Rick Perry and his Pray-a-Palooza

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Rick Perry elected President

that would be a time to start praying

So, what do you think?  True believer or political hack?  Either way, is this the way we want our elected, public officials behaving?  So much for separation of church and state in this country.  By the way, that whirring noise you hear is the sound of our Founding Fathers spinning in their graves.

Texas Governor Rick Perry, expected to enter the Republican race for the White House within weeks, offered a prayer for America on Saturday at a controversial religious rally that put the spotlight on his Christian faith.

rick-perry,rick perry prayerRick Perry a Christian? Bit of a stretch

Perry, who has made his religious beliefs a big part of his public image, urged an enthusiastic crowd at the seven-hour gathering to pray for President Barack Obama and other U.S. leaders.

“Father, our heart breaks for America,” said Perry, who hatched the idea for the rally and brushed off heavy criticism for participating.

“We see discord at home, we see fear in the marketplace, we see anger in the halls of government. As a nation, we have forgotten who made us,” Perry said in a prayer offered to a crowd estimated by organizers at more than 30,000 people.

The event was named “The Response” and billed as a day of prayer for a nation in crisis. It also gave Perry a national platform to sharpen his appeal to religious conservatives who play a big role in the Republican nominating race and have been unhappy with the current crop of contenders.

Sponsors of the rally included the American Family Association, whose leaders have condemned gays and Muslims, and the International House of Prayer, founded by an evangelist who warns celebrity Oprah Winfrey is a pastor in a Satan-inspired religion.

It also drew prominent religious conservative leaders such as Focus on the Family head James Dobson and Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council.

Critics condemned the event for excluding non-Christian faiths and blurring the boundary between church and state, as well as affiliating with controversial fringe religious groups and leaders.

“Governor Perry achieved his goal today — he drove almost every religious right leader and group into his corral,” said Reverend Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Perry is poised to enter the 2012 Republican presidential race in the next few weeks. He already has shot into the top tier of contenders in opinion polls.

At the rally in Houston’s cavernous 70,000-seat Reliant Stadium, home of the Houston Texans professional football team, Perry discussed his faith, read scripture and said a prayer.

“We know the greatest darkness comes just before the morning,” he said in a 12-minute appearance, adding God was wise enough to avoid affiliation with any political party.

“His agenda is not a political agenda. His agenda is a salvation agenda,” said Perry, who was criticized for blending politics and religion in launching the prayer rally.
 

Rick Perry uses prayer as ‘a campaign prop’

“This isn’t the first time we have seen Governor Perry use a religious gathering or house of worship as a campaign prop,” said Kathy Miller, executive director of the Texas Freedom Network, a nonpartisan watchdog on far-right religious groups.

Perry closed the event by saying he hoped it would begin a national renewal and “our willingness to stand in the public square” would inspire others to seek God.

The rally had a mix of Christian rock, testimonials and scripture from pastors and children, as well as numerous calls to end abortion but little other overtly political rhetoric.

Participants said they were praying to heal a troubled nation and politics was not their concern. Many in attendance, who came in church buses from throughout the region, praised Perry for leading the effort.

“He was brave enough to stand up and say, ‘Hey, we’ve got to pray for the nation.’ He’s the governor but he’s a Christian man,” said Lonnie Lavender, a pastor at the War Cry Prayer Ministry in Venus, Texas.

Eddie Ellis, a delivery service owner in Conroe, Texas, who bused to the event with about 50 parishioners from his church, said Americans needed to “wake up.”

“Perry is a politician but he says we’ve got to pray. He hits the right keys,” Ellis said.

Perry invited all of the nation’s governors but Republican Sam Brownback of Kansas was the only one to attend. Florida Governor Rick Scott, also a Republican, sent a video message.

The event was broadcast on the Internet to more than 1,000 churches around the country, sponsors said. Organizers draped black curtains behind the stage to hide empty seats, although the crowd was larger than predicted earlier in the week.

Perry’s emphasis on his Christian faith could be a drawback in a general election when it could turn off moderates and independents, along with those of non-Christian faiths.

rick perry prayer, rick-perryI want to be President this much

Thanks to YahooNews for the story.

Rick Perry is professional Christian, all President’s have to be, only Jimmy Cater in recent memory, was probably a genuine Christian.

About Post Author

R. J. Opus

R.J. is by turns, sentimental, political, snotty, sarcastic, angry, philosophical, opinionated, funny and usually fair. She is not religious, bigoted, sexist, ageist, boring, maudlin or Republican. She truly believes in your right to your opinion, even if it's wrong.
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12 years ago

As one of the few Christians in these parts,, even I see this for the bullshit pandering do religious zealots that it is.

Any Christian that would allow a pandering to faith as a reason to vote for someone is an idiot and accomplice to blasphemy.

Whe Jesus returns and I see him knocking on doors and putting up Rick Perry signs then I’ll rethink. Till then this joker is a punk trying to use God for political means.

12 years ago

Why do I always think of Elmer Gantry when I see anything about this man?

12 years ago

If I began praying in public to ODIN the Father of the Gods, King of ASGARD, Ruler of the AESIR and the Lord of War, Death and Knowledge, could I get elected to dog catcher?
No difference.

BigHarryH
12 years ago

Rick Perry has no scruples, if he gets to Washington he will be in good company.

12 years ago

Fucking nut case. People who believe in fairy tales, mythology and need sky pixies to watch over them are fucking insane. 19th Century mythology in a 21st Century world. Geez. Lock em up.

Bradley scott
Reply to  Sagacious Hillbilly
12 years ago

Ja, Mein Fuehrer. Lock up all religious volk. Seig Heil! That being said, I’d venture that RP is crazy like a fox, a fraud, to be sure, but climbing in the polls, nonetheless. Focus on his POLITICAL record, what he has done for, or more aptly, done TO the state of Texas and I don’t think even a sky pixie would vote for him.

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