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After Court Gives OK, Christians Mark National Day of Prayer

Christianity Today May 5, 2011

Supporters marked the 60th annual National Day of Prayer on Thursday, just weeks after a federal appeals court dismissed a suit that challenged the law creating the day as unconstitutional.

Focus on the Family founder James Dobson spoke of the “poignant moment” for the annual gathering on Capitol Hill after a federal court last year had cast uncertainty about future observances.

“Millions of people prayed, and many of them here in this room, and God heard and answered prayer and here we are today!” said Dobson, husband of Shirley Dobson, chairwoman of the National Day of Prayer Task Force.

Joining other events in churches, on military bases and at courthouse steps across the country, about 400 people prayed for relief from natural disasters and thanked God for the capture and death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

“We are blessed to have the best military and the most sophisticated weaponry in the world,” Shirley Dobson said. “They put their lives on the line to assure that justice was done.”

President Obama, who discontinued his predecessor’s annual observances at the White House, nonetheless issued a proclamation under the 1988 law that says the president shall designate the first Thursday in May as the National Day of Prayer.

Church-state separation groups continued to oppose the observances, saying it is inappropriate for elected leaders to tell the American people when or how to pray.

“It is bad manners and worse law for Congress and the president to exhort citizens to `turn to God in prayer,’ as the 1952 law enacting a National Day of Prayer does,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom from Religion Foundation, which recently lost the case about the observance.

Rep. Allen West, R-Fla., who posited that the Navy SEALs prayed before entering bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan, defended the observances against opposition from advocates of church-state separation.

“That principle does not apply to separating me or any of us from our faith and belief in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,” he said, drawing a standing ovation. “It does not apply to separating this great nation from its Judeo-Christian faith heritage.”

Task force officials invited former Sen. Elizabeth Dole to speak “on behalf of” the executive branch, in lieu of a representative from the current administration. Dole, who served as secretary of transportation during Ronald Reagan’s administration, spoke of Reagan’s reliance on prayer, support of religious tolerance and belief in “how good can triumph over evil.”

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