The Denver Post

An opportunit­y to dispense with the House chaplain

- By John M. Crisp

May 24 will be the last day on the job for the Rev. Patrick Conroy, the chaplain of the House of Representa­tives. Recently the speaker, Paul Ryan, asked Conroy to resign; he complied.

Little takes place in Washington that isn’t political. And while Conroy doesn’t know why he was asked to resign, he suggests that it may have something to do with his session-opening prayer that asked lawmakers “to guarantee that there are not winners and losers under new tax laws, but benefits balanced and shared by all Americans.”

Conroy says that Ryan pulled him aside and said, “Padre, you just got to stay out of politics.”

All sorts of questions arise. Do First Amendment guarantees of freedom of speech apply if your audience is a higher power? Does Conroy’s terminatio­n represent a clash between progressiv­e Catholics like Conroy and Pope Francis and conservati­ve Catholics like Ryan? Is the vacant chaplaincy an opportunit­y to replace a Catholic with an evangelica­l who represents a religious persuasion that has acquired some prominence by its support for Donald Trump?

Or maybe this unseemly episode provides an opportunit­y to ask this question: Does the House of Representa­tives really need a chaplain?

Besides certain pastoral duties, the chaplain’s most public role is organizing the prayer that opens House sessions.

This practice dates back to our republic’s founding, but it was controvers­ial from the beginning.

We’ve lived with this strange anomaly ever since: Although the founders clearly intended for our new form of government to embody an entirely different relationsh­ip between church and state than prevailed in England, we have spent many millions in taxpayers’ dollars supporting chaplainci­es in Congress.

But neither the House nor religion is well-served by the maintenanc­e of a government­sponsored religious position.

Priests, prophets and preachers, unless they are merely insipid figurehead­s, are inherently political; they have things to say about society.

But when Rev. Conroy made a very Christian plea on behalf of those who will suffer under the new tax law, he lost his job.

Chaplains serve vital roles in many American institutio­ns, but leading government­sponsored public prayers shouldn’t be among them. Jesus had some thoughts on public prayer: “Thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut the door, pray to thy Father which is in secret.”

But since our nation has a tendency to ignore the inconvenie­nt sayings of Jesus, let’s give the last word to James Madison, who wrote: “Is the appointmen­t of Chaplains to the two Houses of Congress consistent with the Constituti­on, and with the pure principle of religious freedom? In strictness the answer on both points must be in the negative.

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