AP
 
Trump's inaugural to include interfaith prayer service
 
 
 
 
 
By _RACHEL  ZOLL_ (http://bigstory.ap.org/content/rachel-zoll) 



Dec. 21,  2016



 
 
 
Donald Trump's Inaugural weekend will include an  interfaith prayer service 
at Washington's National Cathedral, a customary event  but complicated this 
year by anger over the president-elect's rhetoric on  Muslims, immigrants 
and others. 
The service was announced Wednesday by the  presidential inaugural 
committee, which provided no details on the ceremony or  participants. A 
similar 
2013 event for President Barack Obama's second-term  Inaugural included about 
two dozen religious leaders, including three Muslims,  along with 
representatives of Judaism, evangelical Christianity, mainline  Protestantism, 
Orthodox 
Christianity and Sikhism. 
Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the Roman Catholic archbishop  of Washington, has 
been helping plan the Jan. 21 service and will participate,  said his 
spokeswoman, Chieko Noguchi. She said the organizing "is still in its  early 
stages." 

Washington Episcopal Bishop Mariann Budde, who  oversees the cathedral, 
declined an interview request Wednesday. A cathedral  spokesman released a 
brief statement saying the service "is a moment for our  next president to 
pause 
and contemplate the incredible responsibility he has  been entrusted with 
and to listen as the faith community offers prayers for the  office of the 
president." In an interview Tuesday on NPR's "The Diane Rehm  Show," Budde 
said "all faiths will be represented at his (Trump's) request and  we will pray 
for the good of our nation." 
The cathedral, part of the Episcopal Church, a  liberal Protestant group, 
has hosted presidential funerals and national prayers  of mourning, including 
a ceremony with evangelist Billy Graham three days after  the Sept. 11 
attacks. The cathedral also has been deeply involved in interfaith  outreach, 
including hosting Friday communal prayer for Muslims two years ago — a  first 
for the worship space. 
The cathedral staff and other religious leaders will  work with the 
inaugural committee on the event, but the committee "can't dictate  everything 
about it because it is, in fact, an Episcopal cathedral, so they have  to 
negotiate" over who is invited and what they say during the ceremony,  
according 
to Charles Haynes of the Religious Freedom Center at the Newseum  Institute 
in Washington. 
Johnnie Moore, a member of Trump's evangelical  advisory board, which meets 
weekly, said the decision about religious events  related to the inaugural 
would be made by the president-elect's aides, not the  advisory group. Moore 
said he has been to Trump Tower in New York more than once  to discuss 
policy and plans to attend the inauguration and the cathedral  service. "It's 
going to be reconciliatory," said Moore, a public relations  executive who 
leads The KAIROS Company. He said the ceremony will underscore  "the 
president-elect's commitment to having a presidency for all  Americans." 
Trump won 81 percent of white evangelical voters and  52 percent of the 
overall Catholic vote. Conservative Christians and others have  been deeply 
heartened by Trump's promise to appoint conservative U.S. Supreme  Court 
justices, among other pledges. 
But Trump lost Latino Catholics and attracted only 24  percent of Jews. He 
has drawn condemnations from a wide range of religious  leaders for calling 
Mexicans rapists, while pledging to deport large numbers of  immigrants in 
the country illegally and promising during the campaign to  temporarily ban 
immigrants from Muslim nations. This week, the U.S. Conference  of Catholic 
Bishops announced a new working group to advocate on behalf of  immigrants 
and refugees. Earlier this month, more than 300 American Muslim  leaders sent 
a letter to Trump expressing grave concern about his incoming  
administration, including appointees who have cast suspicion on all Muslims as 
a  
potential terror threat. 
These tensions could discourage some religious  leaders from participating 
in the cathedral service. "As a matter of conscience,  religious leaders who 
are concerned about the next administration might do well  to be a part of 
this ceremony and to pray for what they would like to see, to  lift up 
religious freedom, to lift up a country that is religiously diverse and  call 
on 
the president-elect to remember that as he takes office," Haynes  said. 
Rizwan Jaka, board chairman of the Washington-area  mosque ADAMS, one of 
the largest mosques in the country, said "it would be very  good for Muslims 
to be a part of this" cathedral service. The spiritual leader  of ADAMS, Imam 
Mohamed Magid, was one of the three Muslims who participated in  the 2013 
service at the cathedral for Obama. Magid was one of the signers of the  
Muslim letter to Trump. 
"I believe our nation must come together in unity and  healing. I believe 
we must continue to advocate for religious freedom, better  race relations, 
women's rights, national security, civil rights and counter  bigotry in all 
forms," Jaka said. 
The cathedral service will be held on a Saturday  morning, during the 
Jewish Sabbath, when observant Jews are forbidden to drive  or use electricity, 
among other restrictions, potentially complicating efforts  to find a rabbi 
to participate in the service. Ivanka Trump and her husband  Jared are 
Orthodox Jews and would face the same Shabbat limits. The inaugural is  
constitutionally mandated to be held on Jan. 20, and the National Cathedral  
service 
is usually held the next day. 
Nathan Diament, head of the public policy arm of the  Orthodox Union, the 
main communal association for Orthodox Judaism, said the  cathedral service 
"should not be looked at in a partisan way." 
"It's meant to be a unifying event," Diament said.  "It's meant to focus on 
praying for the success, not only of the president but  also his entire 
administration and the new Congress, which is something everyone  should hope 
for."

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