The Freedom From Religion Foundation, a 16,600-member state/church watchdog based in Madison, Wis., filed a federal lawsuit this morning in the Southern District Court of Texas in Houston seeking to block Texas Gov. Rick Perry from continued association with the evangelical Christian prayer rally he initiated at Reliant Stadium in Houston to take place on Aug. 6.
A judge will be assigned in about two days.
On behalf of its 700 Texas members, FFRF, as well as five of its Houston members ā Kay Staley, Scott Weitzenhoffer, Wilfred Lyon, Stacie Gonzalez and Kristin Ames ā are asking the federal court to declare unconstitutional Perryās initiation, organization, promotion and participation in the Aug. 6 prayer event. A proposed order to restrain Perryās continuing involvement in the prayer rally will be filed after a hearing date is set.
FFRF previously called on Perry to disassociate from the prayer conclave and rescind his prayer proclamation calling Aug. 6 a āDay of Prayer and Fasting for our Nationās Challenges.ā āThe Response: A Call to Prayer for a National in Crisis,ā was initiated by Perry. The prayer rally spokesman is Eric Bearse, Gov. Perryās former communications director.
The website for The Response, linked from the governorās official website, conveys Gov. Perryās hope that the prayer rally will provide divine guidance to the nation, and Perryās videotaped invitation to join him on Aug. 6 to turn to Jesus and ask for Godās forgiveness. The homepage bears Perryās open invitation as governor to āfellow Americansā to join him and other āpraying peopleā in āasking Godās forgiveness, wisdom and provision for our state and nation. There is hope for America. It lies in heaven, and we will find it on our knees.ā
The legal complaint notes the plaintiffs are ānonbelievers who support the free exercise of religion, but strongly oppose the governmental establishment and endorsement of religion, including prayer and fasting, which are not only an ineffectual use of time and government resources, but which can be harmful or counterproductive as a substitute for reasoned action.ā
Perry is working āhand-in-gloveā with the American Family Association to put on and promote the prayer rally. The AFA āpromotes a rabid evangelical Christian agenda that is hostile to nonbelievers, nonChristians and other protected groups, such as gays and lesbians,ā asserts FFRF.
Perryās actions as governor give āofficial recognitionā to a devotional event, endorse religion, have no secular rationale, and seek to encourage citizens to pray and nonChristians to convert to Christianity.
These actions violate the Establishment Clause by āgiving the appearance that the government prefers evangelical Christian religious beliefs over other religious beliefs and non-beliefs, including by aligning and partnering with the American Family Association, a virulent, discriminatory and evangelical Christian organization known for its intolerance.ā
Such actions send an impermissible āmessage that believers in religion are political insiders ā and nonbelievers are political outsiders.ā FFRF notes that Perryās actions as governor endorsing evangelical Christianity and prayer place FFRF at a competitive disadvantage. The power of government, once aligned with religion, to chill dissent is demonstrated by the fact that at least one major billboard company has denied FFRF the opportunity to even purchase advertising space anywhere in Houston that is specifically critical of the prayer rally and Perryās role in it.
The federal lawsuit seeks to declare Perryās participation in the prayer rally and his proclamation unconstitutional, to enjoin his further involvement, and to order corrective action. FFRF seeks to stop further publication of the proclamation, to declare the use of the official state seal of Texas unconstitutional, to order the governor to withdraw permission for the AFA to use his written and videotaped promotions and radio recordings at their website, to remove links from the governorās website, as well as enjoining Perry from issuing and disseminating further Day of Prayer proclamations or designations.
āWe always say āBeware prayer by pious politicians,ā ā says Annie Laurie Gaylor, who co-directs FFRF with husband Dan Barker, a former evangelical minister who is now an atheist. āNothing fails like prayer. Itās the ultimate political cop-out.ā
āThe answers for Americaās problems wonāt be found on our knees or in heaven, but by using our brains, our reason and in compassionate action,ā adds Barker, author of Godless. āGov. Perryās distasteful use of his civil office to plan and dictate a religious course of action to āall citizensā is deeply offensive to many citizens, as well as to our secular form of government.ā
The lawsuit is being handled by FFRF litigation attorney Richard L. Bolton, Madison, Wis., with local counsel Randall L. Kallinen. The case number of Staley, et. al. v. Perry is 4:11-cv-02585.
FFRF, which incorporated as an educational group in 1978 and is now the nationās largest explicitly atheist/agnostic membership group, has taken the lead in challenging the National Day of Prayer. It has brought more than 50 lawsuits, winning many significant victories in and out of court to keep religion out of government.