GoodK wrote:The article might be of particular interest to some here, considering Warren's feelings on Mormonism.
Warren's feelings on Mormonism? Obviously Hitchens's guilt-by-association tack worked. The article doesn't, in fact, tell us anything about what Warren thinks of Mormons--only what one of his so-called "leading allies and defenders" thinks about Mormons. I wonder if Hitchens would have us attribute to him any and all sentiments expressed by any of his friends (say, Martin Amis or Ian McEwan). Probably not.
Hitchens tarring Warren as an anti-Mormon is especially rich in light of the fact that Warren is regularly criticized by co-religionists for being too friendly with Mormons. Routinely cited is this 2003 article from USA Today.
Warren is part of the ultra-conservative Southern Baptist Convention, and all his senior staff sign on to the SBC's doctrines, such as the literal and infallible Bible and exclusion of women as senior pastors. Yet Warren's pastor-training programs welcome Catholics, Methodists, Mormons, Jews and ordained women.
(Source)
I like Hitchens, but this hatchet job on Warren is not one of his better efforts. "The bigot has spoken" indeed.