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About two hours after declaring his support for same-sex marriage last week, President Obama gathered eight or so African-American ministers on a conference call to explain himself. He had struggled with the decision, he said, but had come to believe it was the right one.
 
The ministers, though, were not all as enthusiastic. A vocal few made it clear that the president's stand on gay marriage might make it difficult for them to support his re-election.
 
"They were wrestling with their ability to get over his theological position,"said the Rev. Delman Coates, the pastor of Mt. Ennon Baptist Church in Clinton, Md., who was on the call.
In the end, Mr. Coates, who supports civil marriages for gay men and lesbians, said that most of the pastors, regardless of their views on this issue, agreed to "work aggressively" on behalf of the president's campaign. But not everyone. "Gay marriage is contrary to their understanding of Scripture," Mr. Coates said. "There are people who are really wrestling with this."
In the hours following Mr. Obama's politically charged announcement on Wednesday, the president and his team embarked on a quiet campaign to contain the possible damage among religious leaders and voters. He also reached out to one or more of the five spiritual leaders he calls regularly for religious guidance, and his aides contacted other religious figures who have been supportive in the past.
The damage-control effort underscored the anxiety among Mr. Obama's advisers about the consequences of the president's revised position just months before what is expected to be a tight re-election vote. While hailed by liberals and gay-rights leaders for making a historic breakthrough, Mr. Obama recognized that much of the country is uncomfortable with or opposed to same-sex marriage, including many in his own political coalition.
The issue of religious freedom has become a delicate one for Mr. Obama, especially after the recent furor over an administration mandate that religiously affiliated organizations offer health insurance covering contraceptives. After complaints from Catholic leaders that the mandate undercut their faith, Mr. Obama offered a compromise that would maintain coverage for contraception while not requiring religious organizations to pay for it, but critics remained dissatisfied.
In taking on same-sex marriage, Mr. Obama made a point of couching his views in religious terms. "We're both practicing Christians," the president said of his wife and himself in the ABC News interview in which he discussed his new views. "And obviously this position may be considered to put us at odds with the views of others."
He added that what he thought about was "not only Christ sacrificing himself on our behalf but it's also the golden rule, you know? Treat others the way you would want to be treated."
After the interview, Mr. Obama hit the phones. Among those he called was one of the religious leaders he considers a touchstone, the Rev. Joel C. Hunter, the pastor of a conservative megachurch in Florida.
"Some of the faith communities are going to be afraid that this is an attack against religious liberty," Mr. Hunter remembered telling the president.
"Absolutely not," Mr. Obama insisted. "That's not where we're going, and that's not what I want."
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SOURCE: The New York Times

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Prince Malachi is the founder of The Oracle Network and the Streetwear brand Y.A.H. Apparel

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