Thanks to PGBB commenter Scott Shaffer for first tipping me off, and for Dr. Albert Mohler for speaking so plainly against President Obama's government censorship of public prayers.
Apparently, President Obama has staffers engaged in the task of reviewing, critiquing, and revising(?) public prayers offered at official presidential events.
It all seems very inefficient to me. I mean, how many hours are these staffers having to put into prayer scrutiny at taxpayer expense? Wouldn't it work much better for the Obama White House just to compile a book of approved prayers? Then they could ask Congress to approve it as the national prayer-book. Prayers offered from the text with the President's imprimatur would be legal to offer in public.
It's so simple; it's amazing that nobody's thought of it before.
It just keeps getting better and better every day...dont it?
ReplyDeleteNOT!
This is very disturbing, and everyday brings more disturbing and concerning things with Obama.
What's our country gonna be like in 4 years?
David
I had the privilege, twice, of praying at public gatherings for President Bush (actually, once was before he was president, just before the Iowa caususes).
ReplyDeleteI never got one instruction on what to pray or how to pray. The first was at a Christian school, so there was an almost totally Christian audience.
The second was at a public gathering at a local college, so all kinds of people were there.
No one asked me to limit anything in any way.
Chalk me up as someone who misses the "worst President in history" and wishes he could have served four more years.
Dave Miller: I echo your heartfelt sentiments with one caveat. I wish he'd find the fiscal responsibility of a true Republican before he entered the 3rd term and put someone in place of Paulsen and Cox who had their heads screwed on right. selahV
ReplyDeleteHow do you reconcile vetting prayers with separation of Church and State?
ReplyDeleteUsing the definition of of vetting from onlinedictionary.com in reference to prayers creates an oxymoron. It is not vetting, it is censorship.
Bart,
ReplyDeleteLet me add this to my comment above. I pray for President Obama on a regular basis. My desire is to see the man come to true faith in Jesus. Truly I do.
I dont hate him. I dont like his policies. I really dont like his views about many things, especially theology. And, I despise his pro-abortion views.
David
Bart Burleson,
ReplyDeleteDid you delete me?:-) My, how the mighty have fallen.
cb
CB.
ReplyDeleteYour earlier post mentioned a gentleman who, I am convinced, did what he did solely in an attempt to gain publicity. Well, he's going to have to try to get it elsewhere. This blog will not be helping him.
I well understand.
ReplyDeletecb
I'm pleased to note that even Obama supporter Aaron Weaver agrees with me on this one (see here). It doesn't surprise me. Aaron is, as far as I can tell, a man of principle. Often the wrong principles, from my viewpoint, but he is a principled and consistent man. And on matters of religious liberty, we are rarely at odds with one another.
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