Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Pastor Will Lead Prayer In Pennsylvania Senate After Rejecting House's Rules
The Pennsylvania House of Representatives invites clergy to offer an opening prayer, but requires the prayer to be submitted in advance. When Rev. Gerry Stoltzfoos was invited and submitted his invocation, a staff member in the Speaker's office requested that he remove a reference to Jesus in the closing. The House has recently adopted this policy to avoid litigation. Rev. Stoltzfoos, however, objected and decided not to accept the invitation to lead the House in prayer, saying: "I just feel like if you want me to pray, then I have to pray to the one thing I know." Now, according to yesterday's York Daily Record, Pennsylvania state Sen. Rich Alloway, who was "shocked" by the House policy, has invited Stoltzfoos to open the state Senate with a prayer-- where no similar editorial policy is in effect. Alloway, commenting on the House policy, said: "This government should not be antagonistic toward any religion."