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January 5, 2009

Barack Obama      The Washington Post reports that a group of atheists, led by a California man known for challenging the use of the words "under God" in recitals of the Pledge of Allegiance at public schools, filed a lawsuit to bar prayer and references to God at the swearing-in of President-elect Barack Obama.

     Michael A. Newdow along with 17 other individuals and 10 groups representing atheists sued Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., several officials in charge of inaugural festivities, the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery and mega-church pastor Rick Warren. They filed the complaint in U.S. District Court.

     Newdow failed in similar lawsuits to remove prayer from President Bush's swearing-in ceremonies in 2001 and 2005. Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts will administer the oath of office to Obama at the Jan. 20, 2009 ceremony. Pastor Warren and Rev. Lowery are scheduled to deliver the invocation and benediction, respectively.

     Newdow and others also argue that the phrase "so help me God," used consistently in inaugural oaths since the swearing-in of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, should be stricken, saying it is not part of the oath as specified in the Constitution.

     Bob Ritter, staff attorney for the American Humanist Association and counsel for the suit, said in an interview that the group could win "as long as the judges uphold the Constitution."

      Ritter, who believes the law is on their side, said the lawsuit targets the oath, the invocation and the benediction.

     According to the lawsuit, the opening and ending prayers "are completely exclusionary, showing absolute disrespect to Plaintiffs and others of similar religious views, who explicitly reject the purely religious claims that will be endorsed, i.e., (a) there exists a God, and (b) the United States government should pay homage to that God."

     In an article by David Townsend (www.TheGospelNewsWire.com) the legal move is said to be the latest controversy surrounding the swearing-in. Gay-rights advocates and liberal groups were outraged by Obama's selection of Pastor Warren, who endorsed Proposition 8, which banned gay marriage in California. Conservatives, meanwhile, have criticized Warren for agreeing to appear at the inauguration.

     Scott Walter, executive director of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, called the lawsuit a "publicity stunt" in a recent statement. The Becket Fund promotes free expression of religion and has opposed Newdow's Pledge of Allegiance efforts.

     "Newdow's lawsuit over the inauguration is a lot like the streaker at the Super Bowl: a pale, self-absorbed distraction. And anybody who looks at it carefully can see there's not much there," Walter said. (Source: Washington Post/www.TheGospelNewsWire.com)