Episcopal leaders address church’s part in Trump's inauguration

By Mary Frances Schjonberg
Posted Jan 12, 2017

Clergy lay hands and pray over President-elect Donald J. Trump Sept. 21, 2016, at the New Spirit Revival Center in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Photo: Jonathan Ernst/ REUTERS

[Episcopal News Service] The involvement of Washington National Cathedral and its choir in the upcoming inauguration of President-elect Donald J. Trump has stirred concern in parts of the Episcopal Church.

The Cathedral Choir accepted an invitation to perform during the musical prelude to the Jan. 20 inauguration ceremony. That prelude begins at 9:30 a.m. EST. The actual ceremony is scheduled to start at 11:30 a.m. The program is here.

The cathedral confirmed three weeks ago that it would once again play out one of its traditional roles in U.S. life by offering Trump and the nation a chance to come together in prayer. The invitation-only 58th Presidential Inaugural Prayer Service will take place at 10 a.m. Jan. 21, the day after Trump is sworn in as the 45th president.

After news of the choir’s participation prompted a deluge of comments on social media as well as emails to officials involved, Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, Diocese of Washington Bishop Mariann Budde and Cathedral Dean Randolph Hollerith all issued statements on Jan. 12 addressing those concerns.

“We all know this election has been contentious and there are deep feelings being felt by Episcopalians on all sides of the issues,” Curry said in his statement. “We recognize that this election has been contentious, and the Episcopal Church, like our nation, has expressed a diversity of views, some of which have been born in deep pain.”

Acknowledging that there has been “much discussion, and some controversy” about the appropriateness of the cathedral hosting the traditional prayer service, and of one of its choirs singing at the inauguration, Curry said that those issues raise “some basic Christian questions about prayer.”

“When I pray for our leaders, why am I doing so? Should I pray for a leader I disagree with? When I pray, what do I think I am accomplishing?” is how Curry described the questions.

The presiding bishop said the practice of prayer for leaders is “deep in our biblical and Anglican/Episcopalian traditions.”

Curry said that tradition of prayer means Episcopalians are praying that “their leadership will truly serve not partisan interest, but the common good.”

“We can and, indeed, I believe we must pray for all who lead in our civic order, nationally and internationally. I pray for the president in part because Jesus Christ is my Savior and Lord,” he said. “If Jesus is my Lord and the model and guide for my life, his way must be my way, however difficult. And the way of prayer for others is a part of how I follow the way of Jesus.”

Construction on the 58th Presidential Inaugural Platform continued Jan. 4 on the west front of the U.S. Capitol. Photo: Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies via Facebook

Prayer is both “contemplative and active,” Curry said, adding that people who pray should both listen to God, and serve and witness to the world in the name of Jesus.

“We participate as followers of Jesus in the life of our government and society, caring for each other and others, and working for policies and laws that reflect the values and teachings of Jesus, to ‘love your neighbor,’ to ‘do unto others as you who have them do unto you,’ to fashion a civic order that reflects the goodness, the justice, the compassion that we see in the face of Jesus, that we know to reflect the very heart and dream of God for all of God’s children and God’s creation,” he said.

Hollerith replied to questions about the choir’s participation in his statement.

“Our choir is singing at the inauguration to honor the peaceful transition of power that is at the heart of our democratic government,” he said. “Let me be clear: We do not pray or sing to bless a political ideology or partisan agenda, regardless of the man (or woman) taking that sacred oath of office. We sing to honor the nation.”

The dean said choir members are not required to participate in what he called “part of our call to serve as a spiritual home for the nation.”

“In our bruised and polarized country, we hope the gift of our music can help remind us of our highest ideals and aspirations as one nation under God,” he said.

Budde said that “while I do not ask you to agree, I simply ask you to consider that we, too, acted on spiritual principles.

“Those principles, while they may seem to conflict with yours, are also essential for the work that lies ahead.”

The first principle, she said, is that Episcopal churches “welcome all people into our houses of prayer.”

“Welcoming does not mean condoning offensive speech or behavior; it does not mean that we agree with or seek to legitimize,” she said. “We simply welcome all into this house of prayer, in full acknowledgment that every one of us stands in need of prayer.”

The second principle, Budde said, is that “in times of national division, the Episcopal Church is called to be a place where those who disagree can gather for prayer and learning and to work for the good of all.”

Saying she is “alarmed by some of Mr. Trump’s words and deeds and by those who now feel emboldened to speak and act in hateful ways,” Budde said. “I believe in the power of God to work for good, and the capacity of our nation to rise to our highest ideals.”

Episcopalians and others have also questioned whether the cathedral ought to host the customary prayer service for the incoming president on the day after the inauguration.

Beginning with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s first inauguration in 1933, presidential inaugural prayer services have taken place at Washington National Cathedral, which calls itself a “house of prayer for all people.” That tradition has been more recently consistent since President Ronald Reagan’s second inauguration in 1985. The exception was President Bill Clinton, who chose Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church, the historic black church in downtown Washington, for both of his inaugural prayer services. The cathedral has also been the location of funeral and memorial services for nearly all the 21 U.S. presidents who have died since the cathedral’s founding.

“At a time when emotions are raw, we hope to offer a few moments of spiritual solace and the healing gift of transcendent beauty,” Budde said. “We also want the nation to know that we are still here, as people of hope. While the inauguration is a civic rather than a religious ceremony, it is also an occasion for prayer and an opportunity to offer the balm of beauty.”

Budde previously said she would participate in that service, as is traditional for the bishop of Washington which includes the District of Columbia and four neighboring counties in Maryland.

Curry has asked Bishop Suffragan for the Armed Forces and Federal Ministries James “Jay” Magness to represent him at the prayer service because the presiding bishop will be leading a pilgrimage of reconciliation to Ghana, a commitment he made more than a year ago.

– The Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg is an editor and reporter for the Episcopal News Service.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this story indicated that the Washington National Cathedral Choir of Men and Boys is scheduled to participate in the inauguration’s musical prelude. This story was updated at 11:15 EST Jan. 13 to clarify the fact that the entire cathedral choir is participating.


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Comments (205)

  1. Jan Nunley says:

    And when they came for the Episcopalians…we said, “It is meet and right so to do.” Here Enders the reading.

    1. Jan Nunley says:

      Endeth. Thanks, autocorrect.

  2. Alan Jackson says:

    The headline is misleading. I read nothing in the article about “urging unity”, but rather being a place where those who disagree can pray together. I, for one, am most certainly not for unity, not now, not in this case, as that would be a gross violation of all that the gospel stands for. These are dangerous and fractious times, and unity is not the answer. Opposing evil in all its manifestations is.

  3. Karl Hoaglund says:

    You’re singing for Hitler, regardless of how you justify it.

    1. Kilty McGowan says:

      Singing for Hitler? You must be kidding. Perhaps you have seen the property with all the ovens to bake all those who disagree. This is the silliest and sickest post I have seen here.
      Just remember Hitler got the Autobahn and the Volkswagen right!

      1. Elaine Connolly says:

        And BMW. Boy, you really are a piece work.

  4. Pete Haynsworth says:

    A fly-on-the-wall – November 9th – Trump inauguration team meeting with Bishop Budde:

    “Here’s the deal: The National Cathedral hosts the prayer service with the usual pomp-and-circumstance, but without any progressive Gospel rancor. Or, as did the Clinton administration, we’ll move the service to another edifice, one not falling apart. And, having the cathedral choir at the inauguration would be a classy touch, don’t ya think?”

  5. Craig Grasty says:

    I prayed to the lord of creation and man to save our country. I don’t know if this man is the answer, but I believe it is part of gods plan. Participate and pray. Wonder what might happen if the majority of Americans offered and begged a common prayer of unification. I think it is addressed in my bible.

  6. susan zimmerman says:

    Episcopalians, PECUSA, WHERE IS THAT PART OF OUR ETHOS CALL THE ‘VIA MEDIA’ GONE? HAVE WE NOT LEARNED ALONG TIME AGO, THAT THE VIA MEDIA , THE MIDDLE WAY, DOES NOT MEAN WE BELIEVE NOTHING…IT IS A GREAT PLACE OF PRAYER and we have to share the communion rail…HELLO?

    PERHAPS SOME OF US ARE JUST REDISCOVERING THE V I A M E D I A!!!! IT WAS DRILLED INTO ME DURING MY CONFIRMATION CLASSES…DA? Whoops…the teaching ministry is gone..

  7. Kenneth Knapp says:

    I think we need to either do a prayer service for all inaugurations or none. I would be happy with none. I don’t see how the idolatry of politics has enhanced the church in any way.

  8. Ted Gammill says:

    Wow, to read these postings makes you forget about the great message Bishop Curry wrote in the first place. The Episcopal Church has become so partisan over the last 20 years that it is hard to recognize it. Are we to only open the door of the people’s cathedral when a democrat is elected President? What seems worse to me is the judgment many have placed on evangelical pastors. This is as scary as ISIS judging Christians. It is indeed sad to see those posters who haughtily look down on another branch of the Jesus Movement to quote our PB. Maybe we should be praying for you.

    1. Yaniris Urbaez says:

      The Episcopal Church welcomes everybody. However, let’s not forget that last time a group of Christians did welcome an evil man to their place of worship to pray with then, nine of then ended up dead. Thus, insted of welcoming him, I will follow Jesus by denouncing the evil intentions so far displayed by the upcoming President. I will pray, indeed, but mine will continue to be dissident prayers.

    2. Yaniris A. Urbaez says:

      The Episcopal Church welcomes everybody. However, let’s not forget that last time a group of Christians did welcome an evil man to their place of worship to pray with then, nine of then ended up dead. Thus, insted of welcoming him, I will follow Jesus by denouncing the evil intentions so far displayed by the upcoming President. I will pray, indeed, but mine will continue to be dissident prayers.

    3. Kilty McGowan says:

      The chicken PB will not show up there. He has taken his Jesus movement on the road. That went out of style a long time ago. Too bad he doesn’t have the guts to show up!

      1. robert hunter says:

        What would the PB show up for? The Inauguration Service is not concerned with the “Jesus Movement”. Neither is a large part of the Episcopal Church.
        We must accept the Cathedral Inauguration Program as a unifying program of the religion of “American Nationalism”.

  9. Lesley Hildrey says:

    I hear the reasoning, but I cannot agree nor support this service. Didn’t the choir notice that so many singers refused to partake in the Inauguration ceremony of Jan. 20th?
    Haven’t our leaders been listening to who have been appointed to the cabinet? Or the lies and vulgarity expounded by this future president? (And yes, I get it, he will be the President, but it doesn’t mean I have to agree with him!)
    Most of the U.S. won’t hear our church leaders’ explanations and will see this as our church supporting him from the get go, which makes me ashamed.
    The Episcopal church stands for social justice, (amongst other wonderful things) and this will never mix with a government of racists, misogynists and generally very unpleasant people with dodgy pasts.
    I am an Episcopalian and will remain so and even pray for the President-Elect. However, this event: I want no part in it. It’s just crazy to try and sit on the fence like this.

  10. Robert Peters says:

    We need a true confessing church in the mold of that in Nazi Germany to resist this tyrant and Dictator who is not a President upholding our democratic traditions in any way. Nor is he a leader interested in treating women, minorities, urban dwellers, gay persons, Muslims, Chinese
    , the disabled, etc…with fairness and respect…In fact quite the opposite this man is evil incarnate and the “church” has sold itself out to Idolatry to embrace any part of him and his regime. They have sold their soul to the brutal nationalism he represents and totally failed the Gospel of a Peace making and Justice Loving Lord over us all who instructed us to non violently resist such evil kings! Shame on your Episcopal church.

  11. Joseph Lane says:

    I had problems with Bp. Curry’s statement. In it, he described two events: the prayer service on 1/21 and the inaugural on 1/20. He addressed the first by speaking poignantly of praying, i.e., what it is that we seek to accomplish through prayer, and I pretty much agreed with him, and I think it’s appropriate that the customary prayer service at the National Cathedral on 1/21 be held as usual. However, unless I overlooked something in his statement, the PB stopped short of addressing the second event, having the National Cathedral choir sing at the inaugural on 1/20. Now, I understand that, for some, singing is a form of prayer, but if that’s what Curry was implying about the choir’s performance on 1/20, he didn’t make that clear. Besides, there’s no getting around the fact that the choir’s participation on 1/20 is, by and large, a performance, not understood or perceived by most people as prayer. I might feel differently about, for example, the choir or the PB or anyone being asked to pray the invocation or benediction. But we’re talking about performance here, and it troubles me that the National Cathedral is, through its choir, performing at the inauguration on 1/20. There are reasons for holding to tradition and there are reasons for breaking with tradition when circumstances warrant. The horrid and hateful rhetoric of the president-elect cited by Bp. Budde warrants breaking with tradition.

    1. CARLOS CABALLERO says:

      Pray for our governments because is a commandment of Jesus..Don`t care if they are atheos or unbelievers. God saves America. CARLOS CABALLERO from Guatemala.

    2. The Rev. Sylvia Vasquez says:

      Joseph, I noticed the same thing about The PB’s comments. It’s a shame because blurring the issues allows for continued false arguments. His incomplete stance about the two events has greatly increased the license to keep people discussing the straw man argument about whether to pray for this president elect. That’s not the issue. Self aware people can make the distinctions that emotionally challenged people easily conflate. I had hoped for a clear stance for the Gospel from him… it’s a missed opportunity. Yes, we should/must pray for him in all our many and varied ways (including the prayer service at the WNC). No, the WNC choir should not perform at the inauguration. These are two distinct events. They each have different meaning and message. We can/should say yes to the prayer and no to the performance.

  12. Fleetwood Range says:

    What is the matter with our people? They seem to have forgotten that our Lord calls us to help and pray for those whom we love and those whom we dislike and/or fear. Can you stand before Jesus, point at a duly elected and honestly sworn president, and say you find him unworthy of your prayer or help or respect? I pray you cannot! I am shamed as an Episcopalian and an American to see these self-righteous and arrogant statements put forth.

  13. Kilty McGowan says:

    Are you so gullible that you believe the lies that were said about him and promoted by this very liberal press in the US. He has more ethics and business acumen than any other president.
    Why not pray for his success rather than whining that your despicable corrupted candidate lost.
    Would you make the same request if that female had won?

  14. Bill Clausen says:

    Trump is a man who thinks it is ok to grab women by the genitals and mocks the disabled: Nothing his supporters say can change those facts.

  15. Michael Patterson says:

    As the American extension of a church that was first founded by a ruthless King who married six times, executed two of his wives, and suppressed all forms of descent, and then re-founded by an enlightened but equally ruthless queen who felt it necessary to assert the State’s control over the temporal and outward spiritual lives of her subjects, the Episcopal Church is in no position to deny prayers for any of its civic leaders. With this in mind, it is reasonable for the National Cathedral to host the post-inaugural prayer service for the incoming president as it has for presidents before.

    I still think it is deeply unfortunate that the WNC Choir will be singing at the inauguration itself. By doing so, the WNC choir is, I think, cheering with the many outwardly racist, homophobic, xenophobic, violent, and nativist voices that are celebrating the ascent of a divisive figure who lost the popular by almost 2.9 million votes.

    1. David mcCain says:

      Sorry, but the Church was founded by Christ, himself, not by Henry VIII.

      1. Michael Patterson says:

        Your point?

  16. Pete Haynsworth says:

    The National Cathedral has, it’s been said, $1/2 billion in repairs needed. Trump has something like $60 million to throw around for the inauguration and those in his sphere have unlimited charitable-donation wealth to tap.

    Whatever that asymmetry between cathedral needs and Trump resources is, can some sort of Faustian bargain – “an artful deal” – not have been struck?

    Pray for the bishop and cathedral dean.

  17. Grace Hobson says:

    Children in the choir should not be taken to witness peaceful transition of power to a man who does not respect Latinos, Muslims, the disabled, women, LGBT, and others.

    1. Ronald Davin says:

      Corpus delicti please !

  18. Jeffrey Jones says:

    The pre-inaugural prayer service is fine. Christ prayed on the cross for those who were killing him. All people deserve prayer. Meanwhile, he Cathedral Choir actively celebrating the inauguration of Donald J. Trump is something differently entirely.

  19. Doug Desper says:

    Is bearing a “false witness” still a sin listed in the 10 Commandments? The hysteria of false witness, distortions, and parrotted attack points by several posters here is disturbing and revealing of the poverty of soul that demands concern. Forget Mr. Trump…..how about focusing on the sinful discourse in the Church!

  20. elena laporosa says:

    The President-elect will be THE President. I will not refer to him as MY president. Taking a step beck will allow me to remove his behavior and narrow-mindedness, thin skinned and bombastic tactics from the office. He will be a non-entity till out of office unless his administration actually does anything to heal the social/economic divide. With so many high end cabinet members it will be difficult.

  21. Fr. Carlton Kelley says:

    Kilty McGowan, et al. The Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ is not about partisan politics. How we treat and speak about one another says volumes about how we think about God. Hate is hate is hate no matter from where it comes. The only thing, so it seems to many in this country, that Donald Trump is only truly interested in is self promotion at all costs – at all costs. If one buys into that, then one’s understanding of the Good News of Jesus Christ for all people is fatally flawed.

  22. Pete Haynsworth says:

    For those who are seething over the upcoming inaugural prayer service – and will be until at least Saturday afternoon – here are some distractions, more-or-less:

    * the 2005 Geo W Bush 2nd inaugural prayer service …
    leaflet – http://faculty.samford.edu/~drbains/inaugural2005.pdf
    and
    video – https://www.c-span.org/video/?185044-1/inaugural-prayer-service

    * the 2013 Barack Obama 2nd inaugural prayer service …
    leaflet – http://www.episcopalchurch.org/files/2013_pips.pdf
    and
    video – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITbHYlDfIHk

  23. Marylin Raisch says:

    There is not much left to be said here and many of the comments themselves are troubling; others therapeutic, and we all need some healing at this point. My only addition to these is likely a most unpopular one: I am a cradle Episcopalian and believe the church left behind the legacy of monarchy as typified by the horrors of Henry VIII. In America, a new church came to be in a land where no religion is established or official. For this reason I am sad that the Episcopal Church has come to play a role that to me blurs the wall of separation between church and state. As for the appalling Mr. Trump, he will be prayed for in the context of the Book of Common Prayer, as is right. But having lived in NYC for twenty years, observing his appalling business and personal conduct, the idea of person of such ignorance and nastiness as well as actually very ordinary business ability becoming President is shocking. He described communion in a published piece as “a little cracker.” Might PB Curry or Bishop Marianne have the courage to ask if he would like instruction? He seems to have latched onto the Episcopal Church to get a respectability that he neither has nor deserves so far, and if he wants to become a member he might learn about respecting human dignity. This really all takes us back to the “social register” church of the 1950s, if that is Trump’s aim. A shame we buy into it but let’s pray for peace and go to the Women’s March!

  24. Selena Smith says:

    The relationship of Politics & Religion. The role of Congress for the colonists (who could not follow the Church of England) during the Revolutionary War included proclaiming days of fasting & prayer and issuing moral codes for those in military service. When there was a religious void, political leadership stepped up. The Inauguration prayer service is an opportunity for the Church’s leadership to step up and model prayer since we are Prayer Book Church. I am grateful that our Presiding Bishop and those responsible for the Cathedral are stepping up as Jesus would: welcoming all to praise God, to hear God’s word in Jesus Christ, and to live as Christ with those who have felt and feel a void in their lives.

  25. Bill Louis says:

    You all make me sick! It took PE Tump to bring out the ungliness that lies just below the surface of the mask you so call “Christians” wear every Sunday. As long as it fits you’re agenda then it’s OK otherwise the claws come out and the hate and name calling begins. Some Christians! All is well as long as it goes your way.. I don’t care for a lot of the things the Episcopal Church promotes but I ask God to help me understand them or give me the strength to be an agent of change.

    1. AC Charles says:

      How very ugly and revealing this chain is. As a former teacher and grandmother I am astonished at the childish and disgusting display. Christians, at a minimum, are called to pray for those in authority an in the government, whether we voted for them or not, agree or disagree, and to respect the office. Why such umbrage at an attempt to bring together people of all faiths at the National Cathedral? Some will find offense at anything. Why not give the man a chance and and pray God forbid, that we might lay aside judgmental attitudes and predjucice to seek unity, peace, wisdom and grace at least during this Inaugural.

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