Christian Defense Coalition director Rev.
Patrick Mahoney has been denied a permit to hold a prayer service at the U.S. Capitol during the National Day of
Prayer on Thursday May 6, 2021. The U.S. Capitol building has been
closed to the public since the day protestors breached the doors of the building back
in January 2021, an incident that left five people dead and over 140 injured.
Rev. Patrick Mahoney: ‘Deeply Troubling’
Rev. Patrick Mahoney said, “For 70 years, there has been
a public witness on the National Day of Prayer at the U.S. Capitol
Building. Until today! Our request to have prayer service was denied.” He asked
for people to pray for God’s wisdom moving forward.
Charisma News posted a statement given by
Rev. Mahoney regarding the current denial for observing the National Day of
Prayer 2021 on the U.S. Capitol grounds:
It is deeply troubling for the first time in
70 years, there will not be a public prayer service at the United States
Capitol Building on the National Day of Prayer. Every American needs to be
asking the question, “How is it possible to have public prayer prohibited at
the Capitol on the National Day of Prayer?”—especially when it is a national
observance designated by Congress. The “People’s House,” as the U.S. Capitol
Building is so rightly called, must be a place where all Americans are afforded
the right to come and peacefully celebrate and express their First Amendment
rights. Tragically, those rights and freedoms are being denied and prohibited.
I will continue to work to ensure the “People’s House” is returned to the
people and the First Amendment is once again celebrated and honored at the
United States Capitol.
This isn’t the first time this year Mahoney has been
denied prayer on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol. On March 27, 2021, Rev.
Mahoney posted on his Facebook page letting his followers know that for
the first time in 30 years they had been denied the right to pray at the U.S.
Capitol. Mahoney setup a GoFundMe account for those willing to give
financially so he could fight them in court.
After filing
the lawsuit, Rev. Mahoney told Fox News that he believes “free speech is in
danger all across America.” Discussing the suit during a Fox & Friends
broadcast, he told co-host Ainsley Earnhardt, “There’s a misconception out
there that many people think the Capitol is closed, and it’s not.” Rev. Mahoney
cited the fact that members are voting, and other workers are allowed inside
the U.S. Capitol building; therefore the only thing closed on the grounds are
“peaceful First Amendment activities.”
“A Washington, D.C. federal court DENIED our right to
have a Good Friday Service on the lower western terrace of the U.S. Capitol
Building,” Rev.
Mahoney posted after the lawsuit was heard. The reverend however
let his followers know they would continue to “press on to open the ‘People’s
House!'”
Rev. Patrick Mahoney is also known for his campaigning
for the life of terminally ill baby Charlie Gard of the U.K. in 2017.
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