tedstrong.com

Public Prayer Fanatics Borrow Page from Enemy's Script
March 5, 2003
BY ROGER EBERT

The Bush administration has been dealt a setback in its campaign to allow prayer in our public schools. The full 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals has voted 15-9 to back the 2-1 vote by its earlier panel finding the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional because of the words ''under God.''

The pledge, written in 1892, had those words added to it in 1954, during the Eisenhower administration, and I remember a nun in our Catholic school telling us we had to say it because it was the law--but it was wrong, because it violated the principle of separating church and state.

We started every day with classroom prayer at St. Mary's School, of course, but Sister Rosanne said there was a difference between voluntary prayer in a private religious school and prayer in a school paid for by every taxpayer--a distinction so obvious that Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft are forced to willfully ignore it.

Ashcroft said after the ruling that his Justice Department will ''spare no effort to preserve the rights of all our citizens to pledge allegiance to the American flag''--a misrepresentation so blatant that it functions as a lie. The pledge remains intact and unchallenged. The court said nothing about pledging allegiance to the flag. It spoke only of the words ''under God''--which amounted, the court said, to an endorsement of religion.

This is really an argument between two kinds of prayer--vertical and horizontal. I don't have the slightest problem with vertical prayer. It is horizontal prayer that frightens me. Vertical prayer is private, directed upward toward heaven. It need not be spoken aloud, because God is a spirit and has no ears. Horizontal prayer must always be audible, because its purpose is not to be heard by God, but to be heard by fellow men standing within earshot.

To choose an example from football, when my team needs a field goal to win and I think, ''Please, dear God, let them make it!''--that is vertical prayer. When, before the game, a group of fans joins hands and ''voluntarily'' recites the Lord's Prayer--that is horizontal prayer. It serves one of two purposes: to encourage me to join them, or to make me feel excluded.

Although some of the horizontal devout are sincere, others use this prayer as a device of recruitment or intimidation. If you are conspicuous in your refusal to go along, they may even turn and pray while holding you directly in their sights.

This simple insight about two kinds of prayer, which is beyond theological question, should bring a dead halt to the obsession with prayer in public places. It doesn't, because the purpose of its supporters is political, not spiritual. Their faith is like Dial soap: Now that they use it, they wish everyone would. I grew up in an America where people of good breeding did not impose their religious convictions upon those they did not know very well. Now those manners have been discarded.

Our attorney general, John Ashcroft, is theoretically responsible for enforcing the separation of church and state. He violates his oath of office daily by getting down on his knees in his government office every morning and welcoming federal employees to join him in ''voluntary'' prayer on carpets paid for by the taxpayers.

His brand of religion is specifically fundamentalist evangelical. As his eyes lift from beneath lowered lids to take informal attendance, would he be gladdened to see a Muslim, a Catholic, a Jew, a Hindu, a Buddhist, a Baha'i, a Unitarian, a Scientologist, all accompanied by the chants of Hare Krishnas?

Under Bush we have had a great deal of horizontal prayer, in which we evoke the deity at political events to send the sideways message that our enemies had better look out, because God is on our side. This week's Newsweek cover story reports that the Bush presidency ''is the most resolutely 'faith-based' in modern times.''

Because our enemies are for the most part more enthusiastic about horizontal prayer than we are, and see absolutely no difference between church and state--indeed, want to make them the same--it is alarming to reflect that they may be having more success bringing us around to their point of view than we are at sticking to our own traditional American beliefs about freedom of religion. When Ashcroft and his enemies both begin their days with displays of their godliness, do we feel safer after they rise from their devotions?

Copyright © Chicago Sun-Times Inc.

I originally had a link to this article at the Sun-Times website, but then I noticed they only keep their articles up for about a month. So I'm posting it here. I hope Mr. Ebert doesn't mind.

So, anyway, I sent this article to my mom.

She emailed me...

From: Patti Strong
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003
To: Ted Strong
Subject: Re: Public Prayer Fanatics Borrow Page from Enemy's Script

yeah yeah yeah.....Ebert should stick to his movies and not get his panties in a bunch over God being in the Pledge of Allegiance. Does he know that God is on his money too? Another thing, does Ebert give a zero rating to David Hale because of artistic failures... or because he wasn't happy with the way capital punishment was dealt with?

And then I emailed her back...

From: Ted Strong
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003
To: Patti Strong
Subject: Re: Public Prayer Fanatics Borrow Page from Enemy's Script

First of all, it's David Gale.

Second of all the David Gale movie is the worst film of the year so far.
Third I'm sure Ebert does know that "God" is on our money, that doesn't change the fact that having children recite in school something about being under "God" is a) unconstitutional and b) was never originally in the Pledge of A. -- it was added by a group of politicians who wanted to appease or please a Christian lobby group.

As was the case with "In God We Trust": On July 11.1955, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed Public Law 140 making it mandatory that all coinage and paper currency display the motto "In God We Trust." The following year, Public Law 851 was enacted and signed, which officially replaced the national motto "E Pluribus Unum" with "In God We Trust."

All of this occurred at the height of cold war tension, when political divisions between the Soviet and western block was simplistically portrayed as a confrontation between Judeo-Christian civilization and the "godless" menace of communism. Indeed, the new national motto was only part of a broader effort to effectively religionize civic ritual and symbols.

On June 14, 1954, Congress unanimously ordered the inclusion of the words "Under God" into the nation's Pledge of Allegiance. By this time, other laws mandating public religiosity had also been enacted, including a statute for all federal justices and judges to swear an oath concluding with "So help me God."

All paper currency issued after October 1, 1957 included the IN GOD WE TRUST national motto.

In summary, it is wrong to try to turn this country into a Christian country. The Republican Party is now controlled by the religious right, and when the religious get into politics it practically always leads to censorship, loss of freedoms (speech, thought, the press), war and murder. It is morally, and I think legally (unconstitutional) to add "God" to things dealing with the government. This didn't start until rather recently -- the 50s -- and it needs to be repealed. Keeping the separation of church and state is important. If you don't know why look at Iraq. Or Afghanistan. Look at history all over the world.

A lot of Christians even believe in the separation of church and state.

Why do you believe in Christianity? I mean, I get that you want to. But what is that based in? Faith? Yes, but your faith in what? A book written by countless people over centuries, translated dozens of times, filled with fictional stories that are obviously moral tales and lessons of bygone worlds? Think about why you believe it, and why you believe in it. There's no sense to it at all.

And what makes Mormons, Jews, Buddhists, etc wrong? And have you noticed that most people are the religion of their parents? What does that say? You're taught something growing up, it's ingrained so you keep it. It does not make it true.

And you know it's the seriously hardcore, fundamentalist/born again people (these are also the people who want to and are getting their hands into the running of this country) who think that almost everyone is going to hell. Many Christians too, including and especially Catholics. And if you don't believe me or don't know what I'm talking about then you might want to look into your religion a little more.

Fourth "panties in a bunch"?


Home