Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHY NOT JUST FIRE ALL CONGRESSIO­NAL CHAPLAINS?

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Washington is asking why U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan recently fired Patrick Conroy, the Roman Catholic Jesuit priest who had been serving as House chaplain since 2011.

The logical inference is Ryan fired him as payback for Conroy beseeching God, in his opening prayer on a key legislativ­e day last November, that there not be “winners and losers under new tax laws, but benefits balanced and shared by all Americans.”

Balanced benefits? When the GOP tax bill Ryan was shepherdin­g was designed to give more than 80 percent of the benefits to the top 1 percent of earners? Heresy!

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

“This was not about politics or prayers,” Ryan countered during an appearance Monday at the Midwest Conservati­ve Summit in Milwaukee. “It was about pastoral services. And a number of our members felt like the pastoral services were not being adequately served, or offered.”

Furious Democrats have failed in an effort to establish a select committee to get to the bottom of the first-ever firing of a congressio­nal chaplain.

What Washington should be asking, however, is why we still have clergymen (they have always been men) on the congressio­nal payroll.

The House chaplain earns $172,500 a year while his Senate counterpar­t — currently Seventh-day Adventist minister Barry Black — earns $160,787. Adding staff and office expenses, the annual cost of maintainin­g these largely ceremonial tips of the hat to Christiani­ty approaches $1 million.

Founder James Madison saw the flaw in the idea when it began in 1789: “Is the appointmen­t of chaplains to the two houses of Congress consistent with the Constituti­on, and with the pure principle of religious freedom?” he wrote. “In strictness, the answer on both points must be in the negative.”

Let lawmakers “like their constituen­ts, (worship) at their own expense,” wrote Madison. “How noble in its exemplary sacrifice to the genius of the Constituti­on and the divine rights of conscience! Why should the expense of a religious worship for the legislatur­e be paid by the public?”

Madison’s words ring even more true today.

Having a rotating cast of volunteer faith leaders and inspiratio­nal orators deliver opening messages would be better. And, indeed, for a brief period in the 1850s when controvers­y over the position raged anew, Congress did exactly that. The practice “avoided any question of financial support of religion while simultaneo­usly dodging some of the potential for denominati­onal favoritism,” according to “The Congressio­nal Chaplainci­es,” a 2009 scholarly article by Christophe­r Lund, a professor at Wayne State University Law School.

But the temptation for majorities to institutio­nalize favored creeds proved too great. Paid, full-time chaplains returned to Congress. And yes, of course, the practice blows a gaping hole in the wall of separation that ideally stands between church and state, protecting each from the incursions of the other.

The U.S. Supreme Court has chosen to look the other way. In Marsh v. Chambers, a 1983 case, the court upheld public funding of legislativ­e chaplains even though the tradition lacks a secular purpose and amounts to government promotion of religion — the normal no-nos.

A 6-3 majority ruled that, since the practice began with the first Congress, the founders clearly didn’t believe it conflicted with the guarantee of religious freedom.

Along with the debate over Conroy’s expression of liberal pieties is a brewing debate over whether a celibate Catholic priest can address the spiritual needs of married legislator­s.

“I’m looking for somebody who … has adult children (and) can connect with the bulk of the body here,” said Rep. Mark Walker, R-N.C., a Southern Baptist who is on the committee seeking a replacemen­t for Conroy. Walker alluded to his concern for what lawmakers “are going through, back home, (with) the wife (and) the family.”

There’s so much wrong with that! The anti-Catholicis­m! The inappropri­ateness of lawmakers playing pastoral referee! The hint of the sectarian popularity contest ahead!

Where to begin?

How about by ending it?

 ??  ?? Eric Zorn
Eric Zorn

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