Prayer shaming: Are prayer and political action at odds?
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| New York
In the wake of tragedy and sorrow, many people offer to those who are hurting a simple act of social grace and spiritual solidarity: 鈥淵ou鈥檙e in my thoughts and prayers.鈥
It鈥檚 usually an act of personal intimacy, rooted both in faith and a kind of cautious empathy, many observers say. Moments of grief, sudden and unexpected, can seem to be beyond words, and even collective responses to sorrow often begin with moments of silence and reflection.
Yet amid the frustrations of yet another mass shooting in San Bernardino, Calif., where 14 people lost their lives and at least 17 were injured, this social grace has been politicized. Within the 140-character parameters of public quips and avatars on screens, tweets offering thoughts and prayers to victims online have appeared to many a hollow political pose 鈥 empty cliches and self-interested public platitudes without any deeper calls to action.
And now it鈥檚 become a new social media phenomenon: #prayershaming.
On the one hand, the new hashtag in many ways reflects the country鈥檚 deepening political and cultural divides. A secular-leaning left demands action for gun control, while a religious-leaning right offers, ostensibly, prayers but no solutions to the country鈥檚 problem of mass shootings, which are becoming more and more a part of the everyday American landscape.
Still, as the trending #prayershaming debates sweeps across the country, many on the right and left both are rejecting what they see as a simplistic if not itself cliched discussion of the meaning of prayer within the public sphere.
鈥淧rayer is an inner commitment to transform our deepest hopes into social goods, healing, and community-building,鈥 says Randal Jelks, a professor of African American studies and religion at the University of Kansas in Lawrence and an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (USA). 鈥淎nd there are lots of discussions among聽people of faith 鈥 people joining forces with anybody who will listen to each other.鈥
鈥淏ut I do think, this larger religious posture of piety without action 鈥 I think people are frustrated,鈥 he continues. 鈥淥verall, the American public includes many who are religious themselves, and who see the efficacy of prayer, but they, too, are deeply frustrated. So I don鈥檛 see it as a divide.鈥
But the hashtag, too, has also evoked a deeper theological debate about the efficacy of prayer 鈥 a debate that goes back to the origins of secular society centuries ago, scholars say.
鈥淕od isn鈥檛 fixing this: as latest batch of innocent Americans are left lying in pools of blood, cowards who could truly end gun scourge continue to hide behind meaningless platitudes,鈥 blares the provocative and much tweeted in today鈥檚 New York Daily News.
The political debate over prayer began almost immediately after news of the shootings in San Bernardino begin to unfold on Wednesday, and a number of Republican presidential candidates tweeted their offerings of prayer and support.
鈥淵our 鈥榯houghts鈥 should be about steps to take to stop this carnage. Your 鈥榩rayers鈥 should be for forgiveness if you do nothing 鈥 again,鈥 (D) of Connecticut.聽
Later, after his tweet began to circulate, his office , making the same distinction between the 鈥渢houghtful reaction of people to pray in times of tragedy in grief鈥 and what he saw as some lawmakers鈥 empty banalities and general inaction in the wake of the the country鈥檚 mass shootings, the in the first 336 days of 2015.
鈥淚鈥檝e been exasperated by the way politicians have used prayer, too,鈥 wrote Russell Moore, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, and a prominent conservative Evangelical thinker, . 鈥淪ome campaign 鈥榖enedictions鈥 are basically campaign commercials containing everything but 鈥業鈥檓 John Smith, and I approved this message,鈥 at the end.鈥
But while Mr. Moore said he could try to give prayer cynics the benefit of the doubt when it came to political posturing, and affirmed a necessary public debate over gun control, he noted that the 鈥渧icious鈥 #prayershaming on social media has extended into something far more. 聽
鈥淚f you shame away the most human aspects of public life 鈥 such as the call to pray for one another 鈥 you will find this situation worsening, not getting better,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淎fter all, we learn to listen to one another, and even work together, because we see one another as fellow humans, fellow citizens, as people of goodwill, not just as avatars to be warred against on a screen.鈥
Yet many on the left, however, note that many of the presidential candidates and other politicians offering thoughts and prayers, but no real solutions, also happen to receive thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from the National Rifle Association. tweeted a list of those who offered prayers along with the amounts they received.
The current debate over public expressions of prayer does illustrate how much the country has changed over the past few decades, many observers say. No longer is there a widely shared language of religion and politics, as the country generally becomes less religious, according to polls.
But as Emma Green at The Atlantic pointed out, the current cynicism online belies the facts on the ground. As people inside the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino hid from the shooters, a woman texted her father: 聽鈥淧ray for us.鈥 At the same time, those who had been evacuated holding hands.
鈥淧rayer and political action have a deeply entwined history in America,鈥 Ms. Green and others also note, saying that most all social justice movements, including the fights for civil rights and women鈥檚 suffrage, maintained deep religious ties. 聽
鈥淎nd maybe silence is the best way of being in solidarity because it鈥檚 such a horror to the people who have experienced loss,鈥 says Jelks at the University of Kansas.聽