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Choice of Warren for inaugural magnifies role of U.S. ‘civic religion’ (DC Examiner)

Posted on December 26, 2008 by ReligiousLiberty.TV

By Leah Fabel
Examiner Staff Writer 12/24/08

An often ignored minute of presidential inaugurations is shaping up to be one of the most closely watched next month as evangelical Pastor Rick Warren will momentarily test the controversial role of faith in American public life.

Past prayers have been “a sidelight,” said Jim Bendat, author of “Democracy’s Big Day,” a historical jaunt through presidential inaugurations. “When you watch the tapes, people are usually milling around during those things, but they’ll probably pay attention this year because of the selection.”

Evangelicals like Warren are nothing new to the ceremonies – Billy Graham led inaugural prayers for every president from Richard Nixon in 1969 to Bill Clinton in 1997. But in a political climate in which gay rights is a touchstone issue for many Democrats, Warren’s outspoken opposition to gay marriage has infuriated some Obama faithful.

Neither are the prayers themselves anything new. On April 30, 1789, a man referred to in history books as Dr. Prevost, bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in New York, led post-swearing-in prayers for President George Washington at New York City’s St. Paul’s Church.

In 1961, Catholic Cardinal Richard Cushing’s lectern caught fire due to a electrical short during the opening prayer at President John F. Kennedy’s swearing-in.

“You’d never have known it watching his face – he kept on without a hitch,” Bendat said.

But the selection of Warren is the selection of a man in a faith tradition more in the face of what scholars call American “civic religion,” or a generic approach to a deity found in phrases such as “God bless America.”

 

Read the rest at: http://www.dcexaminer.com/local/122408-Choice_of_Warren_for_inaugural_magnifies_role_of_US_civic_religion.html

Category: Current Events, Politics

2 thoughts on “Choice of Warren for inaugural magnifies role of U.S. ‘civic religion’ (DC Examiner)”

  1. Monica Williamson says:
    December 30, 2008 at 1:50 am

    Rick Warren is a very outspoken evangelist. He is very much different from what our country has seen in the past inaugurations with the Graham family. Warren just might say something controversial in his prayer. If he does or not, people will be listening a little closer just to hear what he says.

  2. Monica Williamson says:
    December 29, 2008 at 6:50 pm

    Rick Warren is a very outspoken evangelist. He is very much different from what our country has seen in the past inaugurations with the Graham family. Warren just might say something controversial in his prayer. If he does or not, people will be listening a little closer just to hear what he says.

Comments are closed.

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