[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 37, Number 18 (Monday, May 7, 2001)]
[Pages 698-699]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a National Day of Prayer Reception

May 3, 2001

    Thank you, all. Thank you and welcome to the White House. It's great 
to see members of my Cabinet here. Secretaries Veneman, Martinez, and 
Paige, thank you all for coming. Leaders of the United States Congress, 
thank you all for being here, as well.
    Shirley, thank you for the State proclamations. I quickly thumbed 
through to make sure that Florida was there. [Laughter] Otherwise, my 
little brother might be hearing from me. [Laughter] But it was there. 
And thanks for the beautiful painting. We know how much work it takes to 
organize the National Day of Prayer, and all of us thank you for your 
hard work. You've done a very good job.
    Wintley, thank you very much for sharing your voice with us. This is 
the second time I've been privileged to hear your voice since I've been 
the President. I hope to hear it a lot more. And Angela, it's wonderful 
to see you again. Thank you for your testimony and your beauty and your 
grace.

[[Page 699]]

    And Reverend Rogers, thank you so much for bringing not only your 
own words of prayer but that of our mutual friend, Billy Graham, for 
whom we continue to pray for his health.
    This is a day when our Nation recognizes a power above our power and 
influence beyond our influence, a guiding wisdom far greater than our 
own. The American character, it's strong and confident, but we have 
never been reluctant to speak of our own dependence on providence.
    Our country was founded by great and wise people who were fluent in 
the language of humility, praise, and petition. Throughout our history, 
in danger and division, we have always turned to prayer. And our country 
has been delivered from many serious evils and wrongs because of that 
prayer.
    We cannot presume to know every design of our Creator, or to assert 
a special claim on His favor. Yet, it is important to pause and 
recognize our help in ages past and our hope for years to come.
    The first President to live in the White House arrived with a 
prayer. In a letter to his wife, written on his second night here, John 
Adams offered a prayer that Heaven might bless this house and all those 
who would call it home. One of his successors, Franklin D. Roosevelt, 
thought enough of that prayer to have it inscribed on a mantelpiece in 
the State Dining Room, where you can still find it today.
    In this house I make many decisions. But as I do so, as I make those 
decisions, I know as surely as you said that many Americans lift me up 
in prayer, those prayers are a gracious gift, and Laura and I and my 
family greatly appreciate them.
    America has many traditions of faith and many experiences of prayer. 
But I suspect that many who pray have something in common: that we may 
pray for God's help, but as we do so, we find that God has changed our 
deepest selves. We learn humility before His will and acceptance of 
things beyond our understanding. We discover that the most sincere of 
all prayers can be the simple words, ``Thy will be done.'' And that is a 
comfort more powerful than all our plans.
    Laura and I really appreciate you being here on this special day. We 
thank you for your concerns for your country and your love of the Lord. 
It's an honor for me to be here, and I would ask that you join me in the 
State Dining Room for a little fellowship.
    God bless America.

Note: The President spoke at 3:48 p.m. on the State Floor at the White 
House. In his remarks, he referred to Shirley Dobson, chair, National 
Day of Prayer Task Force; gospel singer Wintley Phipps; Miss America 
Angela Perez Baraquio; Rev. Adrian Rogers, pastor, Bellevue Baptist 
Church, Memphis, TN, and host, ``Love Worth Finding'' radio program; and 
evangelist Rev. Billy Graham.