Posted on 08/09/2011 2:38:07 PM PDT by NYer
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 8, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Intended as a simple gathering to invoke God’s help for America, a high-profile Houston prayer rally hosted by Texas Gov. Rick Perry kicked a beehive of anti-Christian sentiment as media commentators slammed the event as bigoted, unconstitutional, and even akin to Nazi brainwashing tactics.
The Response, a non-denominational Christian event initiated by Gov. Perry and joined by cosponsors including the American Family Association (AFA), drew around 30,000 participants to Houston Saturday. There, the crowd followed a Biblical injunction to “gather together, repent of their sins, and pray to God to intervene on their behalf.”
“A historic crisis facing our nation and threatening our future demands a historic response from the church. We must, as a people, return to the faith and hope of our fathers,” states The Response’s web site.
Governor Perry, who is expected to announce his presidential bid on Saturday, bucked political correctness at the event in favor of wearing openly his Christian beliefs.
“Father, our heart breaks for America,” said Perry, as reported by the Associated Press. “We see discord at home. We see fear in the marketplace. We see anger in the halls of government and, as a nation, we have forgotten who made us, who protects us, who blesses us.”
The governor called on the crowd to pray for the nation and for President Obama, and was otherwise silent on political issues.
In the aftermath, critics lambasted the pro-life and pro-family event as “bigoted,” primarily due to the American Family Association’s (AFA) involvement, and too exclusive of other faiths because it called for prayer to Jesus.
At a counter-rally, state Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston, called the prayer event “a narrow, theocratic view ... that says that people are not welcomed that says that people are bad because of who they are.” A letter signed by several left-leaning local clergy also said the event was not “inclusive” enough and condemned the sponsorship of the AFA, “an organization labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.”
One ABC report suggested that “even some mainstream Christians are concerned” over the event, while quoting only prominent left-wing figures, as pointed out by NewsBusters.
Meanwhile, some commentators suggested that the event was problematic simply for being Christian.
In a commentary published by the Los Angeles Times, Lawrence M. Krauss wrote that, by associating Perry with Christianity, the “misguided day of prayer” should have done him more harm than good.
“Claiming affiliation with Christian values often guarantees immunity from serious public or media backlash, but it shouldn’t,” wrote Krauss.
“Not when that claim, once you get to the details, means that about 21 percent of the adult U.S. population ... are excluded from a quasi-governmental event that will, among other things, proclaim their eternal damnation.”
Writing for the Washington Post’s faith blog, Charles Haynes decided that the call to prayer was not unconstitutional, but still “raises serious questions about the governors commitment to represent all Texans.” “Perrys ‘call to prayer’ may be legal, but that doesnt make it right,” he concluded.
Others had harder words for the Texas governor: Clay Farris Naff of the Huffington Post argued that Perry’s event was both “violating the U.S. Constitution” and a plot to use the “dark side to prayer” to foment political upheaval in the mold of Nazism.
“The purpose of Rick Perry’s prayer rally is not to cure the nation’s ills, it is to build an American Volksgemeinschaft—a community of believers in a reactionary myth of America’s history and the Christian religion,” wrote Naff.
“The promoters of this myth scorn constitutional law, separation of church and state, science, minority rights, and most of all the principle of tolerance.”
But one conservative leader noted that invocations by government leaders are nothing new - 43 of 44 presidents have announced national days of prayer - and that it’s the critics of the event, not its organizers, whose views fall outside the American mainstream.
“The reality is, those who are speaking against this on the left are people who generally think that there should be no role of religious faith in any sort of public activity,” said Dan Klukowski of the Family Research Countil in an appearance on Fox News August 5.
“Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston, called the prayer event a narrow, theocratic view”
I’ve never heard the Jihadi’s described as such. Curious. The MSM is presenting an undeniable example of the double stanard.
People are getting together and praying in the time of our nation’s need!!! No!!! Ah! Theocrat!! Dictator!!! Homophobe!! Racist! Idiot!! Irrational!! Puritanical!! Separation of church and state!! Religious Establishment!!! All religions are equal, except Christianity!!! /sarc
If these people didn’t believe in the the power of prayer, they would not be protesting. I certainly don’t protest Islamic prayer meetings.
They hate Christians and Jews and love Muslims. Sounds like they want to Establish a Religion to me.
"Accuse others of what you do." --V. I. Lenin
I saw an article somewhere (I’m getting old) that said that the reason Jews vote democratic is that the Republicans are too closely connected with Christianity and that scares them.
Apparently, in Republican circles, Jews feel pressure to convert. In democratic circles, they don’t.
It may be just this simple.
Looks like the media whores smell red meat. Look for this bullshit 24/7. Gotta protect barry.
While the objectors to Perry attending this event try to make folks think they’re only concerned for the 20% of Texans who aren’t Christians, the truth is they make it very clear they have zero respect or concern for the 80% who are.
Perry is a Christian and has every right to be a dedicated one.
These people won’t quit until they have destroyed the ability for a Christian to hold public office.
Of course they’ll do it in the name of protecting constitutional rights. These people are pure evil.
I am not a fan of Perry at all, however I’ll defend his right to be a practicing Christian to my dying breath.
Praise the Lord... and start passing out the ammunition!
What would others say?
” . .. about 21 percent of the adult U.S. population ... are excluded . . ..”
Who are those excluded ones? Was there published a list of those kinds of people that were to be welcomed, and those to be excluded?
It is past time for us to ‘JUST DO IT’. The pledge, prayer, speak of God. People need to hear more of it and of our founding fathers.
Excellent! Well played.
I’ve been watching to see if the ACLU was going to do anything about this:http://whitehouse.blogs.cnn.com/2011/08/01/obama-marks-ramadan/
No ... Gov. Perry is gearing up for a presidential campaign. That's his style... say one thing to get elected, then do another once in office.
The Constitution says:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
I don't take that as a ban on Christians being allowed to speak out on what they believe. What science? Are we talking Global Warming? The Big Bang that came from nowhere? What minority rights? Are we talking about the minority of atheists, child molesters or homosexuals? Can't be black or brown people (if you must put a label on them) because many of them are Christian. What is the "principle of tolerance" and why does it exclude Christians?
In their dreams. Why would anybody in their right mind object ?
Screams from the Southern Poverty-pimp Law Center don't mean anything. Well known as a Soros-funded opportunistic-parasite group, they've so destroyed their credibility that if they tell me Governor Perry has two hands I'd have to check for myself to believe it.
The Huff-n-Puff Post ? Arianna's big screw-job meal ticket ? As they never had any credibility, who cares what they say ?
Sylvestre Reyes ? Enough said.
Massive anti-Christian backlash ? More like the hysterical rhetoric of professional agitators.
Disclaimer - I'm an agnostic who lives in Houston. I've heard of no one complaining - or saying anything.
The LEFTISTS must be driven from every perch of power they inhabit and pushed off the public square entirely. They are a clear and present danger to our freedoms, our liberties, our way of life, our faith, and our country. Damn them to hell!
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