http://www.facebook.com/MarysGourmetDiner
Dont expect this discount each and every time you go there. This wasnt usual policy, just an occasional act of kindness: "There's a lot of craziness going on in regard to the 15% discount. I will not respond to all the posts. I will say that it is not a "policy", it's a gift we give at random to customers who take a moment before their meal."
They will be sued before you can say ACLU.
Just waiting for the ACLU and Freedom From Religion Foundation to sue.
Yes I know this is a private business, and so has nothing to do with issues of church state separation regarding government. But these liberal groups could sue and say its illegal to give a discount to praying customers. Based on equal protection under civil rights laws, perhaps.
This reminds me of the discount a lot of restaurants, especially in the South, gave on Sundays to people who could show a current church program brochure to the waiter/waitress as proof they had attended services.
I loved that idea. But I think it got a lot of the godless Left angry, so it stopped, to our shame.
Bitter howls of protest from leftists to begin in 5, 4, 3....
Seriously. When will the ACLU or some idiot official take this restaraunt to court?
That is awesome
Gives new meaning to Prayer Breakfast.
I’m certainly not going to stop anybody from praying in public. But I’ll pray silently in a public setting because of Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 6:5-7.
It has always amazed me how few people one observes praying before a meal in public.
Lovely thought to this approach, but nowadays, if you involve christian prayer in a public business, you are playing with fire. Just saying Season’s Greetings could cost you a free tax audit in the Lois Lerner Era. I refuse to believe she was the only was so hateful and closeminded. That is the predominant culture in most public agencies of today. Well, this restaurant has now gotten mega-tons of free publicity, so good for her, now go ‘turn that water into wine’, Oops!
“Civil Rights” Commission complaint filed in 5, 4, 3, 2 . . . .