THE QUESTION

President-elect Obama hasn't been to church in three weeks, saying he doesn't want to disrupt the service for others. Reagan and Bush said the same thing, but Carter and Clinton attended church regularly. What's your advice? Where should presidents worship?
Posted by Sally Quinn and Jon Meacham | Your Thoughts

FROM THE PANEL

Syndicated political columnist and “On Faith” panelist Cal Thomas has a twice-weekly column that appears in over 500 newspapers around the world. A graduate of American University, Thomas is a veteran of broadcast and print journalism. He has worked for NBC, CNBC, PBS television, and the Fox News Channel where he currently appears on the weekly media critique show, “Fox News Watch.” Thomas has authored ten books, including Blinded by Might: Can the Religious Right Save America?, A Freedom Dream, Public Persons and Private Lives, Book Burning, Liberals for Lunch, Occupied Territory, The Death of Ethics in America, Uncommon Sense and Things That Matter Most. His latest was The Wit and Wisdom of Cal Thomas. In 1995, Thomas was honored with a Cable Ace Award nomination for Best Interview Program. Other awards include a George Foster Peabody team reporting award, and awards from both the Associated Press and United Press International. Common Ground, which Thomas writes for USA Today, offers insightful discussion of contentious social issues with his friend and political counterpart, Bob Beckel. The two are working together on a book to be published in 2007.

President Carter's Sunday School Lessons

It is important for a president to be seen worshipping God if it is genuine and not political window dressing. There were stories in the press at the time that Jimmy Carter's example encouraged other Americans to go to church and seek God's will for their lives.

Cal Thomas, Syndicated political columnist | 134 COMMENTS
Nov 25, 2008 at 8:00 PM
Dwight N. Hopkins is Professor of Theology at the University of Chicago Divinity School. The "On Faith" panelist is the author of "Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion," and "Shoes That Fit Our Feet: Sources for a constructive black theology." He is co-editor of "Walk Together Children: Black and womanist theologies, church and theological education," and "Another World Is Possible: Spiritualities and Religions of Global Darker Peoples."

Obama's Deliberate, Judicious Approach

Dwight Hopkins, Professor of Theology at the University of Chicago Divinity School. | 2 COMMENTS
Susan Jacoby is the author of The Age of American Unreason. She began her writing career as a reporter for The Washington Post, and has been a contributor to a wide range of periodicals and newspapers for more than 25 years on topics including law, religion, medicine, aging, women's rights, political dissent in the Soviet Union and Russian literature. Jacoby has been the recipient of grants from the Guggenheim, Rockefeller and Ford Foundations, as well as the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 2001-2002, she was named a fellow at the Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library. Jacoby’s other books include Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism (2004); Wild Justice: The Evolution of Revenge, a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 1984, and Half-Jew: A Daughter's Search for Her Family's Buried Past. She is working on a book about the relationship between American anti-intellectualism and political polarization, to be published by Pantheon in 2008. Her photo is by Chris Ramir.

Welcome To The Unchurched, President And Mrs. Obama

Susan Jacoby, Author and reporter | 39 COMMENTS
An ordained United Church of Christ and American Baptist minister, "On Faith" panelist Dr. Willis E. Elliott has been a pastor, teacher, lecturer, administrator, consultant (to Newsweek for 38 years), church executive, and the author of six books. His five earned degrees in religion include a PhD, University of Chicago, where he was divinity research librarian. He taught in colleges, seminaries, & universities--including the University of Hawaii, where he taught "The World's Great Religions" and "Religion and the Meaning of Existence." At the 1966 Triennium of the National Council of Churches, he was the interlocutor with Billy Graham.

The Obamas Should Worship in the National Cathedral

Willis E. Elliott, Minister, teacher, author | 9 COMMENTS
Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite   |   William Tully   |   Leith Anderson
ALL PANELIST RESPONSES »

READER RESPONSE

» kimba1 | Although none of our business, the choice of a church does send a powerful message. I am anticipatin...
» cognitivedissident1 | I believe that presidents, along with other Christians, should follow the command of Jesus to pray i...
» lepidopteryx | If they wish to attend a church, the Obam family should find one that suits their spiritual needs an...
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