Christian Post
 
 
In Pushing Homosexual Agenda Globally, Obama Admin Seeks to Co-opt,  
Marginalize Religion

 
 
By _Piero A. Tozzi_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/piero-a-tozzi/)   
, CP Guest Contributor
April 6, 2012|10:19 am
In a major foreign policy address last December in  Geneva before United 
Nations delegates, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton  identified "deeply-held 
… religious beliefs" as among "the obstacles standing in  the way of 
protecting the human rights of LGBT [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,  Transgender] 
people." Criticizing those who "cite religious or cultural values"  to oppose 
"LGBT" rights, she then made a doctrinal point: if properly  understood, 
"religious traditions" actually support the progressive march of  "_human  
rights_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/human-rights/) " and sanction homosexual 
behavior.
Clinton's remarks followed an executive order making "combating  
criminalization of LGBT status or conduct" by foreign governments "central" to  
U.S. 
foreign policy. 
Harnessing a "good religion vs. bad" theme to advance divisive social 
policy  strikes a favored administration chord. Just as the White House has 
promoted  ObamaCare's _abortion_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/abortion/)  
 pill/contraception mandate by using "Catholic" spokesmen such as Health 
and  Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Vice President Joe Biden 
to blunt  Church disapproval, the Obama administration speaks in religious 
language to  advance its global social policy objectives while marginalizing 
faith-based  opposition. 
In Jamaica, for example, activists attribute religion-based disapproval of  
homosexual conduct as a factor in the continued penalization of sodomy. 
U.S.  Ambassador Pamela Bridgewater has intervened in Jamaican domestic debates 
under  the guise of combating "homophobia," framing the issue in religious 
terms: "As a  lifelong Christian, I sometimes struggle with religious 
beliefs which seem to be  at odds with tolerance. Then, I simply consider 
afresh 
the gospel of love, which  convinces me that tolerance is in accordance with 
the Christian faith and  practice." 
Bridgewater, an accomplished diplomat in her own right and former President 
 George W. Bush's ambassador to Ghana, is a strategic choice for another 
reason:  Her husband, Rev. A. Russell Awkward, is a dynamic African-American 
Baptist  pastor, who thus cloaks his wife's statements with vicarious 
clerical approval  in a society where the voice of clergy is given great 
weight. 
In El Salvador, where last June then-acting Ambassador Carmen Aponte 
created  a kerfuffle by penning a heavy-handed article decrying "homophobia" in 
the local  press, part of the U.S. strategy has been to work with the Anglican 
church as  "one of the only LGBT-friendly religious institutions in El 
Salvador," according  to an unclassified State Department document, thereby 
aligning with a  "progressive" _denomination_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/denomination/)   against "reactionary" 
Catholics and _Evangelicals_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/evangelicals/) .  
Other clergy enlisted in the Obama administration's religious offensive  
include Bishop John Bryson Chane, the retired Episcopal bishop of Washington,  
D.C. Chane served as a U.S. delegate at a meeting in Kazakhstan on "the 
rights  of [LGBT] persons in Central Asia," where activists excoriated 
Evangelicals and  other religious groups for opposing persons of 
"non-traditional  
orientation." 
Bishop Chane is an interesting choice: a number of years ago he promoted  
himself as the chief antagonist of Nigerian Archbishop Peter Akinola, who had 
 championed the rights of traditionalist _Anglicans_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/anglicans/)  in North  America and 
_Europe_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/region/europe/)  displaced by  progressives 
within their own 
denomination. The Obama administration appears to  pay close attention to an 
on-going intra-Christian debate, co-opting sympathetic  clergy to advance its 
objectives. 
Indeed, for what most would consider a secular-minded administration, the  
Obama presidency seems exceptionally concerned about dictating what religion 
 ought say and do regarding moral issues, going so far as to define what is 
a  religious body via federal regulation and thus breaching the wall that 
protects  the church from the state. 
"Kulturkampf" refers to Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck's policy in 
the  1870s to marginalize the Catholic Church, which he thought impeded 
building a  centralized, paternalistic state. Similarly, the Obama 
administration 
has picked  a battle with Evangelicals and Catholics, whose biblical and 
natural law-based  alternative narrative stands in the way of the Latex Left's 
quest for utopia at  home and abroad. 
----------------------------- 
Piero A. Tozzi serves as senior counsel with the  Alliance Defense Fund at 
its headquarters in Scottsdale, Arizona, where he plays  a key role with 
ADF-Global.

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