate of the Constitution Party.
But
aside from politics, there is the question of whether people who pray the
Psalms in this manner stand on any kind of solid theological ground.
Stephen
Chapman from Duke University’s Center for Jewish Studies says Jews and
Christians inherited the tradition of imprecatory prayer from the Ancient Near
East but used this form of prayer in a specific way: Imprecatory prayers were
meant to remind the faithful of the covenant they held with God and the
consequences that would follow if that covenant was broken.
Given
the New Testament’s message of love and forgiveness, Christians in particular
have struggled with what to do with the material ever since, says Chapman.
But
Drake argues he’s in good company when it comes to imprecatory prayer. Both
Martin Luther and John Calvin prayed this way, he says. Still, there have been
other famous theologians, C.S. Lewis for one, who found these kinds of prayers
distasteful. Present-day Hebrew scholar Walter Brueggemann has tried to find
some kind of middle ground by arguing that the Psalms can serve as a kind of
liturgical venting — a psychological release from the pent-up anger and
frustration life continually piles on us.
The
Southern Baptist Convention has distanced itself from imprecatory prayer,
though Drake himself once served as the SBC’s vice-president; SBC president Dr.
Johnny Hunt has called imprecatory prayer unbiblical. But this is where, in a
sense, Drake is right and others are wrong. Prayers calling for the downfall of
our enemies can be found in the Bible, there’s no arguing that. But the
question is: What do we do with the text now?
This
isn’t an easy question to answer. Though Drake’s or Anderson’s actions may
strike most of us as plainly and abhorrently wrong, same-sex marriage no doubt
strikes Drake as decidedly wrong. That’s yet another conviction upheld with the
help of biblical text, and which is, no matter what fundamentalists argue,
clearly open to interpretation. It’s a reality that not even historical context
can save us from, and the danger that comes when considering a text as
beautifully complicated as the Bible sacred.
But
discrediting people like Drake or Anderson should remain a priority, even for
those of us who don’t believe in the power of prayer, because in these
instances prayer is tantamount to hate speech — an act of violence that the
First Amendment makes difficult to do anything about in the United States.
Drake has just recently lifted his call for imprecatory prayer against the
president, but only because he wants Obama to live long enough to stand trial
for treason. Drake continues to argue that Obama is not a U.S. citizen and that
his claim to the presidency is illegitimate as a result. But Drake is no doubt
using imprecatory prayers on others, and one look at the evidence screams he’s
not alone.
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