New York Post

Adams’ Sound Sense on Faith

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Mayor Adams’ recent remarks at an interfaith breakfast garnered a lot of badfaith criticism. “We need to find a way to introduce some form of spirituali­ty in our children, because they’re not fighting against the seen, they’re fighting against the unseen,” the mayor pleaded in followup remarks. “These poor children are growing up in an environmen­t that is — it is just so painful to them.”

Critics focused on his breakfast complaint that “when we took prayers out of schools, guns came into schools.” New York Civil Liberties Union honcho Donna Lieberman sniffed, “It is odd that Mayor Adams would need a refresher on the First Amendment.”

Actually, she needs that refresher. As Adams noted, “There are clear rules about prayers in school,” and, “I don’t have the power to change that. I just gave you my belief.”

She utterly missed the point. “If we are bringing our best fight in the ring,” he said, “we would not have homeless in this city. We would not have a crisis of domestic violence.” Teaching children to be better (so we have better adults!) “means instilling in them some level of faith and belief.”

That’s no call to turn public schools into religious ones, only a reminder that spirituali­ty provides the strength and serenity to fight the worthiest battles, even and especially to the young.

You might disagree, but plenty of evidence supports the idea. Religious people are, data suggests, much more generous with time and money for charity than the irreligiou­s. They’re less likely to have kids out of wedlock — and children raised by both their parents face far better odds of succeeding in life.

Too many young people today are hurting. Those who insist it’s bad to urge the guidance of faith merely expose their own bigotry.

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