
11 'Is it the end of faith?' Greg Clarke at Melbourne Uni
11 'Does faith make sense?' Greg Clarke at Retro Cafe, Fitzroy
12 'Bash a Christian' Open Forum with Greg Clarke at Melbourne Uni
13 'Atheism & Belief: the difference Jesus makes' Greg Clarke in Melbourne
15 'Is Christianity the one true faith?' Greg Clarke debates Dan Barker at UOW
16 'Is the Bible an acceptable guide for morality?' Greg Clarke debates Dan Barker at UNSW
17 'Can you believe in God and Science?' Panel discussion in Melbourne
18 Philosophy in a Pub: 'Does God exist?'
Bar(r)ack(ing) for change: Obama as the latest American Adam
Justine Toh
| “For that is the true genius of America: that America can change. Our
union can be perfected. And what we have already achieved gives us hope
for what we can and must achieve tomorrow…” U.S. President-elect Barack Obama, November 5, 2008. |
| In this sense, Obama is the latest incarnation of that process for reinvention and self-renewal. It is what won him the election. Obama manifests the possibility of racial harmony, inspiring leadership, global responsibility, and above all, a departure from the old—associated with the vastly unpopular George W. Bush Administration (2001-9). Obama, in contrast, represents the radically new, although he does so by embodying a familiar, uniquely American theme: the “American Adam”. A concept originally from the Bible, the American Adam draws on the idea of Adam, the first man God created. |
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| Obama has four, possibly eight years to institute as much change as he
can, change that will make a real and lasting difference to people’s
lives not only in America, but in the world. There are many challenges
ahead—a stalled global economy, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the
Arab-Israeli conflict among them. Yet Obama’s conviction that change is
possible and that he is ready to confront them is a heady, exciting
prospect that I, for one, will be following with great anticipation. The hope that Obama has mobilised in the electorate among young and old, White, Latino, Jewish, Asian, and Black provides an earthly portrait of a heavenly scene described in the Bible. The Book of Revelation depicts Jesus Christ making all things new and uniting peoples “from every nation, tribe … and language” (Revelation 7:9) In this way, Obama as American Adam prefigures the Christian hope of Jesus as “the last Adam” (1 Corinthians 15:45) who undoes the chronic pattern of sin established by the first, earthly Adam (Romans 5:17-19). |
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| 30-Jan-2009 01:12 AM Anonymous | |
| Although this was not information that I was searching the sight for I found it an extremely interesting read. First of all congratulations Justine Toh for keeping a positive yet guarded Christian view of our new president Barrack Obama. It was a well written article and kept my interest to the very end. Thanks for sharing with an open mind. | |
| 05-Feb-2009 01:08 PM Anna M Blanch | |
| Thanks for this article Justine! I will be linking to this on an upcoming post - I am glad to see CPX featuring this kind of material. It is interesting living in the US at present i have to say. | |
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