DC Episcopal Bishop Says She’ll Appeal to ‘Better Angels’ in Convention Prayer - Word&Way

DC Episcopal Bishop Says She’ll Appeal to ‘Better Angels’ in Convention Prayer

(RNS) — Mariann Budde, the Episcopal bishop of Washington who criticized President Donald Trump after he held a Bible aloft during a photo op in front St. John’s Church near the White House in June, says she will call upon “higher angels of our nature” in her prayer before the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday evening (Aug. 18).

Budde told Religion News Service that she intends to intersperse her roughly 100-word prerecorded benediction with homages to prominent religious figures of the past such as Protestant minister and peace activist William Sloane Coffin, civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. and the late Congressman and civil rights activist John Lewis. She plans to ask God “to give us the grace to realize in our time something out of the ‘beloved community’ of Dr. King, the ‘just society’ of Congressman Lewis, and the ‘more perfect union’ of President Lincoln.”

Episcopal Bishop Mariann Budde of Washington, D.C., speaks to a crowd protesting outside Sen. Mitch McConnell’s office in Washington on Aug. 6, 2019. (Jack Jenkins/Religion News Service)

Budde noted that she is “not naive” about why Democratic Party officials asked her to deliver the blessing Tuesday evening, explaining that it likely related to her criticism of Trump in the days after he posed for cameras while holding a Bible in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church, on the opposite side of Lafayette Square from the White House.

Minutes before the president’s arrival at the church, the square was forcibly cleared of demonstrators, an action that included the expulsion by law enforcement officials of an Episcopal priest and seminarian from St. John’s grounds. The two were working on behalf of the diocese Budde runs, offering aid to protesters. The St. John’s incident was mentioned critically by multiple speakers during Monday’s opening night of the Democratic convention.

“The symbolism of him holding a Bible … as a prop and standing in front of our church as a backdrop when everything that he has said is antithetical to the teachings of our traditions and what we stand for as a church — I was horrified,” Budde told RNS at the time.

Roughly two weeks after the incident, Budde, who has participated in protests against gun violence and other issues, joined a slate of faith leaders outside St. John’s who railed against racism, police brutality and the Trump administration’s response to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

But Budde said she drew a line when Democratic Party officials suggested she film her Democratic convention prayer in front of St. John’s, explaining that her prayer is neither an endorsement nor partisan.

“I would have prayed the exact same prayer at the Republican National Convention if they asked me,” she said.

Budde said she expects some of her fellow Episcopalians may disagree with her decision to participate in the convention at all. She noted pushback she received from a separate incident in 2017, when she, along with leaders at the Washington National Cathedral, faced criticism for hosting an interfaith prayer service as part of Trump’s inauguration, per longstanding tradition.

In preparation for her DNC prayer, Budde consulted with the Rev. Russell J. Levenson, an Episcopal priest who served the congregation of former President George H.W. Bush and prayed at the 2012 Republican National Convention. She said Levenson warned her via email that there may be some blowback.

But when Budde saw the lineup of other faith leaders slated to pray at the Democratic convention, such as Jesuit priest James Martin, her concerns about participating were largely assuaged.

“I love these people,” she said.

“It’s a little different praying for a party convention, as opposed to an inaugural prayer service where the will of the people has been determined,” she added. “(But) I thought, you know, why pass up an opportunity to pray, and to pray on behalf of the nation?”

She also hopes to chip away at the divisions that she says currently fracture both religion and politics in the United States.

“You can be a Christian and vote for either party,” she said.