Not sure if anyone has a problem with this:
For the past five months, White House aides and friends of the Obamas have been quietly visiting local churches and vetting the sermons of prospective first ministers in a search for a new — and uncontroversial — church home. Obama has even sampled a few himself, attending services at 19th Street Baptist on the weekend before his inauguration and celebrating Easter at St. John’s Episcopal Church.
Now, in an unexpected move, Obama has told White House aides that instead of joining a congregation in Washington, D.C., he will follow in George W. Bush’s footsteps and make his primary place of worship Evergreen Chapel, the nondenominational church at Camp David.
I wouldn’t call it an unexpected move, because there is a precedent here. Most modern-day presidents have done almost the exact same thing. In Reagan’s memoirs, for example, he said they stopped going to public churches because he felt the danger he brought along with him (assassination attempts, terrorist attacks, etc) and the media spectacle his attending always created was unfair to others in the congregation, who wanted nothing more than to worship in private and in peace. So he had church services in the White House. The article mentions some other examples of this:
The challenge of being part of a church community but also praying in peace has long been a problem for Presidents, according to historian Carl Sferrazza Anthony. “McKinley hated having people staring at him while he read Psalms, sang hymns, put money in the collection plate or took communion,” he writes in America’s First Families. “By the 1920s, getting a presidential family in and out of church was a production. Secret Service agents had to cordon off a clear path from the curb to the church entrance before the Coolidges arrived … [and] they were swiftly escorted to their third-row pew.”
So I don’t see the problem here, if in fact there is one. Unless Reverend Wright is officiating, this is nobody’s business.

