 
 
    
    
      Now, suddenly, the Reverend   Jeremiah Wright is misunderstood.  Suddenly, so-called black liberation theology   is misunderstood. 
     
    
      Wright's successor at Trinity   United Church of Christ, the Reverend Otis Moss III, won't bow to the wishes of   "they" to shut up.  It begs the question: "Who are they?"  The larger   white cultural?  Or liberals and Democrats who see all this unfavorable   publicity hurting the election chances of Barack Obama? 
     
    
      The sad truth is that neither the   Reverend Wright nor black liberation theology is being misunderstood.  Both,   thanks to the candidacy of Barack Obama, are being exposed.  God, in fact, works   in mysterious ways.  And unless it's the aforementioned liberals and Democrats   who are trying to hush up Wright, Moss and others of their ilk, sensible   Americans want to hear more, for knowledge is power, the power to combat hate.  
     
    
      And make no mistake, what   Americans are hearing, they don't like. In the Rasmussen   poll, 73% of voters find   Wright's comments to be racially divisive.  That's a broad cross section of   voters, including 58% of black voters.   
     
    
      In an article in the Washington Post,  unnamed ministers commented that black liberation   theology "encourages a preacher to speak forcefully against the institutions of   oppression..."
     
    
      And what might these institutions   be?  They are not specified.  But it is safe to say that they are not the welfare state or the Democratic Party.  Given that black liberation   theology is a product of the dreary leftist politics of the twentieth century,   the very vehicles employed by the left to advance statism certainly can't be the   culprits. 
     
    
      For the left, black liberation   theology makes for close to a perfect faith.  It is a political creed larded   with religion.  It serves not to reconcile and unite blacks with the larger   cultural, but to keep them separate.  Here, again, The Washington Post reports that "He [Wright] translated the Bible into lessons about...the   misguided pursuit of ‘middle-classness.'"
     
    
      Not very Martin Luther King-ish.    Further, all the kooky talk about the government infecting blacks with HIV is a   fine example of how the left will promote a lie to nurture alienation and   grievance.  To listen to Wright -- more an apostle of the left than the   Christian church -- the model for blacks is alienation, deep resentment,   separation and grievance.  All of which leads to militancy.  Militancy is   important.  It's the sword dangled over the head of society.  Either fork over   more tax dollars, government services and patronage or else.  And unlike the   Reverend Moss and his kindred, I'll specify the "else."  Civil unrest.    Disruptions in cities.  Riot in the streets.
     
    
      Keeping blacks who fall into the   orbit of a Reverend Wright at a near-boil is a card used by leftist agitators to   serve their ends: they want bigger and more pervasive government -- and they   want badly to run it.
     
    
      If any further proof is needed   that black liberation theology has nothing to do with the vision of Martin   Luther King -- with reconciliation, brotherhood and universality -- the words of   James H. Cone, on faculty at New York's Union Theological Seminary, may   persuade.  Cone, not incidentally, originated the movement known as black   liberation theology.  He said to The Washington Post:
     
    
        "The Christian faith has been   interpreted largely by those who enslaved black people, and by the people who   segregated them."
       
    
    
      No mention of the Civil War   involving the sacrifices of tens of thousands of lives; no abolition or civil   rights movements.  No Abraham Lincoln.  No Harriet Beecher Stowe.  No white   civil rights workers who risked and, in some instances, lost their lives   crusading in the south to end segregation.  And since the civil rights movement,   society hasn't opened up; blacks have no better access to jobs and housing; no   greater opportunities.  The federal government, led by a white liberal, Lyndon   Johnson, did not pour billions of dollars into welfare programs and education   targeted at inner cities in an attempt to right old wrongs.  And still does so.    A black man, Barak Obama, on the threshold of winning his party's nomination for   president, has in no way done so with the help of white voters in communities   across the land.     
     
    
      In the closed world of Cone,   Wright and Moss, Jefferson Davis and Bull Connor are alive and well.  Black   victimhood is the doing of white society, not the doing of angry black leaders   and leftists, who see advantage and profit in keeping too many people in black   communities captive.      
     
    
      Barack Obama knows all this, as a   seventeen year congregant at Wright's church, and as a liberal community   activist prior to his election to the Illinois Senate.  That he feigns   innocence, or that he professes forbearance for some of Wright's words   because of the goodness of others, is not the line one expects from a   post-racial politician.  It is what is expected from a man whose career is   steeped in racial politics, a politics that does great harm to the very people   it purports to serve. 
     
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