Where to draw the line
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“In God We Trust” appears on the U.S. bills in my pocket. “One nation
under God” is pledged every day. U.S. courts and presidents take the
“Bible oath.” The so-called separation of church and state is a mere
idea -- excellent when it is against a state-endorsed religion,
pitiable when it is against religion itself. Prayers are a symbol of
profound awe, respect and love. Such acts only serve to enrich a
closer bond with our fellow man.
IMAM MOUSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
For Christians, a central goal is to be praying always; ideally,
prayer is less something we do than it is how we live. Everybody
prays whether one thinks of it as praying or not: The odd silence you
fall into when something very beautiful is happening or something
very good or very bad, like the “ah-h-h-h!” that sometimes floats out
of you as out of a Fourth of July crowd when fireworks burst over the
water, the stammer of pain at someone else’s pain, the stammer of joy
at someone else’s joy, or whatever words or sounds one uses for
sighing over your own life and loves.
These are all prayers in their way. These are all spoken not just
to yourself but to something or someone even more familiar than
yourself and even more unusual than the world. Opportunities for
prayer serve to remind that we all pray as an integral, inescapable
dynamic of human living, that we all honor symbols, beliefs, values
and practices focused on bottom-line questions of meaning (so, we all
have a “religion”), and that we all have an ultimate focus, whether
it is a god of pleasure or success or happiness or the God of Jews
and Christians and Muslims.
Optional times for quiet contemplation and silent meditation would
provide opportunities for individuals to do ... something along the
long continuum of the great variety of things people do and the ways
peoples and religions pray. How we use such times would identify who
or what our God or god is, in what religion we believe, and how we
pray ... always!
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
I have enjoyed the privilege of opening sessions of the U.S. House
of Representatives and the U.S. Senate with prayers invoking the
blessings of God on the legislators and our country. I have offered
invocations at countless council meetings and public school
gatherings.
I affirm the separation of church and state while acknowledging no
separation between God and country. It is not so much a wall that
divides the two realms as a heavy curtain. Religious life has never
been divorced from the political process, and governmental
neutrality, in matters of religious expression, has never been a
feature of the political landscape.
I am the rabbi of a synagogue that enjoys tax-exempt status as a
religious institution. Our government is officially on the side of
God, affirming its faith in God, its reliance upon God and the
relevance of God’s blessings to America’s survival and welfare.
Despite such a disposition toward religion, and despite displays of
religiosity in all branches of government, the founders wrote a
secular Constitution in which the powers and concerns of the
government were not to affect the religious conscience of the
individual.
Victims themselves of Europe’s religious wars, they believed that
full religious freedom was possible only in a secular state. I
believe the public school is a secular institution. A time set aside
for prayer to be recited in such a setting is coercive.
When I offer a prayer before Congress, it is uttered before adults
who are present voluntarily. A legislator who objects to ceremonial
deism may enter the chamber a few moments after the opening gavel for
the start of the business day. Students, though, do not enjoy such a
luxury and are compelled to either recite a prayer, distance
themselves from the students who are praying or remain silent while
their peers and friends are engaged in this exercise.
Other than praying “Please let the bell ring” or “Please let the
teacher grade on the curve,” the serious business of entreating God
should be left to the sacred precincts of the house of worship, the
home, or to any setting in which the worshipper feels the need to
engage in religious devotion.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
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