US President Barack Obama said Thursday that faith can help the US overcome fear as his Christian faith has helped him overcome fear as the nation's commander in chief.
"Like every president, like every leader, like every person, I've known fear," the president said at his final National Prayer Breakfast, an annual meeting of the city's political and religious leaders, as president.
"God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind," he said without referring to some 2016 Republican presidential candidates, whom he has often accused of stoking fear.
"Fear can lead us to lash out against those who are different or lead us to try to get some sinister other under control," Obama said.
"Alternatively, fear can lead us to succumb to despair, or paralysis or cynicism. Fear can feed our most selfish impulses and erode the bonds of community.
"It is a primal emotion, fear, one that we all experience. It can be contagious. If we let it consume us, the consequences of that fear can be worse than any outward threat," he said.
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But Obama said that faith can conquer fear. "Faith is the great cure for fear. Jesus is a good cure for fear," he said.
"God gives believers the power, the love, the sound mind, required to conquer any fear. What more important moment for that faith than right now.
"What better time than for these changing, tumultuous times than to have Jesus standing beside us, steadying our minds, cleansing our hearts, pointing us towards what matters," he said.
Speaking at the Christian event, Obama also noted that he visited the Islamic Society of Baltimore on Wednesday and attended a Jewish event last week at the Israeli Embassy in Washington commemorating the Holocaust.
"I've drawn strength from witnessing good people of all faiths who do the Lord's work each and every day," he said.