
Warren also drew criticism from those who thought the prayer was too evangelical or that the pastor, by his very presence, excluded the "lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender" audience members.In a forum on the Dallas Morning News' website, a poster named Alex writes, "Not exactly inclusive. Invoking Jesus 'who taught us to pray' alienates all non-Christians. And Catholics don't say 'For thine is the kingdom and the power,and the glory for ever and ever.'And his previous statements about LGBT Americans and those who are pro-choice [are] divisive as well."The paper's religion blog writer, Jeffrey Weiss, however, was willing to extend Warren more credit."I found it to be inclusive – in the sense that he expressed God's love of all peoples and set forth a set of broad moral imperatives," Weiss writes. "But also restrictive in that it was an emphatically Christian prayer. But you can't invite Rick Warren to pray and expect anything but an evangelical Christian prayer."Dan Gilgoff, the "God & Country" blogger for U.S. News & World Report, acknowledged the difficult position Warren faced, straddling a faith that demands he speak for truth and a portion of the public antagonistic toward him for standing there at all. "For me," Gilgoff writes, "the two most salient features of the Rev. Rick Warren's inauguration invocation were its emphasis on the values of unity and mutual respect, which seemed partly a reaction to the controversy his selection as invocation speaker sparked, and its bold invocation of Jesus in the form of the Lord's Prayer. For some, those two themes would seem incongruous. It was trademark Warren, who – like Barack Obama – has been accused of trying to be all things to all people."On the Dallas paper's message board, one contributor presented a complimentary critique, with a fitting conclusion, regardless of one's opinion of Warren's invocation."A prayer for our time and our new President," he writes. "May God's care and blessing be upon a people that can extend that blessing onto others. The Lord of ALL (non-Christian, gay and lesbians included) is the Lord of us. May we recognize and honor Him so. As this prayer clearly reminds us, we will eventually have to give an account to Him of our deeds, good or bad."The contributor concludes, "Please pray for our new president and this administration. America is in great need of it."
By Drew Zahn
PS:We not only should be praying for BHO but also for Rick Warren who has clearly shown today to be CONFUSED ABOUT THE TRUTH and has openly COMPROMISED IT,on behalf of God knows what...As in the days of Noah....