Media Matters has a piece on Tucker Carlson's comments on Barack Obama's church, Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. Apparently, if you can't smear a person by calling them a closet Muslim, perhaps even a closet terrorist (he went to a madrassah, you know, in Indonesia), then you can at least question the bona fides, not so much of his faith, but of the faith of an entire congregation. Man, Tucker, I'm impressed - you managed to get all that in. How do you do it?
The part that has Tucker's tie spinning like something out of The Three Stooges is the church, a predominantly African-American church, includes in its own mission statement what Carlson calls "a disavowal of the pursuit of 'middle classness'", and Carlson says that is somehow, not just un-American, but (gasp!) un-Christian. That would be true if Jesus had been a middle-class white guy from the suburbs, the figure that probably comes up in Carlson's fetid mind whenever he hears the name mentioned. Except, of course, Jesus was a dark, long-haired, carpenter/stone-mason who spoke Aramaic and resembled Yassar Arafat more than he did Jeffrey Hunter (if you haven't seen The Greatest Story Ever Told, you're missing a really campy rendition of the Gospel story; Hunter committed suicide not long after the release of this movie). More to the point, the refusal to pursue "middle classness" is, as a pastor-theologian has pointed out, the refusal to align the Gospel of Jesus Christ with the dominant ethic and lebensweld of bourgoise America. Nothing wrong with that, unless you are an upper-class twit who knows nothing about the actual content of the Christian message, or its revolutionary message.
As per the previous post, please hold on as this particular point of view makes its way around the right-wing. I feel sorry for the folks at Trinity UCC, going about the business of figuring out how to live as faithful Christians, and having a ninny in a bow-tie dis them on national television. There might be some good that comes from this, but we need to make sure the idiocy stops where it started.