Forum discusses religion in political forums
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Tony Dodero
Newport Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway and Costa Mesa Councilman Allan
Mansoor used a prayer breakfast on Wednesday morning as a venue to
better explain how the rules of the road have changed for sectarian
invocations at city council meetings.
“To me, it’s an unfortunate event,” Ridgeway said of the Newport
council’s decision to eliminate secular prayer. “To not use the words
Jesus Christ, to me, that’s offensive.”
In January, the Newport Beach City Council, in a preemptive move
on the heels of a court ruling involving Burbank City Council
meetings, passed a resolution that would forbid clergy to utter the
words “Jesus Christ,” “Allah,” “Our father in heaven,” or any other
secular reference to a deity specific to a certain religion during
invocations, which are prayers said before government meetings.
Ridgeway acknowledged it would be difficult for some clergy
members to abide by the law and not use the forbidden names or words.
“I’m not trying to encourage civil disobedience,” he said. “But
you have to be true to your Lord by walking the line on invocations.”
Mansoor noted that the city of Costa Mesa had taken a different
tack and chosen not to impose rules on speech by clergy.
The Costa Mesa council adopted early this month what it calls a
“moment of solemn expression” in which anyone, lay person or clergy,
can speak in a public forum on any topic, sectarian or otherwise.
“That kind of separates it from a state action,” Mansoor said.
In the Burbank case, the late activist Irv Rubin sued the city
after a chaplain invoked “the name of Jesus Christ” in an invocation.
A judge ruled that the chaplain violated the Establishment Clause of
the U.S. Constitution because it constituted a sectarian prayer.
Mansoor and Ridgeway were two of several featured speakers at the
40th annual Orange Coast Christian Outreach Prayer Breakfast at the
Newport Marriott that included master of ceremonies Jim Villers;
County Treasurer John Moorlach; clergy members Eric Heard and Erin
Kerr from Mariners Church; Chuck Smith from Calvary Chapel; the Rev.
Jack Preus, president of Concordia University in Irvine; and
Concordia student Amanda Eckels, who performed solos of “My Country
‘Tis of Thee,” and “God Bless America.”
The breakfast was patterned 40 years ago after the national Prayer
Breakfast in Washington, D.C.
The guest speaker of this year’s breakfast was Sam Wolgemuth,
former chief executive and president of Freedom Communications, the
parent company of the Orange County Register.
“What’s the point of a prayer breakfast?” Wolgemuth asked the
guests at the breakfast. “To remind ourselves that we are not alone.”
Wolgemuth talked of his trials and tribulations that came after he
was ousted from his CEO job during a squabble between the heirs of
Freedom founder R.C. Hoiles over whether or not to sell the company.
After the experience, he sought guidance through prayer.
“The basis of all prayer is helplessness,” he said. God taught him
he must trust, wait and be generous, he said.
“Most of us have more than we need, and we can be held captive by
it,” Wolgemuth said. As for trusting, he said, “God has been so good
to me, how can I not trust God in return?”
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