Wednesday, December 3, 2008
A Unique Prayer
c. 1951
Gloucester
A UNIQUE PRAYER
[Editor’s Note: This is another undated and unsigned paper found in Rev. Westman’s files.]
The prayer that Dr. Levi M. Powers gave at the city inauguration exercises more than 30 years ago in Gloucester was so unusual that it created a sensation throughout the country. These are some excerpts:
"WE PRAY for the retiring mayor. He might have done better and he knows it and now we are sending him to the state house. Help him to be the representative he may be and ought to be.
WE PRAY for those who must guide our city in the coming year. There is Alderman Daniel Marshall. You know what a good fellow he is and how everybody likes him - the most popular man in town, though there are some who say he needs a stiffer backbone. If that is so, Lord, give him what he needs, and if it is a lie, help him to refute it.
THEN THERE IS Alderman Johnson who needs thy help, Lord. This is a new job for him. But everybody speaks well of him, and many who did not know him voted for him because those who know him best said he was all right. May he end this year with this good opinion confirmed and increased.
MOST OF ALL we pray for him honored in being chosen mayor. But we have given him a hard job, Lord. You know very well that the laws of this city have not been well-enforced. May he accept this responsibility and not only do his duty, but insist that all those responsible to him do their duty as well.
NOT ALONE for those we have chosen do we pray, Lord; we pray for ourselves. We confess, Lord, that we are a logy, grouchy set of citizens, most of us. We no sooner elect men to office than we find fault with them. Help us to see that good citizenship is an all-the-year job that cannot be delegated to others,
WE PRAY for the voters of this city; there are some too lazy to vote but not too lazy to grumble. Bless them. We pray for the citizens who want good streets, good schools, good fire and police protection and good health officers but who wish other people to pay their cost.
WE PRAY for the business men whose votes are always determined by the expectancy of special favors for themselves. Bless them, if you can. We pray for those who believe that all laws should be enforced except the laws which they do not like or which, if enforced, would trouble them.
WE PRAY for the comfortable who do not care for anything so long as they are left at ease.
WE PRAY for political managers who swap votes and sell out their friends and let their bad candidates go unopposed.
WE PRAY for the ministers who say what it is pleasant to hear rather than what is true. We pray for all connected with the newspapers who openly advocate civic righteousness and secretly promote crooked policies,
WE PRAY for the lawyers who use their knowledge to help those who wish to evade the law and so enable themselves and others to get something for nothing.
WE WISH, O God, that these people might be blessed, but perhaps we are asking too much. It may be that the only thing you can do is to let them go to hell.
INCREASE our love and devotion to our city. May we be zealous of its good name and prosperity. May wealth, happiness, intelligence and character so increase that the proudest boast we can make shall be that we are men and women of this city." Amen
LATER COMMENTS of Dr Powers in answering the critics of his prayer: “I have been criticized for asking the Lord if he could help some people out of hell. I did not send anyone to hell or ask the Lord to send anyone there, I questioned whether God could keep some people out and I hope I shall shock no one when I say that I do not believe that God can keep out of hell those who prefer to be there. God has established laws that are just and changeless and all who disobey them punish themselves. To most people the most shocking things of life are not the things themselves, but the words that remind us of the things. Sometimes it is God's work to shock people out of their complacency and self-satisfaction.”
Gloucester
A UNIQUE PRAYER
[Editor’s Note: This is another undated and unsigned paper found in Rev. Westman’s files.]
The prayer that Dr. Levi M. Powers gave at the city inauguration exercises more than 30 years ago in Gloucester was so unusual that it created a sensation throughout the country. These are some excerpts:
"WE PRAY for the retiring mayor. He might have done better and he knows it and now we are sending him to the state house. Help him to be the representative he may be and ought to be.
WE PRAY for those who must guide our city in the coming year. There is Alderman Daniel Marshall. You know what a good fellow he is and how everybody likes him - the most popular man in town, though there are some who say he needs a stiffer backbone. If that is so, Lord, give him what he needs, and if it is a lie, help him to refute it.
THEN THERE IS Alderman Johnson who needs thy help, Lord. This is a new job for him. But everybody speaks well of him, and many who did not know him voted for him because those who know him best said he was all right. May he end this year with this good opinion confirmed and increased.
MOST OF ALL we pray for him honored in being chosen mayor. But we have given him a hard job, Lord. You know very well that the laws of this city have not been well-enforced. May he accept this responsibility and not only do his duty, but insist that all those responsible to him do their duty as well.
NOT ALONE for those we have chosen do we pray, Lord; we pray for ourselves. We confess, Lord, that we are a logy, grouchy set of citizens, most of us. We no sooner elect men to office than we find fault with them. Help us to see that good citizenship is an all-the-year job that cannot be delegated to others,
WE PRAY for the voters of this city; there are some too lazy to vote but not too lazy to grumble. Bless them. We pray for the citizens who want good streets, good schools, good fire and police protection and good health officers but who wish other people to pay their cost.
WE PRAY for the business men whose votes are always determined by the expectancy of special favors for themselves. Bless them, if you can. We pray for those who believe that all laws should be enforced except the laws which they do not like or which, if enforced, would trouble them.
WE PRAY for the comfortable who do not care for anything so long as they are left at ease.
WE PRAY for political managers who swap votes and sell out their friends and let their bad candidates go unopposed.
WE PRAY for the ministers who say what it is pleasant to hear rather than what is true. We pray for all connected with the newspapers who openly advocate civic righteousness and secretly promote crooked policies,
WE PRAY for the lawyers who use their knowledge to help those who wish to evade the law and so enable themselves and others to get something for nothing.
WE WISH, O God, that these people might be blessed, but perhaps we are asking too much. It may be that the only thing you can do is to let them go to hell.
INCREASE our love and devotion to our city. May we be zealous of its good name and prosperity. May wealth, happiness, intelligence and character so increase that the proudest boast we can make shall be that we are men and women of this city." Amen
LATER COMMENTS of Dr Powers in answering the critics of his prayer: “I have been criticized for asking the Lord if he could help some people out of hell. I did not send anyone to hell or ask the Lord to send anyone there, I questioned whether God could keep some people out and I hope I shall shock no one when I say that I do not believe that God can keep out of hell those who prefer to be there. God has established laws that are just and changeless and all who disobey them punish themselves. To most people the most shocking things of life are not the things themselves, but the words that remind us of the things. Sometimes it is God's work to shock people out of their complacency and self-satisfaction.”
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