Salisbury, Md. – The 4th Annual ‘National Day of Prayer’ Breakfast will return to the Wicomico Youth & Civic Center on Thursday, May 1 at 7 a.m. The breakfast will feature speaker Donald Meeks, a contemplative pastor, teacher, Psalmic intercessor and songwriter. Tickets for this event are $20 per person or $160 for a table of eight. Tickets are available at the Country House and Chamber of Commerce in Salisbury or by calling 410-430-4189. To purchase by mail, send check payable to Salisbury Area Prayer Breakfast Committee c/o The Magi Fund, P.O. Box 521, Salisbury, MD 21803.
Following the breakfast, the 63rd Annual ‘National Day of Prayer’ Observance will be held at the City / County Office Building in downtown Salisbury at 12 p.m. This event is free and open to the public.
As anti-Christian as Jim Ireton is I hope he doesn't attend. That goes for Laura Mitchell, Terry Cohen and anyone else who voted to do away with the Lords Prayer at the City Council meetings.
ReplyDeleteWhat were we taught about judging others 4:04?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous said...
ReplyDeleteWhat were we taught about judging others 4:04?
April 3, 2014 at 4:49 PM
Get lost Dumbo! You and other soft hearted liberals are the problem in this country.
Why is its being held in a city/county building? I'm sending this to the ACLU.
ReplyDeleteGet over yourself, 805, this Country was founded on Judeo-Christian principles, and any short history search will tell you so. We can remember it any time we want, and that "Humanist" lawsuit can go straight to he!! as well. We are who we are, and always have been.
ReplyDelete4:04, Lord's Prayer not constitutional and would have cost the city big time.
ReplyDeletePrayer is allowed if non-denominational and Cohen supported having that and moment of silence on a rotation.
Remember the big show Shields made about coming in late if there wasn't prayer? Soon as the headlines were over, she showed up on time.
How about we not politicize God?
oh no, we can't have this. someone call aclu & report the offense. how can this be?
ReplyDelete(sarcasm)
Anonymous said...
ReplyDelete4:04, Lord's Prayer not constitutional and would have cost the city big time.
Prayer is allowed if non-denominational and Cohen supported having that and moment of silence on a rotation.
Remember the big show Shields made about coming in late if there wasn't prayer? Soon as the headlines were over, she showed up on time.
How about we not politicize God?
April 4, 2014 at 12:10 AM
See 10:21 PM
Mayor Ireton attended last year.
ReplyDelete10:21 Next you will be telling us that "In God We Trust" has always been on our money. Not true.
ReplyDelete