The word “Christian” has many senses. Mormons claim that “Christian” applies to them. So do Jehovah’s Witnesses. So did the Branch Dividians. So this English word, like many others, is infected with ambiguity and vagueness. I believe that when people hear Barack Obama say that he is a Christian, they understand the word in a particular sense. Namely, Peter the Presbyterian believes that Barack Obama means that he (Obama) is a “Christian” in whatever sense Peter takes himself to be a “Christian.” And Jeff the Jehovah’s Witness believes that Barack Obama is a “Christian” in whatever (very inclusive) sense Jeff takes himself to be a “Christian.” If you’re reading this, chances are you’re an Evangelical. When you hear Barack Obama say that he is a “Christian,” you probably understand him to be endorsing a certain set of minimal “Christian” doctrines that is compatible with Evangelicalism. Probably you don’t think Obama is a full-blown Evangelical, but you at least take him to be endorsing something like C.S. Lewis’ “mere Christianity,” which is compatible with Evangelicalism. Right? Well, the bad news is that Barack Obama does not believe that he is an Evangelical. When asked that exact question by Cathleen Falsani, Obama’s answer was “I’m not sure.” The worse news is that Barack Obama does not even subscribe to C.S. Lewis’ “mere Christianity.” Barack Obama’s beliefs are incompatible with Evangelicalism. They’re also incompatible with Presbyterianism, Lutheranism, and indeed all forms of traditional, orthodox Christianity. That makes Obama a heretic, in the most precise sense of the word. Barack Obama cannot in good conscience endorse the Nicene Creed. Neither does he endorse Biblical inerrancy. And he flat-out denies the reality of hell. In an interview with Cathleen Falsani, Obama denied that anyone will go to hell:
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