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Bush talking more about religion

'Faith to solve the nation's deepest problems'

President Bush became a born-again Christian in the 1980s.
President Bush became a born-again Christian in the 1980s.

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QUOTES
Recent quotes from President Bush casting events and his agenda in moral and spiritual terms: 

On the economy:
"We've got plans in place to encourage job growth, ways to stimulate the entrepreneurial spirit of the country, encourage small business expansion so that people can find work. Yet there are some needs that prosperity can never meet."
-- to National Religious Broadcasters, February 10.

On  welfare:
"We just reformed our welfare in America and we've helped a lot of people. Yet, even as we work to improve the welfare laws, we know that welfare policy will not solve the deepest problems of the spirit."
-- in Nashville

On the environment:
-- "I don't know if you and I are going to be driving one of these cars, but our grandkids will. And we can say we did our duty. You know, we can look back and say we came, stayed here for just a little bit, proposed some initiatives that would fundamentally alter the American way of life in a positive way, got it started and went home knowing we were called upon and we answered the bell."
-- promoting his hydrogen fuel initiative,  February 7.

On preparing for war:
--"We also can be confident in the ways of providence, even when they are far from our understanding. Events aren't moved by blind and chance. Behind all of life and all of history there is a dedication and purpose set by the hand of a just and faithful God, and that hope will never be shaken. In this hour of our country's history, we stand in the need of prayer."
-- at National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, February 6.

On AIDS:
-- "America believes deeply that everybody has worth, everybody matters, everybody was created by the Almighty. And we're going to act on that belief, and we'll act on that passion. You know, the world looks at us and say, 'They're strong.' And we are, we're strong militarily. We've got a greater strength than that; we've got a strength in the universality of human rights and the human condition. It's in our country's history. It's ingrained in our soul. And today we're going to describe how we're going to act, not just talk, but act , on the basis of our firm beliefs."
-- on his plan to spend more to fight AIDS overseas, January 31

WASHINGTON (AP) -- "I welcome faith to help solve the nation's deepest problems," President Bush told a convention of religious broadcasters last week.

Earlier, in his State of the Union address, he said, "The liberty we prize is not America's gift to the world, it is God's gift to humanity."

The president, often portrayed as using a strict good-and-evil compass to navigate national issues, has always peppered his speeches with exhortations to moral and civic duty. And with war, tragedy and terrorism confronting him all at once, Bush's allusions to spirituality and morality seem to be increasing.

Speaking to the broadcasters in Nashville, Tennessee, last week about the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Bush said, "We carried our grief to the Lord Almighty in prayer."

Hours after the shuttle Columbia disintegrated, Bush turned to religion and a quote from the book of Isaiah to help console the nation.

"The same Creator who names the stars also knows the names of the seven souls we mourn today. The crew of the shuttle Columbia did not return safely to Earth; yet we can pray that all are safely home," the president said.

Expressions of faith and values are familiar ground for American presidents, and this one, who became a born-again Christian in the 1980s after concluding he was drinking too much, is no exception. Yet lately, Bush has gone beyond his usual broad remarks on the power of faith in general to use language and ideas specific to Christianity.

It is a welcome message for some, particularly the evangelical Christian conservatives whom Bush is courting as he seeks a second term. Some others are uncomfortable.

"This president is using general references and, beyond that, terminology and vocabulary that come straight out of a very particular religious tradition, which is evangelical Christianity," said the Rev. C. Welton Gaddy, a Louisiana pastor and executive director of the Interfaith Alliance Foundation, an umbrella interfaith group.

"I think his rhetoric implies a lack of appreciation for the vast pluralism of religion in this nation," Gaddy said.

Potentially alienating?

Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, said Bush speeches have started sounding "more and more like a sermon in a church" and risk alienating significant chunks of his constituency.

"When presidents start to become theologians on a regular basis, they begin to exclude people from their audience," Lynn said.

White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said Bush is comfortable speaking about religion because of its importance to him personally.

"The president when he speaks, speaks in a very inclusive way, very respectful ... of the fact that we are a nation whose great strengths come from the fact that we have people of so many faiths and people who have chosen not to have any particular religious affiliation," Fleischer said.

In his State of the Union address, Bush reflected on the challenges facing the nation as it prepares for possible war:

"We Americans have faith in ourselves, but not in ourselves alone. We do not claim to know all the ways of providence, yet we can trust in them, placing our confidence in the loving God behind all of life and all of history. May he guide us now, and may God continue to bless the United States of America."

In Nashville, Bush praised Americans' "deep and diverse religious beliefs." But he also singled out a special place for Christianity, calling the gospel that the broadcasters share over the airwaves "words of truth."

More generally, the president has delivered several passion-filled speeches recently on behalf of his proposal to spend billions more to combat AIDS abroad. In Grand Rapids, Michigan, the day after his State of the Union address, Bush said the humanitarian crisis is a chance "a moral nation" cannot pass up to use its riches and know-how for good.


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