July 22, 2009 2:19 PM

For Obama, A High-Stakes Church Search

(AP)  President Barack Obama and his family are looking for a new church, but his decision represents more than merely settling on a pew.

The Obamas planned to attend Easter services Sunday, marking the president's first visit to a Washington church since taking office in January. Aides have been secretive about which church the first family will attend, citing security and the desire not to disrupt services for other worshippers. They also caution that the church Obama visits might not signal that the president has decided on a permanent place of worship.

Obama's choice of a permanent pastor is sure to draw scrutiny, given his history with a pastor in Chicago whose bombastic sermons almost destroyed Obama's presidential bid.

"On one level, I think he's just getting acclimated to DC. He's still feeling things out. Easter is a very important day in the Christian calendar; he's a Christian," said J. Kameron Carter, who teaches theology and black church studies at Duke University. "But you are the president. Whatever decision he makes is going to be analyzed with a fine-tooth comb against the backdrop of the Rev. Wright."

Obama's presidential campaign was blind-sided last year when video surfaced of his friend and pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, condemning the United States and suggesting the government was to blame for the HIV/AIDS scourge on black communities. Wright's sermons forced the then-senator to deliver two speeches: the first, a tempered defense of the pastor whose rhetoric inspired the name of Obama's memoir; later, a speech about Obama's views on race that has been viewed almost 6 million times online.

Wright followed up with a media tour that personally frustrated Obama and politically enraged his aides. Obama left Trinity United Church of Christ and has been without an official house of worship since then, instead relying on a close circle of advisers and pastors to help him in private.

"What the president should do - and I believe would do - is find a church home that's good for his family," said Jim Wallis, a progressive evangelical who speaks with White House aides several times each day and Obama frequently.

"In the post-Jeremiah world, he can't just do that," Wallis said.

But Obama has told his advisers he needs a church, and he faces choice.

He could join a historically African-American church in the nation's capital, where 55 percent of the population is black. It would be a nod to his family's roots on the South Side of Chicago, a signal to his black supporters who helped fuel his rapid rise and a cue to his two young daughters. It could also be a danger if a message from the pulpit comes anywhere close to Wright's heated rhetoric.

Aides say he could just as easily select an integrated church, similar to the one his visited immediately after his South Carolina Democratic primary win last year. Obama made his first appearance after the victory at an interracial and interdenominational church in Macon, Ga. The move helped him with whites concerned Obama was merely a candidate for black voters and helped him win that state's nominating contest.

Experts caution reading too much into what Obama does on Sunday and beyond to address his personal faith.

"At the end of the day, whatever way he finally goes is going to be dissected," said Carter of Duke's divinity school. "I think it gets in the way on some level."

So far, Obama hasn't really needed a church to call his own; he spent last Easter in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Christmas in Hawaii.

But for his first major Christian holiday as president, Obama is publicly marking the celebration. Obama enlisted aides, friends and advisers to scout out more than a dozen churches in the Washington area.

Since the New Year, the Obamas have only attended church services twice in Washington. Two days before the inauguration, Obama visited 19th Street Baptist Church where worshippers lined up three hours before the service.

"Just another typical Sunday," deadpanned the Rev. Derrick Harkins of 19th Street, one of the oldest historically black churches in Washington.

Aides this week said the Obamas would not be visiting 19th Street for Easter.

Obama and his family attended a private service at St. John's Church on Inauguration Day, a tradition for those about to become president. The Rev. Luis Leon welcomed the Obamas to the Episcopalian church and noted every president since James Madison has worshipped at the church at least once, "some of them kicking and screaming."

White House aides note the Obamas have spent several weekends at the presidential retreat at Camp David, where there is a chapel. Aides say there would be no way to know if the Obamas visited the chapel for private prayer with a guest pastor.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 55 Comments
by democracy1 April 13, 2009 7:31 PM EDT
And PS--religion is carried in anyone's GENES--it's NOT biological.
Posted by democracy1 at 4:29 PM : Apr 13, 2009

Typo--meant to say "it's NOT carried in anyone's genes". ;)
Reply to this comment
by democracy1 April 13, 2009 7:29 PM EDT
He was NOT saying that he was Muslim.
Posted by democracy1

Yes if you were of Christian birth, with Christian genes and standing in the middle of Indonesia one could say I am one of them and remain a Christian. But having a father and family all from Muslim genes anywhere you stand and say I am one of them means you are a Muslim, and will remain one of them till you die. With Muslim genes he should be proud of them and proud that he follows his fathers heritage as I am proud of my heritage.
Posted by banders6 at 5:40 AM : Apr 13, 2009

Here in America, no one else--no members of any religion--not even your parents--are allowed to DICTATE your religion to you. He can be proud of his ethnic heritage without having his religion ASSIGNED and dictated to him, no matter what you or any member of ANY religion believe.

And PS--religion is carried in anyone's GENES--it's NOT biological.
Reply to this comment
by dsforget April 13, 2009 3:23 PM EDT
May God Bless the Obamas and their search for a Church in D.C. !!!
I pray they will find a Church which is right for their young girls as well as themselves.

A Religion is one thing - but the Pastor leads the way. I (myself) have found that a simple
"Good Morning" WITH a SMILE - or a HUG - means so much. I left my previous church
because a 'sort of smile' and a polite "Good Morning" left me feeling 'isolated'. My
current Church is very welcoming! Best of Luck !!!
Reply to this comment
by banders6 April 13, 2009 8:40 AM EDT
He was NOT saying that he was Muslim.
Posted by democracy1

Yes if you were of Christian birth, with Christian genes and standing in the middle of Indonesia one could say I am one of them and remain a Christian. But having a father and family all from Muslim genes anywhere you stand and say I am one of them means you are a Muslim, and will remain one of them till you die. With Muslim genes he should be proud of them and proud that he follows his fathers heritage as I am proud of my heritage.
Reply to this comment
by democracy1 April 12, 2009 8:07 PM EDT
Al-Jazeera's Anita McNaught, reporting from Istanbul, with BO talking about the Muslim faith said he (BO) personalized that message by saying, I know because I am one of them. democracy1 you need to get back to reading MSM.
Posted by banders6 at 8:08 AM : Apr 12, 2009

"Many other Americans have Muslims in their family, or have lived in a Muslim-majority country - I know, because I am one of them."

"One of them" was referring to where he was talking about people who had been brought up in a predominately Muslim country. He was NOT saying that he was Muslim.

Go back to the 3rd grade and brush up on your reading comprehension skills.
Reply to this comment
by ramos1129 April 12, 2009 5:48 PM EDT
Why is this even an issue?? Obama is free to worship where he wants to and when he wants to. The WH and Camp David both have chapels. If he chooses to attend services there, why is it anyone elses's business where he attends?

The media has to get off this kick of trying to make news where there is none.
Reply to this comment
by jamesguy April 12, 2009 4:59 PM EDT
-You won't be able to say that at the Day of Judgment.

Your mockery and scoffing is only going to be temporary. You can be assured of that.
Posted by Hyptnotized_Liberals

You gotta die to claim your prize. Better get to that.
Reply to this comment
by jamesguy April 12, 2009 4:46 PM EDT
Did God rape Mary? Just sayin'.
Posted by mcthreeteeth

Now you've made zombie Jesus angry. He's going to come through your window and eat your brain tonight!
Reply to this comment
by jamesguy April 12, 2009 4:44 PM EDT
John McCain doesn't go to church. Palin goes to a church with an African witch doctor as the pastor. This is absolutely true.
Reply to this comment
by jdog911-2009 April 12, 2009 4:08 PM EDT
Wow, I have seen some stupid comments, but some of these take the cake. May all of you take the time to truly educate yourself, instead of listening to the rumors, lies, and bias of both the right and the left. So far I have seen a person try to make change in the way they see fit, just as another person tried to do for the last 8 years. It is too soon to make judgements, lets see what both of these people's actions end up doing.
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