President Biden left the word “God” out of his proclamation of the annual National Day of Prayer on Thursday, New York Post reports.
The president lauded America’s “remarkable religious vitality and diversity,” noted “the power of prayer to provide hope and uplift us for the work ahead,” and even quoted the late congressman and civil rights leader John Lewis. But the proclamation made no mention or reference to God or any other deity.
By contrast, President Trump’s National Day of Prayer proclamation last year mentioned God eight times, with three more mentions taken from quotations. Barack Obama found space to mention God twice in his last National Day of Prayer declaration as president in 2016, while George W. Bush mentioned God four times in his 2008 proclamation.
The omission was not lost on some Republicans and religious leaders. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) mockingly tweeted:
“Our Government, which art in Washington, hallowed be thy taxes…” in response to a story about the proclamation, while evangelist Franklin Graham told Fox News Thursday night: “Of course we need to call on God, and not just some generic ‘gods’ or some ‘power’ in the air, but on God himself … There is no one else to pray to except to God.”
The president is required by law to issue an annual proclamation designating the first Thursday in May as a National Day of Prayer “on which the people of the United States may turn to God in prayer and meditation at churches, in groups, and as individuals.”
Be the first to comment