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A Home-Grown Victory for Public Prayer

August 17, 2016

Dear Friends,

When I’m making the drive to Austin from Conroe, our capitol can feel like it’s very far away. However, when I see a ruling like the one our attorney general issued in support of Judge Mack it makes me realize that, when it comes to values, there are still a lot of folks in state government who are very close to those of us here in Senate District 4.

If you hadn’t seen the news, Judge Mack has been criticized by an organization called the Freedom From Religion Foundation (you can rest assured I’m not on their Christmas card list…) for opening his court sessions with a prayer offered by a volunteer chaplain. We do the same thing every day the Texas Senate is in session, and I fully believe inviting God’s presence and wisdom into our deliberations is essential to effective leadership.

I stand with Judge Mack and his fully-legal desire to invoke the name of the ultimate lawgiver before adjudicating the matters before his court. I hope you do too.

His critics are part of an ever-growing group of liberal critics who relentlessly seek to undermine the fundamental values upon which our state and nation were built. I am committed to keeping them at bay and I hope you are too. Please be on the lookout for similar encroachments on our liberties and let me know so I can engage. Let’s KEEP Texas great!

Brandon Creighton

 

Texas Tribune

Paxton Opinion Blesses Courtroom Prayers, Chaplain Program

by Jim Malewitz
Aug. 15, 2016

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton issued a legal opinion Monday supporting a Montgomery County courtroom chaplaincy program — and the use of prayer to open legal proceedings.

Wayne Mack, a justice of the peace and coroner, would likely prevail in any legal challenge to the volunteer-led chaplaincy program he organized in the southeast Texas county, the opinion states.

The program does not appear to violate religious freedom guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, the Republican attorney general wrote in an opinion that does not have the force of law, but reflects Paxton’s legal reasoning.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, a Republican who frequently touts his Christian beliefs, requested the legal opinion after Mack’s program sparked controversy.

In late 2015, the state Commission on Judicial Conduct investigated a complaint filed against Mack related to the program. Aside from offering courtroom prayer, the chaplaincy effort — open to religious leaders of any faith — offered counseling to folks that Mack, in his coroner role, dealt with at death scenes.

The commission ultimately dismissed the complaint but issued a letter that “strongly cautioned” against continuing the program and courtroom prayer services — to Patrick’s chagrin.

Neither that program nor the courtroom prayer specifically appears to violate the clause of the First Amendment that states: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,” Paxton’s opinion states.

Also passing constitutional muster, according to Paxton’s opinion: Use of the phrase “God save the State of Texas and this Honorable Court” to open legal proceedings.

On Monday, Mack called the opinion “a clear victory for religious liberty.”

“I’m thankful for Lieutenant Governor Patrick’s request for an opinion on this important issue and that Attorney General Paxton made clear that the Constitution permits judges to invite volunteer chaplains to open sessions of court with prayer,” he said in a statement circulated by the First Liberty Institute, a Plano-based legal group that represented Mack before the Commission on Judicial Conduct.

Within state government, chaplains aren’t rare. Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Millerappointed an official volunteer chaplain — a Christian friend from his hometown of Stephenville — to counsel interested employees at his agency.

And a few other Texas agencies employ non-denominational chaplains, but they tend to focus more on folks like prison inmates or hospital patients.

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