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Jewish lawmakers threaten walk-out over reference to Jesus
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | April 3, 2003 | Diana Lynne

Posted on 04/03/2003 6:25:58 PM PST by honway

A Maryland minister was barred from giving the opening prayer in the state Senate after he refused to drop a reference to Jesus.

The Rev. David N. Hughes of the Trinity and Evangelical Church of Adamstown, Md., intended to round out his invocation yesterday with the line, "In Jesus' name, Amen." But the sergeant at arms – on the orders of Senate President Thomas Mike Miller Jr. – shut the reverend out of the body's chambers.

Miller issued the orders after two Jewish lawmakers threatened to stage a boycott of the legislative session if the phrase was not removed.

"I'm shocked by the response. I've never had this happen in 26 years," Hughes told the Frederick News-Post. "It just makes me feel that they've taken away my right as an American to pray, and this is the seat of government, and that's scary."

The pastor – a Vietnam veteran – was invited to give the prayer by Republican Sen. Alex Mooney. Hughes was Mooney's fourth guest. The other three were Jewish rabbis.

Opening up legislative sessions with prayer is a longstanding tradition in Maryland, as it is in states across the country. Mooney told WorldNetDaily no one had been barred from giving an invocation before. He sees irony in yesterday's "censorship."

Maryland state Republican Rep. Alex Mooney

"We were the first state to address religious tolerance in our state charter," he told WorldNetDaily. "This just shows a lack of tolerance for peoples' religious views."

Mooney recalled numerous instances of invocations referencing Jesus throughout the four years that he has been in office.

But at the beginning of the session this year, a string of invocations by Baptist preachers invoking the name Jesus Christ sparked debate on the issue. Miller appealed to lawmakers for tolerance and urged they stick to guidelines that call for invocations to be of an ecumenical nature and respectful of all faiths.

Webster's New World Dictionary defines ecumenical as "promoting cooperation or better understanding among differing religious faiths."

Since the debate, the Senate clerk screens prayers ahead of time and flagged the written text submitted by Hughes.

When Sens. Ida Ruben and Gloria Hollinger – both of whom are Jewish – heard of the reference, they asked Mooney to strike it.

"I said, 'Hey, I'll let him pray however he wants to pray. I'm not going to censor him and tell him how he needs to pray,'" Mooney told WND.

Ruben told the Frederick News-Post she then urged Hughes to substitute "messiah" for Jesus, telling him the reference could offend non-Christians and goes against the guidelines.

Neither Ruben nor Miller returned calls seeking comment.

"This is part of my faith," Hughes responded, according to Mooney. "The Gospel says when you pray, pray in Jesus' name."

The senators next asked to be excused from the floor during the prayer.

Paradoxically, a walk-out over a Muslim cleric's prayer opening a Washington state legislative session last month backfired on one Christian lawmaker.

Washington state Republican Rep. Lois McMahan

As WorldNetDaily reported, Rep. Lois McMahan, a Republican from Gig Harbor, Wash., refused to participate in the prayer and declared, "My god is not Muhammed."

"The Islamic religion is so ... part and parcel with the attack on America. I just didn't want to be there, be a part of that," she said in an interview with the Seattle Post Intelligencer. "Even though the mainstream Islamic religion doesn't profess to hate America, nonetheless it spawns the groups that hate America."

But a day later, McMahan apologized on the floor of the state House of Representatives amid mounting furor over her stance.

Debate over invocations is raging elsewhere in the country. As WorldNetDaily reported, several Southern California cities are grappling with threats from both sides of the issue.

Under pressure from the American Civil Liberties Union to quit using the name Jesus Christ in invocations, the city of Lake Elsinore, in Riverside County, decided to eliminate mention of "religious figures." The decree subsequently had the apparent effect of eliminating the prayer altogether, as no local pastors would accept invitations to deliver the prayer, and city councilors adopted moments of silence instead.

The ACLU contends that praying at the request of a government entity is a violation of the First Amendment's prohibition against the establishment of religion.

But the nonprofit United States Justice Foundation, which threatened to sue the city if it failed to reverse its decision, maintains telling a pastor what to pray is a violation of his First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and religion.

The notion of "separation of church and state" is derived from the dissenting opinion of the 1946 Supreme Court case Everson vs. Board of Education, which upheld a program allowing parents to be repaid from state funds for the costs of transportation to private religious schools. The court required only that the state maintain neutrality in its relations with various groups of religious believers.

"The decision in Everson does not rise to the level of being a battle cry for those who would wish to remove every vestige of religion from the public forum," USJF litigation counsel Richard Ackerman asserts.

"There's a push in this country to remove religion from society," Mooney echoed, "from the Supreme Court's decision on the Pledge to the ACLU going after all the Ten Commandments posted across the country. ... Nothing in the church-state relationship allows censorship and the removal of religious values from society."


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Maryland
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; christians; ecumenical; hypocrites; jews; liberals; maryland; silliness; watereddown
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To: TopQuark
Open a book on teh history of the Church, on history of Byzantium, or Jewish history.

I am requesting a source for a very serious claim you made about the Catholic Church. Do you have a title and page number?

261 posted on 04/03/2003 7:51:29 PM PST by honway
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To: Illbay
You may be right, but he was a Christian, invited to give a prayer. If his manner of prayer includes the word Jesus, and that offended someone, blame the person who extended the invitation. They got just what they asked for.
262 posted on 04/03/2003 7:52:13 PM PST by wcbtinman (Not from 'my cold dead hands', but from your's.)
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To: 1 spark; Thinkin' Gal; Bobby777; DittoJed2; Jhoffa_
Either one accepts the New Testament or one does not.

Narrow is the road...

263 posted on 04/03/2003 7:52:47 PM PST by sauropod (If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy...)
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Comment #264 Removed by Moderator

To: sauropod
If something you knew to be true was labeled "hateful" by all of the "tolerant" and "broad-minded" folk around you, would you disbelive your eyes?

Of course not. And this is the point you are missing: not all the truth must be said.

YOu actually follow this rule every day: your teenage son or daughter is about to make what you think is a (Small) mistake but, trying to give some room, you don't say anything, letting the child see the consequences on his own. HEy, even simpler: you see a peace of lettuce stuck in your guest's teeth, and you do not say anything.

If I said that only Jews are human, you would go through the roof: " How dare you exclude me," you would say. But you yourself so easily state, "THis is a Christian nation."

No, it's not about what you see. It's about mere tack and politeness. It's surprising that not only you do not exhibit the latter -- you even cannot tell these two notions apart.

265 posted on 04/03/2003 7:54:49 PM PST by TopQuark
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To: Byron_the_Aussie; Chancellor Palpatine
LOL! I'll add American Idol. Or the Neocon Bordello ;-).
266 posted on 04/03/2003 7:55:29 PM PST by sauropod (If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy...)
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Comment #267 Removed by Moderator

To: DoughtyOne
We pray to Jesus. They pray to the Messiah.

It was my understanding, Jews pray to God, not the messiah. They await the messiah, and do not equate messiah to God, as Christians do.

Calling all Jews...do i have this wrong?

268 posted on 04/03/2003 7:56:14 PM PST by 1 spark
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To: wcbtinman

No kidding. I don't blame the guy at all.

What do you expect a Christian to say, anyway and how is a hollow, "multicultural" prayer any more than a feel good pep talk before the den of theives get's down to business?

269 posted on 04/03/2003 7:56:21 PM PST by Jhoffa_ (Frodo sleeps with men...)
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To: plano29
God is not the name of this power. His great name is "blank". When a jew passes upon it, he replaced it with God or lord. It is this "blank" name which when written on things, those things cannot be thrown away.
270 posted on 04/03/2003 7:56:45 PM PST by yonif
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To: sauropod
I have not gone through this thread, but there's a really website that addresses this.

http://www.wallbuilders.com David Barton's site dedicated to American history, particularly America's christian history.
271 posted on 04/03/2003 7:57:45 PM PST by cyborg
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To: TopQuark
It was confusing and begs the question. What are you gonna do about the New Testament. Who is Jesus?
272 posted on 04/03/2003 7:57:49 PM PST by sauropod (If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy...)
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To: Delphinium
Let them walk and tell them their resignations are accepted.
273 posted on 04/03/2003 7:58:07 PM PST by philetus (Keep doing what you always do and you'll keep getting what you always get)
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To: 1 spark
We Pray to God not the Messiah.
274 posted on 04/03/2003 7:58:49 PM PST by yonif
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To: Jhoffa_
I haven't read all the posts, but enough to see that most are missing the point. As a Christian, I am REQUIRED to pray in the name of Jesus because He said to. All power has been given to the Son acording to my beliefs. If I want my prayer heard and answered, I must pray to the one that can do something about it.(This is also a divider between me and Catholics. We don't believe St. so and so has any more influence than I do since the Bible declares that I am already a saint and a royal priest) If a Jew prays to G-D, and a Muslim prays to Allah, I just pray my own prayer in the name of Jesus, or look out the window till they are finished. Just like Jesus said "Forgive them Father, for they know not what they do." One cannot know the truth unless shown. The Holy Spirit is in charge of revealing Jesus to His people. People shouldn't be frightened of hearing a prayer in the name of Jesus, unless of course they are frightened that He is really the King of Kings. His Bride has nothing to fear, from anybody or anything.
275 posted on 04/03/2003 7:58:58 PM PST by chuckles
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To: Delphinium
Yep, you are absolutely right. Jewish friends, tell these people, their timing is pretty atrocious in these trou bled times. If we do not stick together, we will hang apart. Put it on the back burners--- please!
276 posted on 04/03/2003 7:59:33 PM PST by Peter Libra
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To: sauropod
You don't even want to start with me.
277 posted on 04/03/2003 7:59:45 PM PST by Chancellor Palpatine (going into an election campaign without the paleocons is like going to war without the French)
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To: Illbay
..now you've offended me...

Sorry about that. But without a bunch of Christian activists getting their dander up some 200 years ago, what would the US be now? Canada? Australia?

I just find it amazing that everyone's so ready to ignore the fierce Christian aspect of a Washington, a Jefferson, a Reagan, or even a GWB, yet be happy to thrive in the world they've made using their core motivation. 'A charge to keep', Illbay.

278 posted on 04/03/2003 7:59:59 PM PST by Byron_the_Aussie
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To: chuckles
Yes, but is that opinion applicable if the person was invited to make the prayer to not only Christians?
279 posted on 04/03/2003 8:00:08 PM PST by yonif
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To: Pharmboy
???? Please explain your thing with the chicken.

You lost me.

280 posted on 04/03/2003 8:00:42 PM PST by sauropod (If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy...)
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