First up from The God Machine this week is the latest proclamation from the Bush White House, which apparently would like us to pray this weekend.
During this year’s National Days of Prayer and Remembrance, we honor the thousands of victims who died in the brutal and ruthless attacks in New York City, Pennsylvania, and at the Pentagon on September 11, 2001. Our Nation remembers with gratitude the firefighters, police officers, first responders, and ordinary citizens who acted with courage and compassion to save the lives of others, and we pray for the families whose loved ones were taken from them. […]
NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim Friday, September 7, through Sunday, September 9, 2007, as National Days of Prayer and Remembrance. I ask that the people of the United States and their places of worship mark these National Days of Prayer and Remembrance with memorial services, the ringing of bells, and evening candlelight remembrance vigils.
I don’t imagine anyone would argue that there’s anything wrong with honoring the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. The point here is one of religion and government — this president, on average, has issued a “day of prayer” proclamation every 10 weeks since his inauguration in 2001. We’ve had four White House-endorsed prayer days in just the last four months. No president in U.S. history has ever issued so many official prayer edicts in office.
In fact, in the “good old days,” this didn’t occur. Presidents such as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison opposed official government prayer days.
For the truly devout, isn’t every day a day of prayer? Doesn’t that make government proclamations unnecessary? Then again, considering the way the president governs, more Americans are probably praying now than ever before.
The God Machine overall wasn’t nearly as busy this week as it usually is, but there were a couple of other religion stories worth noting.
* A couple of years ago, a Republican-led effort in Congress sought to preserve an 8-foot-tall cross in the Mojave National Preserve, despite two court rulings that said the state-sponsored religious display was a violation of the First Amendment. Lawmakers inserted language in a congressional defense-appropriations bill that transferred government ownership of an acre of land to the Veterans of Foreign Wars in an effort to end government sponsorship of religious symbols on public land.
The argument, in a nutshell, was this: if the cross is unconstitutional on public land, the transfer of ownership of the land to the VFW should make the cross permissible. Instead of a public endorsement of religion, it was, the argument goes, a private war memorial.
This week, a unanimous ruling from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the land transfer was a sham. Judge M. Margaret McKeown, writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, said that “carving out a tiny parcel of property in the midst of this vast Preserve — like a donut hole with the cross atop it — will do nothing to minimize the impermissible governmental endorsement” of the religious symbol.
An ACLU attorney added, “I hope this stops the litigation and the waste of taxpayers’ money. Then they can build a real war memorial that honors all veterans.” Sounds like a good idea.
* And in Dallas, Texas, a local courthouse has a rule that prohibits those with official business from wearing hats. That became controversial when Amardeep Singh, who is a Sikh, entered a courtroom to defend himself in a traffic-citation case while wearing a turban, a religious article for Sikh men.
When Singh tried to explain that his faith requires wearing a turban, Judge Albert B. Cercone reportedly ordered him to leave the courtroom or face arrest.
The Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund said it tried to contact the judge about the incident, but he refused to respond. Left with no other choice, the group contacted the ACLU, which filed a lawsuit this week. It should be interesting.