[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 156 (Tuesday, November 5, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7801-S7802]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SENATE PRAYERS
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, my thanks to the majority leader this
morning. Before I say a few words about Rev. Gregory Knox Jones, I want
to go back in time for a couple of minutes. I was talking to the pages
out in the hall behind the leader about how when our country was first
settled folks came here from all over the world. They came here in part
in pursuit of religious freedom. They were people of different faiths.
They wanted to be able to worship God as they saw fit.
When it got really tough in Philadelphia at the Constitutional
Convention--trying to wrestle with issues such as slavery, rights of
women, whether there should be little States, big States, how we were
going to be represented here--many times the Founding Fathers hit the
pause button and they called in a person of faith to pray, to help them
to find a way to progress, and they did again and again.
When George Washington was inaugurated--not here but in New York
City--at the end of the day they did not go off and have big parties;
they actually went to church. In the early days of our country, worship
services were actually held here, as some of us know. We start every
day here in the Senate with a prayer, oftentimes delivered by retired
Navy ADM Barry C. Black, our Chaplain, and today with a special guest,
my pastor, Gregory Knox Jones from Westminster Presbyterian Church.
Our leader Harry Reid has run a number of marathons. As it happens,
so has our guest. He is a long-distance
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runner, literally and figuratively. He just ran his 10th marathon. He
ran the New York Marathon on Sunday--I might say in good time. He won
in the category of White men over 50 who pastor large Presbyterian
churches on the east coast and who were former team captains from the
Kansas State University football team. That category he won hands down.
I congratulate him, and I am sure my colleagues do as well.
He reminds us every Sunday of the idea that we have a moral
imperative to look out for the least of those in our society, people
who are hungry and need to be fed, people who have no health care. We
have an obligation to look after them. He reminds us every Sunday that
we have an obligation to look out for not only those who are in our
community in Wilmington, DE, but way beyond our borders, such as those
in Guatemala and also those who live in Israel and the West Bank of
Jordan, to make sure justice is done in those places as well.
He reminds us every Sunday of the Golden Rule for our neighbor: Treat
others the way we want to be treated. We have to focus on the poor,
widows and the orphans, and those who are in need. He reminds us to not
just talk a good game but to actually deliver on our words. What does
it say in James 2? You show me your faith by your words, I will show
you my faith by my deeds. He reminds us of that every Sunday.
To my colleagues, he reminds us we are servants. There is a great
sermon in Mark chapter 10. The words are, as I recall--I will
paraphrase him--for those who want to be a leader, you have to be a
slave to all. For those who want to become first, you must become last.
We thank you for those remembrances.
Every week I go to a Bible study led by our Chaplain. On Sundays I
try to show up in our own church. It reminds me of a double shot. You
and I, Mr. President, are about the same age. We remember the days of
Motown, the great song called ``Double Shot of My Baby's Love.'' Every
week I get a double shot of God's love from these two, my pastor and
our Chaplain.
To his life partner Camilla and three children and six grandchildren,
we are honored you are here.
I want to close with the way he closes our sermons every Sunday,
colleagues. He does it with these words. I hope I have them right. It
goes something like this. When he lets us go and dismisses his flock he
says these words: May the love of God, the grace of Christ, and the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit bless you, those you love, and the ones
that no one loves.
And the ones that no one loves. He sends us on our way. Those are
great words for us today as well. We welcome him.
I thank the leader for allowing me to say these words this morning.
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