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9:00 A.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you so much. To the co-chairs,
Jeff and Ann; to all the members of Congress who are here, the distinguished
guests who’ve traveled so far to be here this morning; to Randall for your
wonderful stories and powerful prayer; to all who are here providing testimony,
thank you so much for having me and Michelle here. We are blessed to be here.
I want to begin by just saying a word to Mark Kelly, who’s here. We have
been praying for Mark’s wife, Gabby Giffords, for many days now. But I want
Gabby and Mark and their entire family to know that we are with them for the
long haul, and God is with them for the long haul. (Applause.)
And even as we pray for Gabby in the aftermath of a tragedy here at home, we're
also mindful of the violence that we're now seeing in the Middle East, and we
pray that the violence in Egypt will end and that the rights and aspirations of
the Egyptian people will be realized and that a better day will dawn over Egypt
and throughout the world.
For almost 60 years, going back to President Eisenhower, this gathering has been
attended by our President. It’s a tradition that I'm proud to uphold not only
as a fellow believer but as an elected leader whose entry into public service
was actually through the church. This may come as a surprise, for as some of
you know, I did not come from a particularly religious family. My father, who I
barely knew -- I only met once for a month in my entire life -- was said to be a
non-believer throughout his life.
My mother, whose parents were Baptist and Methodist, grew up with a certain
skepticism about organized religion, and she usually only took me to church on
Easter and Christmas -- sometimes. And yet my mother was also one of the most
spiritual people that I ever knew. She was somebody who was instinctively
guided by the Golden Rule and who nagged me constantly about the homespun values
of her Kansas upbringing, values like honesty and hard work and kindness and
fair play.
And it’s because of her that I came to understand the equal worth of all
men and all women, and the imperatives of an ethical life and the necessity to
act on your beliefs. And it’s because of her example and guidance that despite
the absence of a formal religious upbringing my earliest inspirations for a life
of service ended up being the faith leaders of the civil rights movement.
There was, of course, Martin Luther King and the Baptist leaders, the ways
in which they helped those who had been subjugated to make a way out of no way,
and transform a nation through the force of love. But there were also Catholic
leaders like Father Theodore Heshburg, and Jewish leaders like Rabbi Abraham
Joshua Heschel, Muslim leaders and Hindu leaders. Their call to fix what was
broken in our world, a call rooted in faith, is what led me just a few years out
of college to sign up as a community organizer for a group of churches on the
Southside of Chicago. And it was through that experience working with pastors
and laypeople trying to heal the wounds of hurting neighborhoods that I came to
know Jesus Christ for myself and embrace Him as my lord and savior. (Applause.)
Now, that was over 20 years ago. And like all of us, my faith journey has
had its twists and turns. It hasn’t always been a straight line. I have
thanked God for the joys of parenthood and Michelle’s willingness to put up with
me. (Laughter.) In the wake of failures and disappointments I've questioned
what God had in store for me and been reminded that God’s plans for us may not
always match our own short-sighted desires.
And let me tell you, these past two years, they have deepened my faith.
(Laughter and applause.) The presidency has a funny way of making a person feel
the need to pray. (Laughter.) Abe Lincoln said, as many of you know, “I have
been driven to my knees many times by the overwhelming conviction that I had no
place else to go.” (Laughter.)
Fortunately, I'm not alone in my prayers. Pastor friends like Joel Hunter
and T.D. Jakes come over to the Oval Office every once in a while to pray with
me and pray for the nation. The chapel at Camp David has provided consistent
respite and fellowship. The director of our Faith-based and Neighborhood
Partnership’s office, Joshua DuBois -- young minister himself -- he starts my
morning off with meditations from Scripture.
Most of all, I've got friends around the country -- some who I know, some
who I don’t know, but I know their friends who are out there praying for me.
One of them is an old friend named Kaye Wilson. In our family we call her Momma
Kaye. And she happens to be Malia and Sasha’s godmother. And she has organized
prayer circles for me all around the country. She started small with her own
Bible study group, but once I started running for President and she heard what
they were saying about me on cable, she felt the need to pray harder.
(Laughter.) By the time I was elected President, she says, “I just couldn’t
keep up on my own.” (Laughter.) “I was having to pray eight, nine times a day
just for you.” (Laughter.) So she enlisted help from around the country.
It’s also comforting to know that people are praying for you who don’t
always agree with you. Tom Coburn, for example, is here. He is not only a dear
friend but also a brother in Christ. We came into the Senate at the same time.
Even though we are on opposite sides of a whole bunch of issues, part of what
has bound us together is a shared faith, a recognition that we pray to and serve
the same God. And I keep praying that God will show him the light and he will
vote with me once in a while. (Laughter.) It’s going to happen, Tom.
(Laughter.) A ray of light is going to beam down. (Laughter.)
My Christian faith then has been a sustaining force for me over these last
few years. All the more so, when Michelle and I hear our faith questioned from
time to time, we are reminded that ultimately what matters is not what other
people say about us but whether we're being true to our conscience and true to
our God. “Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness and all these things
will be given to you as well.”
As I travel across the country folks often ask me what is it that I pray for.
And like most of you, my prayers sometimes are general: Lord, give me the
strength to meet the challenges of my office. Sometimes they’re specific:
Lord, give me patience as I watch Malia go to her first dance -- (laughter) --
where there will be boys. (Laughter.) Lord, have that skirt get longer as she
travels to that dance. (Laughter.)
But while I petition God for a whole range of things, there are a few common
themes that do recur. The first category of prayer comes out of the urgency of
the Old Testament prophets and the Gospel itself. I pray for my ability to help
those who are struggling. Christian tradition teaches that one day the world
will be turned right side up and everything will return as it should be. But
until that day, we're called to work on behalf of a God that chose justice and
mercy and compassion to the most vulnerable.
We've seen a lot of hardship these past two years. Not a day passes when I
don't get a letter from somebody or meet someone who’s out of work or lost their
home or without health care. The story Randall told about his father -- that's
a story that a whole lot of Americans have gone through over these past couple
of years.
Sometimes I can't help right away. Sometimes what I can do to try to improve
the economy or to curb foreclosures or to help deal with the health care system
-- sometimes it seems so distant and so remote, so profoundly inadequate to the
enormity of the need. And it is my faith, then, that biblical injunction to
serve the least of these, that keeps me going and that keeps me from being
overwhelmed. It’s faith that reminds me that despite being just one very
imperfect man, I can still help whoever I can, however I can, wherever I can,
for as long as I can, and that somehow God will buttress these efforts.
It also helps to know that none of us are alone in answering this call. It’s
being taken up each and every day by so many of you -- back home, your churches,
your temples and synagogues, your fellow congregants -- so many faith groups
across this great country of ours.
I came upon a group recently called “charity: water,” a group that supports
clean water projects overseas. This is a project that was started by a former
nightclub promoter named Scott Harrison who grew weary of living only for
himself and feeling like he wasn’t following Christ as well as he should.
And because of Scott’s good work, “charity: water” has helped 1.7 million people
get access to clean water. And in the next 10 years, he plans to make clean
water accessible to a hundred million more. That’s the kind of promoting we
need more of, and that’s the kind of faith that moves mountains. And there’s
stories like that scattered across this room of people who’ve taken it upon
themselves to make a difference.
Now, sometimes faith groups can do the work of caring for the least of
these on their own; sometimes they need a partner, whether it’s in business or
government. And that’s why my administration has taken a fresh look at the way
we organize with faith groups, the way we work with faith groups through our
Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships.
And through that office, we’re expanding the way faith groups can partner
with our government. We’re helping them feed more kids who otherwise would go
hungry. We’re helping fatherhood groups get dads the support they need to be
there for their children. We’re working with non-profits to improve the lives
of people around the world. And we’re doing it in ways that are aligned with
our constitutional principles. And in this work, we intend to expand it in the
days ahead, rooted in the notions of partnership and justice and the imperatives
to help the poor.
Of course there are some needs that require more resources than faith
groups have at their disposal. There’s only so much a church can do to help all
the families in need -- all those who need help making a mortgage payment, or
avoiding foreclosure, or making sure their child can go to college. There’s
only so much that a nonprofit can do to help a community rebuild in the wake of
disaster. There’s only so much the private sector will do to help folks who are
desperately sick get the care that they need.
And that's why I continue to believe that in a caring and in a just society,
government must have a role to play; that our values, our love and our charity
must find expression not just in our families, not just in our places of work
and our places of worship, but also in our government and in our politics.
Over the past two years, the nature of these obligations, the proper role
of government has obviously been the subject of enormous controversy. And the
debates have been fierce as one side’s version of compassion and community may
be interpreted by the other side as an oppressive and irresponsible expansion of
the state or an unacceptable restriction on individual freedom.
That's why a second recurring theme in my prayers is a prayer for
humility. Now, God answered this prayer for me early on by having me marry
Michelle. (Laughter and applause.) Because whether it’s reminding me of a
chore undone, or questioning the wisdom of watching my third football game in a
row on Sunday, she keeps me humble. (Laughter.)
But in this life of politics when debates have become so bitterly
polarized, and changes in the media lead so many of us just to listen to those
who reinforce our existing biases, it’s useful to go back to Scripture to remind
ourselves that none of has all the answers -- none of us, no matter what our
political party or our station in life.
The full breadth of human knowledge is like a grain of sand in God’s hands. And
there are some mysteries in this world we cannot fully comprehend. As it’s
written in Job, “God’s voice thunders in marvelous ways. He does great things
beyond our understandings.”
The challenge I find then is to balance this uncertainty, this humility, with
the need to fight for deeply held convictions, to be open to other points of
view but firm in our core principles. And I pray for this wisdom every day.
I pray that God will show me and all of us the limits of our understanding, and
open our ears and our hearts to our brothers and sisters with different points
of view; that such reminders of our shared hopes and our shared dreams and our
shared limitations as children of God will reveal the way forward that we can
travel together.
And the last recurring theme, one that binds all prayers together, is that I
might walk closer with God and make that walk my first and most important task.
In our own lives it’s easy to be consumed by our daily worries and our
daily concerns. And it is even easier at a time when everybody is busy,
everybody is stressed, and everybody -- our culture is obsessed with wealth and
power and celebrity. And often it takes a brush with hardship or tragedy to
shake us out of that, to remind us of what matters most.
We see an aging parent wither under a long illness, or we lose a daughter
or a husband in Afghanistan, we watch a gunman open fire in a supermarket -- and
we remember how fleeting life can be. And we ask ourselves how have we treated
others, whether we’ve told our family and friends how much we love them. And
it’s in these moments, when we feel most intensely our mortality and our own
flaws and the sins of the world, that we most desperately seek to touch the face
of God.
So my prayer this morning is that we might seek His face not only in those
moments, but each and every day; that every day as we go through the hustle and
bustle of our lives, whether it’s in Washington or Hollywood or anywhere in
between, that we might every so often rise above the here and now, and kneel
before the Eternal; that we might remember, Kaye, the fact that those who wait
on the Lord will soar on wings like eagles, and they will run and not be weary,
and they will walk and not faint.
When I wake in the morning, I wait on the Lord, and I ask Him to give me
the strength to do right by our country and its people. And when I go to bed at
night I wait on the Lord, and I ask Him to forgive me my sins, and look after my
family and the American people, and make me an instrument of His will.
I say these prayers hoping they will be answered, and I say these prayers
knowing that I must work and must sacrifice and must serve to see them
answered. But I also say these prayers knowing that the act of prayer itself is
a source of strength. It’s a reminder that our time on Earth is not just about
us; that when we open ourselves to the possibility that God might have a larger
purpose for our lives, there’s a chance that somehow, in ways that we may never
fully know, God will use us well.
May the Lord bless you and keep you, and may He bless this country that we
love. (Applause.)