ATLANTA ā In 2008, when Barack Obama was under fire for a sermon his former pastor delivered years earlier, the aspiring president distanced himself from the preacherās fiery words that channeled Black Americansā anger over racism.
The Rev. Raphael Warnock defended Jeremiah Wright. āWhen preachers tell the truth, very often it makes people uncomfortable,ā he said on Fox News.
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Now Warnock is the politician running for office and the one under attack for his sometimes impassioned words from the pulpit. And once again, he is not backing down. Warnock, 51, says his run for U.S. Senate in Georgia ā one of two races on Jan. 5 that will determine control of the Senate ā is an extension of his years of progressive activism as head of the church where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. preached.
Warnock is calling for bail reform and an end to mass incarceration; a living wage and job training for a green economy; expanded access to voting and health care, and student loan forgiveness. Itās an unabashedly liberal platform that may galvanize the Democrats he needs to turn out to vote in the runoff election.
But it also carries risks. His opponent, Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler, has blasted his rhetoric and proposals as āradical,ā socialist and out of step with Georgia residents. Georgia voters are also likely to hear more about that from President Donald Trump, who announced Saturday that he will return to the state on Jan. 4, the eve of the runoff, to rally support for Loeffler and fellow Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue
Itās a line of attack that could sway moderate suburban voters in a state that hasnāt elected a Democrat to the Senate in 20 years.
āIām a pastor who is running for political office, but I donāt think of myself as a politician,ā he told The Associated Press. āI honestly donāt know anything to be other than authentic.ā
Warnock would join a small group of other ministers in Congress, including at least one other Black pastor, Rep. Emanuel Cleaver. He said his model was King, āwho used his faith to activate change in the public square.ā In high school, he listened to the civil rights icon's sermons and was particularly drawn to āA Knock At Midnight,ā in which King exhorts churches to serve as the ācritic of the stateā and fight for peace and economic and racial justice.
Warnock has embraced that mission. In 2007, he warned that the U.S. could ālose its soulā in a speech that condemned President George W. Bush's decision to send more troops to Iraq. At the Georgia Capitol in 2014, he was arrested while protesting the refusal of state Republicans to expand Medicaid. After the killing of George Floyd by police in May, he expounded on the country's struggle with a āvirusā he dubbed āCOVID-1619ā for the year when some of the first slaves arrived in English North America.
His campaign draws heavily from his early life. Warnock grew up poor in public housing in Savannah, Georgia. He cites his father's small business hauling old cars to a local steel yard to push back on attacks he is against free enterprise.
He attended Morehouse College and earned a Ph.D. in theology from Union Theological Seminary, funding his education with help from student loans and federal grants. His older brother Keith, one of 11 siblings, served more than 20 years in prison for a first-time, drug-related offense, and Warnock has used his case to argue for criminal justice reform.
"He knew what it is to struggle. He knew what it is to go without," Bishop Reginald T. Jackson, a leader of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Georgia, said of Raphael Warnock, whom he supports. āHeās able to speak to where a lot of people are.ā
Warnock knew early on that he wanted to enter the ministry. His father was also a preacher, and enlisted his son at a young age to help him read the small print in a biblical reference book because he refused to get prescription glasses. Warnock recalled giving his first sermon, "Itās Time I be about My Fatherās Business,ā at 11.
His social activism is part of a tradition of resistance in many Black churches that developed from the fight against racial inequality. Black pastors have called out the countryās troubled racial history using terms that can be discomforting to outsiders.
In his much-scrutinized sermon, Wright decried the countryās mistreatment of Blacks with the exclamation, āGod damn America.ā Loeffler has used the clip in an ad that accuses Warnock of defending Wright's āhatred."
Loeffler has also used snippets of Warnock's own sermons to argue that he is against police and the military. In one clip, Warnock says that nobody can serve āGod and the military.ā Warnock, who has two brothers who are veterans and whose father served in World War II, has said he was preaching from a biblical text and trying to impart a lesson about prioritizing God and laying a moral foundation for life.
Loeffler has used another clip to accuse Warnock of denigrating police. But his remark about āpolice power showing up in a kind of gangster and thug mentalityā in that sermon was a specific reference to police practices in Ferguson, Missouri, that the U.S. Justice Department investigated after a white police officer fatally shot Michael Brown, a Black teenager, in 2014.
āHe has actually made sure that we know who he is in his own words," Loeffler said at a debate in December. āThose arenāt my words.ā
Warnock accused her of lying āon Jesus.ā
Cleaver said the attacks on Warnock's sermons using lines with no context are āwoefully unfairā and show no understanding of the role of a Black preacher.
āI'm just made sick over what they're trying to do,ā he said.
At the debate in December, Loeffler also questioned Warnock about his arrest in 2002 on suspicion of obstructing a child abuse investigation at a camp in Maryland run by the Baltimore church he headed at the time. Warnock said he was trying to make sure young people had lawyers or family present when questioned by authorities. The charges were dropped.
Warnock's estranged wife accused him earlier this year of running over her foot during an argument, but police said they found no visible signs of injury, and they did not charge Warnock with a crime.
The effort to paint Warnock as a radical is similar to the strategy Republicans used with some success against other Democrats in down-ballot races this year. But it also echoes the attacks that segregationists leveled against King and supporters of the civil rights movement. That could help turn out the stateās large African American population to vote in next monthās runoff.
Warnock is right to keep focusing on his platform of a living wage, expanded health care options and voting rights, said the Rev. William Barber II, president of the Repairers of the Breach, a nonprofit group that fights poverty and discrimination.
āYou donāt win by being Republican lite," Barber said. āYou win by lifting up people from the bottom."