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2 December 2011updated 20 Mar 2012 8:52pm

Praying for an end to prayers

Are council prayers discriminatory, or just local democracy in action?

By Nelson Jones

Are council prayers discriminatory, or just local democracy in action?

As living standards atrophy and the collapse of the eurozone becomes every day a little less unthinkable, it may seem trivial in the extreme to be arguing about whether or not the mayor of a small town in Devon should be called upon to say a prayer before the start of council meetings. Yet for the National Secular Society (NSS) it would seem to be a big deal. As their legal challenge is heard in the High Court, the NSS believes its case against Bideford council to be an issue that “goes to the very heart of secularism in public life and, if successful, will set a key country-wide precedent.”

The law, declares the NSS in a press release, “is not made in Bideford”. But whichever way the decision goes, Bideford will decide the law. The NSS estimates that half of all local councils in Britain begin their proceedings with prayers, usually of a Christian character. It’s a custom that they’re determined to see brought to an end. A document published on the NSS website calls both for donations to a fighting fund and for a pro-active campaign to root out instances of coucil prayer. Supporters are urged to find out if their local council begins its meetings with prayers — and, if so, to complain to the council and to the local press (“the local media are always looking for stories, particularly those with a specific community angle”) and to take part in radio phone-ins.

Feelings are running equally high on the other side. Last year when the NSS’s legal challenge was first announced, Lord Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, claimed that the “centuries-long tradition of saying of prayers before council meetings” was “an acknowledgment of the important role the Christian faith plays in civic life”. (This may be why the NSS finds them so objectionable, of course.) He condemned the lawsuit as “an attack on freedom and a cynical manoeuvre to drive public expressions of faith from national as well as local life.” A local bishop went so far as to claim that council prayers formed “an integral part of the British system of government”.

Bideford council is being represented by a firm of solicitors closely linked to the campaign group the Christian Institute. The firm has acted in a number of high profile cases — most recently that of Adrian Smith, demoted by Trafford Housing Trust for objecting to gay marriage on his private Facebook account.

But the roots of the Bideford case are also local, particular and long-standing. At its centre is Councillor Clive Bone, who has been trying to get prayers abolished for more than three years. His attempt in 2008 to replace them with a moment of silent contemplation was defeated by nine votes to four. Bone claims that the practice is divisive, embarrassing and that he was aware of potential councillors who put off standing for election by the prospect of having to sit through prayers. According to the NSS, “prayers make him uncomfortable and he feels embarrassed and awkward as the public act of worship is practised”. He objects to having to choose between “participating” or leaving the room, or else arriving late. Holding prayers “creates a feeling of exclusion for him and some other councillors,” which has led him not to seek re-election.

I can well understand non-religious councillors finding prayers to be boring and unnecessary. The NSS may have a case in law. They report that the National Association of Local Councils shares their analysis that council prayers may be considered discriminatory. They certainly have a good case in logic. I would worry about any councillor who seriously believed that they required divine guidance before making decisions about some local planning application. And prayers at the start of meetings are likely to produce embarrassed shuffling of feet among non-believing councillors.

To impose prayers by majority vote upon council members who actively object to them strikes me as insensitive and less than wholly Christian. In Bideford itself, the controversy seems to have produced a poisonous atmosphere on the council that can hardly have been conducive to good local government; still less to the “cohesion” that was claimed to be the purpose of the prayers. There’s more common sense on display in Gloucester, where to the NSS’s delight council prayers have this week been abolished.

And yet I can’t help thinking that high court judges have more pressing calls on their time, and more expertise than micromanaging how proceedings should be initiated in council chambers up and down the country. It’s not as if — as with religious school assemblies — council prayers are compulsory, and for the National Secular Society to argue that it they represent a key front in the wider battle against religious domination of public life is as absurd as their opponents’ contention that they are essential to maintaining the country’s Christian foundation. In reality, the issue represents yet another opportunity for two legally-obsessed pressure groups to go head-to-head — a depressingly recurrent feature of our modern human rights culture. Sometimes the law is best made in Bideford.

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