[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 110 (Thursday, July 21, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5287]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN GOD WE TRUST
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Rangel) for 5 minutes.
Mr. RANGEL. Good morning, my colleagues.
Like most of you, I have taken so many things around this wonderful
Capitol for granted. And this beautiful statement, ``In God We Trust,''
unfortunately for me has been one of them. It has not really struck me
like the pledge of allegiance to the flag or the ``Star Spangled
Banner'' or so many other things.
But I think that now is the time that we really need God to guide us
to do the right and the moral thing. And the reason we have to do it is
because we're dealing with something that is basic to all religions and
faiths and this is our responsibility to make certain that we balance
our budget, do what is fiscally necessary for our great Nation to
survive. But also to do it in such a way that the poor and the
vulnerable, who have nothing to do with the crisis that we face, are
not hurt.
So I guess this is what we're talking about when we say ``In God We
Trust.''
But God works through us. We are the tools. We have the
responsibility of the missionaries. We don't have lobbyists that come
down to say protect those people. And I guess this is one of the
reasons why this saying here is a constant reminder to us that even
though we're carried away with our ability to create statutes, that we
respect our court system and the Supreme Court, in the final analysis
it's the higher authority of morality that should be guiding all of us.
Recently, I called upon religious leaders to help us in this
guidance, to make the right decisions--Christians, Catholics,
Protestants, Muslims, Mormons, Jews, and gentiles. And I was so pleased
that a long and dear friend named Jim Wallis--he's a Lutheran pastor,
was an adviser to the President, and just yesterday he brought in a
group of ministers to help the President to make the moral decision as
he struggles so hard to make the proper decision as it affects our
budget and how we're going to reduce our deficit.
But the things that he had cited, like Matthews, ``Truly I tell you,
whatever you did for the least of these brothers and sisters of mine,
you did for me,'' what it is, is that whatever you have done to assist
a poor person or those who are not as strong physically and financially
as you and I that you really did this, in a sense, for Jesus because
you have done the right thing.
And then he goes on to have something that sounds like statutes when
it says: Woe to those who enact unjust statutes and who write
oppressive decrees--oppressive decrees--depriving the needy of justice
and robbing poor people of their rights.
Is health care a right? Is Social Security a right? Is decent
housing, education, the pursuit of happiness--is all of this a right?
And does this permeate the entire budget and every decision that we're
trying to make?
Well, in these statements that he made, we have the Torah that says
the same thing: If there is a poor man among your brothers in any of
the towns of the land, we have a responsibility. The Koran indicates:
Believe in Allah and his messengers and spend on charity.
And so my brothers and sisters, it seems to me that now is the time
for us to really get in touch with the Gang of Six because it seems
like nobody in the House of Representatives has any clue as to what
ultimately the President and his advisers will decide. Certainly the
Senate doesn't know what we will decide.
But somehow we should include not just the question of revenue, not
just the question of trillions of dollars to be cut, but in the course
of these negotiations to think of the lesser of our brothers and
sisters. Remember that it is a part of our very lives in saying ``in
God we trust'' and to know that you just can't cut services without
losing jobs.
In other words, when you have people who are jobless, homeless, who
lost their savings, these are God's children and they need hope for the
future.
So thank you for once again giving me this opportunity. And what
words could better express what I've been trying to say, and that is,
Mr. Speaker, ``in God we trust.''
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