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Saturday, July 26, 2008
ELECTION
2008
WorldNetDaily
Rick
Warren, 'gay' advocate team up to host Obama-McCain
Joint
appearance at Saddleback Church co-sponsored by faith
group challenging 'right'
Posted: July 26, 2008
12:00 am Eastern
WorldNetDaily

Hillary
Clinton greeted by Rick Warren before her speech
at Saddleback Church in November (WND photo) |
The upcoming joint appearance by Sens. Barack Obama and
John McCain at Rick Warren's evangelical Saddleback
Church is co-sponsored by a left-leaning group led by a
Unitarian-Universalist minister who once headed her
denomination's homosexual advocacy office.
Meg Riley is the board president of Faith
in Public Life, whose board members include other
theological liberals, including a pro-abortion Muslim
leader and a Jewish rabbi, reported OneNewsNow.
The group's stated vision hints at its challenge to the
influence of the so-called religious right, saying it
"envisions a country in which diverse religious
voices for justice and the common good consistently
impact public policy; and those who use religion as a
tool of division and exclusion do not dominate public
discourse."
The blog
Watchers Lamp noted Faith in Public Life offers a list
of faith-based groups on its website that promote the
homosexual-rights agenda.
Warren told OneNewsNow, a Christian Internet site, he's
not troubled by the association with a group at odds
with his church's conservative evangelical theology.
"Really we just are ... co-hosting [the
event]," Warren said, noting Faith in Public Life
came up with the idea.
"Actually, we're in total control of the format,
the program, the questions," he said. "It's at
our church; and so it's not their event, it's our
event."
(Story continues below)
Warren will moderate the event with the presumed
Republican and Democratic presidential nominees Aug.16
at Saddleback Church's Civil Forum on Leadership and
Compassion. He said the forum will be "a civil and
thoughtful format absent the partisan 'gotcha' questions
that typically produce heat instead of light."
Issues, he suggested, would include poverty, HIV/AIDS,
climate and human rights.
Warren said that, at the candidates' request, the
two-hour forum will be held in a non-debate format and
open to all media. Both candidates want the questions to
be posed exclusively by Warren, instead of a panel or
members of the audience. Obama and McCain will each have
an hour to converse with Warren, beginning with Obama,
as determined by a coin toss.
As WND reported, Obama's
appearance in 2006 at Saddleback's Global Summit on
AIDS and the Church stirred controversy when some
evangelicals objected to a pro-choice Democrat being
given the pulpit of a church that opposes abortion. At
last year's AIDS summit, in November, Sen.
Hillary Clinton gave a warmly received speech while
Obama and McCain were among several candidates who
presented taped messages via satellite.
In addition to the Civil Forum event, Warren will
convene an interfaith meeting at the church for some 30
Christian, Jewish and Muslim leaders to discuss
"cooperation in projects for the common good of all
Americans."
Warren, author of the mega-best-seller "The Purpose
Driven Life," told OneNewsNow he does not believe
the biblical Gospel is compromised by working with
non-Christians in efforts to promote the "common
good."
"Now, I don't happen to agree with Muslims,"
Warren said, 'and I don't happen to agree with Jewish
people, and I don't even agree with all of the things
Catholics believe, but I ... can work with them on doing
something like stopping AIDS, because we all believe sex
is for marriage only."
In the candidates' forum, Warren plans to focus on
issues political reporters often ignore, such as how the
candidates view the Constitution. One question might be,
he told OneNewsNow, "Is it a quote 'living
document' that can be changed, that can be reinterpreted
with each generation as things change? Or is it a truth
written in granite that is a standard by which we
evaluate everything else, and you don't change it unless
we amend it?"
A Warren critic, evangelical pastor Bob DeWaay, author
of the book "Redefining Christianity: Understanding
the Purpose Driven Movement" and founder of the
apologetics ministry Critical Issues Commentary, says
he believes Warren is operating under the mistaken
notion that uniting all religions to fight problems like
AIDS and poverty will "warm people up" to
Christianity.
But he admits many evangelicals have a strong affinity
for Warren.
"He's a very likeable guy on the surface, and I
think pastors and Christians think, 'Well, look at this,
if he can get all these people on board and he can build
a big church and he's popular, and maybe if we get on
board with that, some of that will rub off. Maybe we'll
learn how to have a bigger church and how to be
popular,'" DeWaay said in an audio report on his
website.
But DeWaay often reminds people "Jesus told us that
the world would hate us."
"Okay, so something's seriously wrong if we do
achieve popularity with the world," he said.
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