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Atheists seek restraining order against God for the inauguration.

December 31, 2008 |  1:57 pm

Barack Obama, atheists, inauguration, prayer, rick warren, proposition 8, constitution, BibleAmerica’s most irritating atheist is at again. That tiresome Michael Newdow and a bunch of other anti-God types have filed suit to bar prayer and references to God at President-elect Barack Obama’s swearing-in on Jan. 20. Newdow also filed lawsuits to remove prayer from President George W. Bush’s inauguration ceremonies in 2001 and 2005, and you may also remember him as the crank who tried to get the phrase “under God” eliminated from the pledge of allegiance.

At least when he went after the pledge of allegiance in 2005 he could halfway make an argument that there is an expectation, particularly for school children, that it be recited regardless of a child’s beliefs. But the oath of office? That’s one person’s vow to make. Millions of people are not being asked to say it too (and in fact should politely keep quiet while he does it).

Named in the suit filed by Newdow, 17 other individuals and 10 groups, according to the Washington Post, are Chief Justice John Roberts, who will administer the oath; Saddleback church Pastor Rick Warren, who will give the invocation; and Rev. Joseph E. Lowery, who will give the benediction. Wow, this inaugural is shaping up to be one big religious hurly-burly. Liberals who support gay marriage are upset because of Warren will have a prominent place at the ceremony. Conservatives are upset because Obama will have a prominent place at the ceremony. And now atheists are upset that God will have a prominent place there, too. Obama wasn’t kidding when he said he’d bring everyone together.

But back to Newdow et al. If you don’t believe God exists, then why doesn’t it follow that phrases like “so help me God” have no meaning? And if that’s the case, then why does something meaningless matter? I have news for Newdow -- even if he managed to bar all religious references from public life it wouldn’t matter. The Soviet Union tried that; all it did was send religious fervor underground until communism ended and it came roaring back.

Besides, what would Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts be expected to do if Obama were to defy a ruling in Newdow’s favor, snatch away the Lincoln Bible and swat him on the hand? Scott Walter, the executive director of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, hit the nail on the head when he said in a statement:

Newdow's lawsuit over the inauguration is a lot like the streaker at the Super Bowl: a pale, self-absorbed distraction. And anybody who looks at it carefully can see there's not much there.

Photo: Manny Garcia/Getty Images


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Comments
26.

The Founding Fathers were religious folks, and the words; "endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights" in the preamble prove that. I've been hearing the 'church/state' argument for years, but the constitution guarantees freedom OF religion, not freedom FROM religion. Using "so help me God" in the oath is NOT creating a state religion and it's not shoving religion down anyone's throat. Nothing can be shoved down anyone's throat unless the throat is open, yes? Don't like the movie? LEAVE. Don't like what's on television? Turn it OFF. Don't like prayer at the inauguration? Don't watch the inauguration. And I want it understood that I am not a religious person. I was raised Catholic and lapsed many years ago. I don't go to church. Newdow doesn't want religion shoved down his throat, but others don't want HIS belief (or lack thereof) shoved down theirs. I agree with Dean0232, "Live and let live".

27.

"But the oath of office? That’s one person’s vow to make. Millions of people are not being asked to say it too"

The oath of office is an official government function and Obama is a government official. As such, he should not attempt to establish a religion in the US.

When the US was 99% Christian, presidents could get away with this. But today, more than 20% are non-religious and another 5% of the population belong to other religions, and those numbers are growing fast. Furthermore, many Christians are bothered by governmental invocations of the name of God.

It may take another decade or two, but sooner or later, references to God will be removed from government events and functions, and both Christians and non-Christians will be better off for it.

28.

Newdow is making a valid point. Religion contaminates politics with irrational prejudice and should be practiced privately in deference to those who want no part of it.

29.

Would it make Newdow feel better to know Jehovah God wasn't listening to hypocritical prayers that mix politics and religion anyway? Newdow has nothing to fear.

30.

> But the oath of office?

Yes, what about the oath of office? Have a look at its real text, in the Constitution.

"So help me god" is NOT part of the oath.

31.

I think he is representative of the sickness our society is suffering now. Why does he care? What does he expect to get for all this gnashing of teeth? Live and let live...

 


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