Despite Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s firm decision to not allow religious leaders to offer words of prayer at the 9/11 Memorial Service Sunday, one pastor believes the event will still be about God and prayer.
Steve Stone, founding pastor of the Tennessee-based Heartsong Church, which lets Muslims borrow its sanctuary for worship when the Memphis Islamic Center was under construction last year, commented on the exclusion of religion from the 9/11 service when he was in New York City on Friday to participate in an evangelical press conference about the 10th anniversary of 9/11.
While many religious leaders, including Christians, have protested Bloomberg’s decision to keep religion out of the civil ceremony, Stone told The Christian Post he is actually glad that no religious speakers were invited to speak at the 10th anniversary of the World Trade Center terrorist attack.
“We’ll be one people and there’s no way to cut God and prayer out,” said Stone. “The whole event will be a prayer.”
On Friday, Bloomberg took to the radio airwaves to defend his move to keep the 9/11 memorial service prayer-free, saying to allow religious leaders to speak at the event would be tantamount to government forcing religion “down people’s throats.”
He added that “there are plenty of opportunities for people to have their religious ceremonies” outside of the Sept. 11 service to be held at the 9/11 new memorial and museum Sunday.
CPost
