More U.S. Voters Tolerate 'Generic' Prayers In Public Meetings Over No Prayers At All

Majority Of U.S. Voters Think 'Generic' Government Prayer Is OK
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(RNS) The U.S. Supreme Court will soon rule on the constitutionality of prayer at public meetings. But a new survey finds U.S. voters clearly favor prayer – as long as the public prayer is generic and not specifically Christian.

Fairleigh Dickinson University’s PublicMind survey asked about attitudes on high profile cases before the court, including Greece v. Galloway. That case addresses whether elected officials can open public meetings with religiously specific prayers, such as praying in Jesus’ name.

A Jew and an atheist brought suit in Greece, N.Y., saying the Christian prayers excluded many citizens and violated the Constitution, which bans government establishment of religion. Even when the town began inviting non-Christians to give invocations, the “establishment” issue remained a question.

“(Greece officials) were trying their best not to offend anyone by making prayers as generic as possible. In this survey we asked if this is an acceptable way to approach the problem. Three in four people said yes,” said Peter Woolley, professor of political science at Fairleigh Dickinson in New Jersey.

Most registered voters (73 percent) said “prayer at public meetings is fine as long as the public officials are not favoring some beliefs over others.” And 23 percent said “public meetings shouldn’t have any prayers at all because prayers by definition suggest one belief or another.”

The key, however, is that this case centers on generic prayer that is “harmless, if not uplifting,” said Woolley. “Americans have become more used to the idea that one denomination is not necessarily privileged over another. Even unbelievers — atheists who would say prayer ‘is not for me’ — approved” of allowing nonspecific prayer.

While support for prayer was similar for every age group and both men and women, the most religiously observant were the most inclined to approve of it.

Among those who attend religious services (aside from funerals or weddings) at least once or twice a month, 86 percent would allow prayer, 11 percent would not.

For those who attend services a few times a year, 73 percent support it but opposition doubles to 26 percent.

But even those who seldom or never go to church backed the prayers at public meetings, with 58 percent approving and 36 percent opposing.

Surveys continually find prayer in general — not specified by denominational distinctions — is hugely popular.

Gallup, Barna Research and Pew Research Center all find that about 8 in 10 Christians (Catholics, Protestants and Mormons) say they pray at least weekly, as do Muslims and Hindus.

But there still remains a vocal minority of people who oppose having officials call on God before calling a public meeting to order.

The Freedom from Religion Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for Separation of Church and State often send letters to legislators and public officials relaying citizen complaints and asking them to drop the prayer practices.

The FFRF view is that “government prayer is unnecessary, inappropriate and divisive.”

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Before You Go

Most To Least Religious Countries of 2013
Ghana- 96% religious(01 of21)
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Ghanaian cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson attends a mass at the St Peter's basilica on March 12, 2013 at the Vatican. Cardinals moved into the Vatican today as the suspense mounted ahead of a secret papal election with no clear frontrunner to steer the Catholic world through troubled waters after Benedict XVI's historic resignation.The 115 cardinal electors who pick the next leader of 1.2 billion Catholics in a conclave in the Sistine Chapel will live inside the Vatican walls completely cut off from the outside world until they have made their choice. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty Images)
Nigeria- 93% religious(02 of21)
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In this photo taken on Thursday, July 18, 2013, Hauwa Jubril, a muslim girl sit outside a shop in Obalende, Lagos, Nigeria. Nigerias secular and Islamic laws clashed when a senator notorious for marrying a 14-year-old filibustered a vote to amend the constitution by insisting that a girl child comes of age when she marries, not at 18. Enraged activists are demanding the senate revisit the vote, asking how a known pedophile could get away with subverting the countrys constitution. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)
Armenia- 92% religious(03 of21)
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This photo taken on January 5, 2013 shows a man lighting a candle during a Christmas Eve service at the Khor Virab church outside Yerevan. Millions of Armenians will celebrate Christmas on January 6. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:KAREN MINASYAN/AFP/Getty Images)
Fiji- 92% religious(04 of21)
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Pilgrims from Fiji attend the morning Mass of Pope Benedict XVI at Randwick Racecourse in Sydney on July 20, 2008. Far fewer people than the predicted crowd of 500,000 turned out for a final World Youth Day mass led by Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday, leaving one venue almost empty of worshippers, AFP photographers said. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:KRYSTLE WRIGHT/AFP/Getty Images)
Macedonia- 90% religious(05 of21)
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The president of Macedonia'parliament Trajko Veljanoski kisses the hand of Pope Francis during a private audience on May 24, 2013 at the Vatican. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty Images)
Romania- 89% religious(06 of21)
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Visitors light up candles inside a room 'The space for Recollection and Prayer' to commemorate victims of the communist repression in Romania, in Sighetu Marmatiei on July 13, 2013. Former dissidents and political prisoners gathered in Romania on July 14, 2013 at a museum commemorating those who suffered abuses under communism, set up 20 years ago at the site of a prison where scores died. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit: DANIEL MIHAILESCU/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Iraq- 88% religious(07 of21)
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Shiite Muslim worshippers light candles outside Imam Mohammed al-Mahdi shrine during the annual festival of Shabaniyah, which marks the anniversary of the birth of the ninth-century Shiite leader known as the Hidden Imam, in Karbala, 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, June 24, 2013. (AP Photo/ Hadi Mizban)Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:AP/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Kenya- 88% religious(08 of21)
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Njemps tribemen dance in front of a statue of Buddha at the Gallmann nature conservancy near Kinamba, Laikipia, Northern Kenya on March 4, 2012. High Priest Shinso Ito and a group of Shinnyo-en priests arrived in Kenya to perform a Buddhist fire and water ceremony for the first time ever in Africa.The ceremony was attended by over 300 spiritual leaders and was streamed live on the internet to millions of viewers and devotees globally. The ceremony involved Kenyan tribal elders and members of the Njemps, Pokot Samburu, Kikuyu and Turkana communites. AFP PHOTO/Carl de Souza (Photo credit should read CARL DE SOUZA/AFP/Getty Images)Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Peru- 86% religious(09 of21)
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A faithful holds an image of the 'The Lord of Miracles', worshipped by the majority of the Catholic Peruvians, during his main procession on October 18, 2012 in Lima.Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:GERALDO CASO/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Brazil- 85% religious(10 of21)
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Catholics touch an icon of the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ as it is taken along with the World Youth Day (WYD) Cross that in 1984 Pope John Paul II entrusted the youth of the world, across Rocinha shantytown in Rio de Janeiro on July 18, 2013. The Pope is due in Rio for the July 22-28 Catholic WYD, an event expected to attract two million people from around the globe. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Ireland- 10% atheist(11 of21)
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Roman Catholics listen to Bishop Noel Treanor during mass at St Peter's Roman Catholic Cathedral in West Belfast, Northern Ireland, Sunday, March, 21, 2010. Pope Benedict XVI has apologised to victims of child sex abuse by Catholic priests in Ireland. Extracts from the Popes letter were read at all masses across Ireland Sunday, in the pastoral letter to Irish Catholics, he acknowledged the sense of betrayal in the Church felt by victims and their families. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:(AP Photo/Peter Morrison)/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Australia- 10% atheist(12 of21)
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A Falun Gong Practitioner poses on the 14th anniversary of the beginning of the persecution of Falun Gong in China on July 21, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. In July of 1999, the communist Chinese government outlawed the spiritual practise of Falun Gong, declaring it illegal and forbidding citizens to practise. Followers believe thousands of practitioners have been killed, imprisoned or put in labour camps in China since 1999. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:(Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Iceland- 10% atheist(13 of21)
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Pope Benedict XVI (R) poses with Iceland president Olafur Ragnar Grinsson during a private audience at the Vatican on March 4, 2011.Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Austria- 10% atheist(14 of21)
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Netherlands- 14% atheist(15 of21)
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Dozens of people queue in front of the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam on May 1, 2013. A day after the crowning of king Willem-Alexander the church has opened it's doors for those who want to see the church in the same setting as during the ceremony on April 30. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:JERRY LAMPEN/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Germany- 15% atheist(16 of21)
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Eight new priests prepare for their ordination at the Freisinger Dom cathedral on June 29, 2013 in Freising, Germany. Freising Cathedral, also called Saint Mary and Corbinian Cathedral, is a romanesque basilica in Freising, Bavaria. The Freising Cathedral is also known for being the place where Pope Benedict XVI was ordained a priest. Bavaria, Germany's southern-most state, is heavily Catholic. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit: (Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
South Korea- 15% atheist(17 of21)
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France- 29% atheist(18 of21)
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Czech Republic- 30% atheist(19 of21)
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Tourists enjoy a sunny day on March 25, 2010 at the traditional Eastern market in the Old Town Square in Prague. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:MICHAL CIZEK/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
Japan- 31% atheist(20 of21)
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Crown Prince Naruhito of Japan (R) and Galician regional president Alberto Nunez Feijoo (L) attend a concert at Cathedral on June 15, 2013 in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:Photo by Concha Paz-Pool/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')
China- 47% atheist(21 of21)
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This photo taken on on June 27, 2013 shows a muslim Uighur walking through dusty streets in Turpan, Xinjiang Province. China's constitution proclaims the country's dozens of minority groups as integral and equal parts of the national tapestry -- but analysts say the mishandling of such distinctions is a driver of unrest in remote Xinjiang. Beijing's propaganda portrays the vast western region more than four times the size of Japan as a harmonious land of colourful, mostly Muslim Uighur natives and hard-working migrants prospering under Communist Party rule. Statistics come from the WIN-Gallup International "Religion and Atheism Index" of 2013 (credit:MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images/WIN-Gallup International 'Religion and Atheism Index')