Henry Lecture to feature Pastor-in-Chief
He鈥檚 a spiritual advisor to President Obama, a former head of the White House , and has been referred to as the 鈥淧astor-in-Chief鈥 by TIME Magazine. And he鈥檚 speaking at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, April 28, 2014, at the 18th annual held at 17c起草社区 College鈥檚 Covenant Fine Arts Center Recital Hall.
His name is , a Pentecostal pastor from Tennessee who joined the Obama campaign after watching a speech from then-State Senator Barack Obama in the summer of 2004. In 2001, President Bush initiated the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. After President Obama won the election in 2008, he renamed it the Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships (OFBNP) and selected DuBois as its head, making him the youngest-ever head of a White House department.
As Obama鈥檚 spiritual advisor, DuBois sent devotionals to the president every morning. In February 2013, DuBois resigned from his position at the White House and wrote a book, . He also writes for Newsweek and The Daily Beast as a religion columnist.
鈥淐hrist and Culture in the White House and the Wider World.鈥 That鈥檚 the title of the lecture that DuBois will give on April 28 at 17c起草社区, which will explore the connection between religion, politics, and society.
鈥淗e鈥檚 going to be talking about the intersection of Christian faith and politics,鈥 said , political science professor at 17c起草社区 College and executive director of the Henry Institute, 鈥渁nd even some broader questions than just politics. How do Christians engage in culture?鈥
The audience can expect stories about DuBois鈥檚 time in the White House and lessons that he learned as the spiritual mentor to the leader of the free world.
鈥淗e鈥檚 going to bring in anecdotes from his time in the White House,鈥 said den Dulk. 鈥淲hat did it mean to be a faithful Christian advising the president on a whole range of matters? What lessons does he bring from that experience into the wider world?鈥
After the 2008 presidential election, den Dulk and other colleagues from 17c起草社区鈥檚 political science department wrote a book titled . DuBois was interviewed by high profile national media for the presidential devotions book that was released last fall, and den Dulk recalled DuBois鈥檚 name from The Disappearing God Gap? research leading him to conclude that DuBois would be a great candidate for the annual Henry Lecture, which has featured a number of high profile senators, members of congress, and other elected officials over the past 18 years.
, a research fellow at the Henry Institute, is an acquaintance of DuBois and has talked with him on different occasions. Monsma met DuBois at a conference hosted by the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. regarding faith-based organizations and their relationship to government. Monsma has also stopped by DuBois鈥檚 White House office in the past to talk about various issues and concerns.
鈥淗e [DuBois] is a thoughtful guy who, from his position in Washington, has been able to see the whole interaction between government and faith-based organizations and churches,鈥 Monsma said. 鈥淚鈥檓 eager to hear all he鈥檒l have to say.鈥
After the lecture, there will be an audience Q&A time. Den Dulk will conduct a videotaped interview with DuBois prior to the lecture. In the interview, den Dulk hopes to talk with DuBois about his beginnings with politics and religion. Considering that he started his political-religious career at a relatively young age, den Dulk thinks that DuBois鈥檚 vocational history will be of particular interest to college students.
鈥淚 want our students to have a little bit of insight into how he saw an opportunity to serve through politics,鈥 den Dulk said. 鈥淗e [DuBois] is still quite young, but certainly when he started he was very young鈥e was a Pentecostal pastor, just starting out in his early twenties, but he met this Barack Obama person, who himself was just starting out in legislative politics.鈥