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Cynthia McFadden | 08/22/2008 2:00 pm

Cynthia McFadden: Rick Warren's 'Army of Compassion' Goes Beyond Presidential Politics

Cynthia McFadden
A couple of weeks ago I posted a story about my trip to Rwanda with Pastor Rick Warren and his wife Kay. My story was supposed to air on "Nightline," but got bumped. The story finally aired this week. Rick Warren, of course, has been very much in the news after hosting both presidential candidates at Saddleback Church in California, a church he and Kay started from scratch almost 30 years ago. Membership now tops 20,000. I was there for the forum and also filed a piece for "Nightline" about that. I came away deeply impressed with the way Rick Warren conducted the sessions. He asked interested and important questions, was respectful to both candidates and brought out important and fresh information about each of the candidates world views. But Rick Warren’s interests extend far beyond presidential politics. He and Kay are working hard to launch an "army of compassion" around the world to help deal with some of the most troubling and enduring of problems: poverty, health care and education. Invited to Rwanda by that country’s President Paul Kagame in the wake of his bestselling book, The Purpose Driven® Life (now topping 30 million copies in sales making it the bestselling hard-covered adult book of all time — excepting the Bible), President Kagame asked Warren to come and help him turn Rwanda into a "purpose-driven nation." Warren and his wife and their colleagues have launched their program — dubbed the PEACE plan — in Rwanda and plan to spread it to other countries around the world. Sixty-seven other countries have already signed up.

Needless to say, Warren made a fortune from the sale of his book. By the way, sales of the book, which was published in 2002, skyrocketed after the forum on Saturday. Well, the Warrens decided to live on ten percent of the money and give 90 percent of it back to the church. A reverse tithe. In Rwanda they have pledged a quarter of a million dollars of their personal funds to help build a new hospital in the country’s desperately poor Western province. The current hospital has no running water. During last Sunday’s church service he said the reason the book became a bestseller was "God knew he could trust me with the money."

Warren is not without critics, some of whom say he has taken Christian doctrine and turned it into a self-help easy-access plan. Such complaints have done nothing it seems to dull his self-confidence or his sense of humor. I hope you’ll watch the story at the link below and let me know your thoughts.

Click here to read the story on "Nightline."

Read more about: News, Nightline, Rick Warren

37 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

DeBúrca obj
I’m glad you liked it. I rarely agree with Kathleen Parker, but I have to hand it to her on this one, she is sticking her neck out as a conservative and actually putting the Constitution first.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/23/2008 12:45 pm
Frannie Em
Cynthia Wow, amazing what has happened to that country. It will be interesting to watch through the years how Rick Warren’s plan evolves. How it will affect the people and the nation. I have never read his book, and the first time I listened to him was in the conversations with the candidates. The man definitely has a purpose to his life. Great reporting. I think there is a lingering question in the back of my mind that just won’t go away. Through the years we have always been taught that people won’t accomplish progress, unless they want it to happen. Whether it is freedom from addiction, changing ones life for the better, getting more focused on a purpose and following through to make it happen, or getting through any difficult challenge. We get help along the way, but we have to want progress to make it happen. It will not be lasting progress if, as the old adage goes (which was also used here) “Don’t just give them a fish, teach them how to fish.” Pastor Warren took it one step further with ‘teach them enterprise’. Which I agree. His notion of training people to develop a better society is very practical, but they have got to want it, and they have to do it. Do they want freedom from poverty enough to do what it takes? I believe it is possible for Rwanda to be a thriving nation, do they believe it? On another note, when I see all the promises made during this election cycle, to me they are more of I will give you a fish, instead of what to do with it. It never works.
By Frannie Em on 08/22/2008 1:45 pm
Josie Sullivan
I don’t have any problems with Rick Warren. Having said that, the phrase “Army of Compassion” seems like a contradiction. The image that comes to mind is men and women dressed in camouflage dropping out of planes and running wildly to hug everyone in the area. LOL…hmmm maybe not a bad idea. I could use one….just not as a surprise attack.
By Josie Sullivan on 08/22/2008 4:09 pm
Frannie Em
Josie Sounds like an art peace ;-]
By Frannie Em on 08/22/2008 7:39 pm
Josie Sullivan
I’m thinking about sweet frannie.
By Josie Sullivan on 08/27/2008 7:26 am
Susan B
… but it’s CATCHY! People who like ideas and concepts pre-packaged and shrink-wrapped for them really go for catchy. That’s why there’s so much of the stuff everywhere you look, everywhere you step — much like horse poop in the 19th century. Catchy is the horse poop of the 21st century.
By Susan B on 08/23/2008 10:40 pm
Zera Lee
Sounds like you’ve been watching “Monty Python”.
By Zera Lee on 08/26/2008 8:46 pm
Josie Sullivan
Zera - LOL! Yes, I can see that….with that thought I would add hundreds of bunnies released from their backpacks.
By Josie Sullivan on 08/27/2008 7:29 am
Zera Lee
Oh my, I like your army! I’ll bring the clumsy little puppy dogs with big wet tongues. Hugs and laughs all around. 8-)
By Zera Lee on 08/27/2008 12:56 pm
G T
I watched the TV interviews and thought Rick Warren did an excellent job of allowing each candidate to answer how ever he wanted to and each was given as much time as he needed. There was no “spin” on the questions or comments to that effect after each answered. Both were asked exactly the same questions phrased the very same way. I felt the questions were designed to give a better picture of each mans character and beliefs without preconcieved comments to affect the answer. Neither man had been told before hand exactly what the questions would be, so they had to speak extemporanously on those subjects. No prompter to look at, or crib notes to refer to. I wish there was more of this sort of public questions and answers and less of the awful negative advertising engaged in by both D and R. Rick Warren seems to be a man of integrity and wisdom. Too bad we don’t have more men like that.
By G T on 08/22/2008 5:01 pm
Teresa Proctor
It is amazing that “religion” takes such a strong role in politics and our own live. Yet, many sit and listen to the interview of Rick Warren, for the purpose of judgement. Does not all “religions” say in some form or other “judge not less you will be judged.” Religion/Spirituality is a person path, one that each of us must walk in our own way. This path should not include judgement of others, this is a path of connection, love, compassion and a search for our own truth. There is a hugh need in this country and around the world to move from a place of fear, blame, shame and guilt and to move into love, compassion, connection and understanding. I invite everyone to stop living in fear and to move into connection and understanding from a place within of compassion and purity.
By Teresa Proctor on 08/22/2008 7:06 pm
Ruth M
I did not know who Rick Warren was so I went to his website, where he says good deeds can not bring a person salvation; only the born-again exercise can do that. After reading that, and Cynthia’s piece, I am put in mind of what Susan B. Anthony said: “I distrust those who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires.”
By Ruth M on 08/22/2008 8:45 pm
DeBúrca obj
I love that quote Ruth!
By DeBúrca obj on 08/22/2008 10:16 pm
Susan B
Me too! I’ve added it to my collection. I also thought that Rick Warren’s “thing” was self-promoting and wonder what pressure came to bear to make the two candidates participate in it.
By Susan B on 08/24/2008 1:59 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Let’s put this quote next to Susan’s: As for those wingy mysteries in divinity, & airy subtleties in religion, which have unhinged the brains of better heads, they never stretched the pia mater* of mind. ––––––Sir thomas Browne (1605-1682) * the delicate, fibrous & highly vascular membrane forming the innermost of three coverings of the brain & spinal cord. What, pray tell, is the “born-again exercise”? And good deeds are out? Well! no more helping old ladies in the super market! those days are over.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 08/23/2008 1:00 pm