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babylonsister

(171,035 posts)
Fri Jun 26, 2015, 08:27 PM Jun 2015

Obama Transformed

sniff...sniff...

http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2015/06/obama_s_clementa_pinckney_eulogy_in_a_week_the_president_went_from_dejection.html

Obama Transformed

The remarkable week that roused the president from dejection and inspired a stirring call to action.
By John Dickerson

President Barack Obama delivers the eulogy for the Rev. Clementa Pinckney during Pinckney’s funeral service on June 26, 2015, in Charleston, South Carolina.

Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

snip//

The president was no longer giving a speech about a tragedy; he was trying to leverage the grace displayed in the wake of that heinous act into a nation’s purpose. “As a nation out of this terrible tragedy, God has visited grace upon us,” he said. “He has allowed us to see where we have been blind.” It was that grace, the president argued, that helped South Carolina lawmakers conclude that the Confederate flag should come down.

But there was more power in grace than simply providing the impetus to lower a flag. “He has given us the chance where we have been lost to find our best selves,” the president said. “We may not have earned grace, but we got it all the same. He gave it to us anyway.” And that means, he continued, that America has a duty: “It is up to us now to make the most of it. To receive it with gratitude and prove ourselves worthy of this gift.”

The president then outlined the worthy fights, from lessening gun violence to tackling poverty to improving race relations. If you were moved by the response to the shooting, he was arguing, then you have a commitment to be true to what inspired that moving response. If Americans make those commitments and stay focused on improving those injustices, the president said, “by doing that, we express God’s grace.”

This was not a rhetorical exercise, or not merely one. It was a demonstration of the power the president had found in the example of the people of Charleston—both the living and the dead. He wasn’t just telling. He was showing—the power he was trying to summon in this speech came from his own feeling of gratitude and obligation to serve as an example of grace. Even if you didn’t agree with any of what the president said, the distance the president traveled in this one week was a kind of testimony of its own. By the end of his oration, the president was leading the congregation in an impromptu rendition of “Amazing Grace.”

It was the second time in the day, and the third time in two days, that the president had made testimonials to the power of keeping the faith. Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled on a legislative interpretation that allowed the Affordable Care Act to survive, enshrining the president’s signature legislative achievement after years of pitched battle. Friday, the Supreme Court announced that same-sex couples had a constitutional right to marry, rooted in the 14th Amendment, written in the wake of the Civil War to grant citizenship to people once enslaved.

Speaking in the Rose Garden on Friday morning the president said the same-sex marriage ruling was a testament to the power of perseverance in the struggle. “Progress on this journey often comes in small increments, sometimes two steps forward, one step back, propelled by the persistent effort of dedicated citizens. And then sometimes, there are days like this, when that slow, steady effort is rewarded with justice that arrives like a thunderbolt.”

The thunderbolts of change that struck this week seem to have energized the president. He might have given the same eulogy had he not had his opinions affirmed by the Supreme Court. But given the sense of vindication that he feels, it was easy to see how those secular victories gave him the confidence to make that soaring religious speech and to wipe away the intimations toward capitulation and defeat from just a little more than a week ago.

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Obama Transformed (Original Post) babylonsister Jun 2015 OP
I was working. sheshe2 Jun 2015 #1
It's ok, sheshe. brer cat Jun 2015 #2
Lol~ sheshe2 Jun 2015 #5
It is on YouTube...I now have a copy. dixiegrrrrl Jun 2015 #6
I'll watch tomorrow after work. sheshe2 Jun 2015 #7
Powerful preaching... regnaD kciN Jun 2015 #3
Agreed! And babylonsister Jun 2015 #4
VIDEO: President Obama sings Amazing Grace freshwest Jun 2015 #8
Mahalo babylonsistah~ Cha Jun 2015 #9
exactly, cha ~ hopemountain Jun 2015 #13
Aloha hopemountain.. Cha Jun 2015 #14
... hopemountain Jun 2015 #15
History will rank this speech on a par with Lincoln's Gettysburg address Gothmog Jun 2015 #10
I agree! MBS Jun 2015 #11
I recall Reagan's memorial address for the Challenger's crew SleeplessinSoCal Jun 2015 #12

sheshe2

(83,654 posts)
5. Lol~
Fri Jun 26, 2015, 08:56 PM
Jun 2015

Ya, just the awesomeness of our awesome President. His support of gay marriage helped move us forward on LGBT equality.

From the little I have read his grace at the Eulogy today not looking back, yet again taking us forward.

brer cat.

sheshe2

(83,654 posts)
7. I'll watch tomorrow after work.
Fri Jun 26, 2015, 10:26 PM
Jun 2015

I know I will be moved to tears. I know I will be proud, dixiegirl.

Thanks~

freshwest

(53,661 posts)
8. VIDEO: President Obama sings Amazing Grace
Sat Jun 27, 2015, 12:18 AM
Jun 2015


Published on Jun 26, 2015

President Obama sings Amazing Grace. Watch the complete funeral for South Carolina State Senator Clementa Pinckney here:

Cha

(296,848 posts)
9. Mahalo babylonsistah~
Sat Jun 27, 2015, 05:24 AM
Jun 2015
"It was a demonstration of the power the president had found in the example of the people of Charleston—both the living and the dead. He wasn’t just telling. He was showing—the power he was trying to summon in this speech came from his own feeling of gratitude and obligation to serve as an example of grace."

So powerful!



hopemountain

(3,919 posts)
13. exactly, cha ~
Sun Jun 28, 2015, 01:31 AM
Jun 2015

beautifully stated.
and, the reverened senator was an extraordinary man - and leader in his own right. what a day in history.

Gothmog

(144,920 posts)
10. History will rank this speech on a par with Lincoln's Gettysburg address
Sat Jun 27, 2015, 06:53 AM
Jun 2015

This was one of the most moving speeches that I have heard in my lifetime. It was truly amazing

MBS

(9,688 posts)
11. I agree!
Sat Jun 27, 2015, 09:14 AM
Jun 2015

It was both moving and truly profound-- perhaps the best I've heard in my lifetime.

And , to me, it connected the dots with his 2004 speech to the Democratic Convention. He really has, always, been about the UNITED States of America. And about lifting us up, calling us to our better angels. Boy did he ever do that this time.

SleeplessinSoCal

(9,085 posts)
12. I recall Reagan's memorial address for the Challenger's crew
Sat Jun 27, 2015, 06:39 PM
Jun 2015

It helped to inspire in a time of national mourning. President Obama's eulogy seemed a perfect and uplifting message to the country as well as for Clementa Pinckeny's family and the bereaved at Mother Emanuel.

He said and did more to help the cause of ending racism and resentment of the poor
yesterday than I think anyone thought imaginable.

I think it's because he "took us all to church".

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