Say a little prayer
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Tony Dodero
At an early morning gathering Thursday at St. Michael and All Angels
Episcopal Church in Corona del Mar, members of the Newport-Mesa Irvine
Interfaith Council took in a little bit of breakfast and some
inspirational words and spiritual messages as part of the fifth annual
National Day of Prayer.
The breakfast, which was attended by 34 congregations and about 200
people, united the wide spectrum of faithful in the Interfaith Council
and their different flavors of theology with an array of city, school and
community leaders.
With the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the subsequent war in Afghanistan
and the current Middle East crisis looming large, many have expressed the
need to pray even more.
This National Day of Prayer, established by an act of Congress to
encourage Americans to pray, found those many in Newport-Mesa on Thursday
celebrating the occasion by holding prayer vigils outside of City Hall
and other spots around the community.
The morning breakfast at St. Michael and All Angels took on the tone
and theme of religious unity.
“There is a feeling that the need for peace is more urgent,” said the
Rev. Don Oliver, president of the Interfaith Council and a chaplain at
Hoag Hospital. “Spirituality is the way to return to those basic roots
and to realize who we are.”
In line with the Day of Prayer theme for this year, “America United
Under God,” the crowd was treated to spiritual readings by Rabbi Richard
Steinberg of Irvine’s Temple Shir ha’malot, Imam Moustafa Qazwini of the
Costa Mesa Islamic Education Center, Jamie Day of the Newport Beach Stake
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Rev. Barbara
Stewart of St. John the Divine Episcopal Church of Costa Mesa, the Rev.
Karen Stoyanoff of the Orange Coast Unitarian Universalist Church in
Costa Mesa, and Msgr. Daniel Murray of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic
Church in Newport Beach.
In addition, Daily Pilot columnist Peter Buffa emceed the event, and
the crowd was treated to musical renditions of “America the Beautiful”
and “God Bless America” from local pianist Jim Roberts.
The keynote speaker was former Green Beret and now poet James Bruce
Joseph Sievers of Huntington Beach.
Sievers, who has been awarded the George Washington Medal of Honor, is
known for his poem titled “An American in Love with is Country.”
Sievers, who said he has been nominated to be the next poet laureate
of the United States, recited his poetry with a patriotic fervor that
captivated the crowd, in particular one that he wrote for comedian and
actor Bob Hope that ends with this line:
“For a world desperately needing love, thank God we still have Hope.”
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He can be reached ato7
[email protected] or by phone at (949) 574-4258.
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