Catholic Culture Dedication
Catholic Culture Dedication
Catholic World News

Cardinal Dolan’s prayer at Democratic National Convention: full text

September 07, 2012

Following President Barack Obama’s speech at the Democratic National Convention, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, delivered the closing benediction.

Cardinal Dolan also delivered the benediction at the Republican National Convention a week earlier.

“With a ‘firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence,’ let us close this convention by praying for this land that we so cherish and love,” Cardinal Dolan began at the Democratic convention, continuing:

Let us Pray.

Almighty God, father of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, revealed to us so powerfully in your Son, Jesus Christ, we thank you for showering your blessings upon this our beloved nation. Bless all here present, and all across this great land, who work hard for the day when a greater portion of your justice, and a more ample measure of your care for the poor and suffering, may prevail in these United States. Help us to see that a society’s greatness is found above all in the respect it shows for the weakest and neediest among us.

We beseech you, almighty God to shed your grace on this noble experiment in ordered liberty, which began with the confident assertion of inalienable rights bestowed upon us by you: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Thus do we praise you for the gift of life. Grant us the courage to defend it, life, without which no other rights are secure. We ask your benediction on those waiting to be born, that they may be welcomed and protected. Strengthen our sick and our elders waiting to see your holy face at life’s end, that they may be accompanied by true compassion and cherished with the dignity due those who are infirm and fragile.

We praise and thank you for the gift of liberty. May this land of the free never lack those brave enough to defend our basic freedoms. Renew in all our people a profound respect for religious liberty: the first, most cherished freedom bequeathed upon us at our Founding. May our liberty be in harmony with truth; freedom ordered in goodness and justice. Help us live our freedom in faith, hope, and love. Make us ever-grateful for those who, for over two centuries, have given their lives in freedom’s defense; we commend their noble souls to your eternal care, as even now we beg the protection of your mighty arm upon our men and women in uniform.

We praise and thank you for granting us the life and the liberty by which we can pursue happiness. Show us anew that happiness is found only in respecting the laws of nature and of nature’s God. Empower us with your grace so that we might resist the temptation to replace the moral law with idols of our own making, or to remake those institutions you have given us for the nurturing of life and community. May we welcome those who yearn to breathe free and to pursue happiness in this land of freedom, adding their gifts to those whose families have lived here for centuries.

We praise and thank you for the American genius of government of the people, by the people and for the people. Oh God of wisdom, justice, and might, we ask your guidance for those who govern us: President Barack Obama, Vice President Joseph Biden, Congress, the Supreme Court, and all those, including Governor Mitt Romney and Congressman Paul Ryan, who seek to serve the common good by seeking public office. Make them all worthy to serve you by serving our country. Help them remember that the only just government is the government that serves its citizens rather than itself. With your grace, may all Americans choose wisely as we consider the future course of public policy.

And finally Lord, we beseech your benediction on all of us who depart from here this evening, and on all those, in every land, who yearn to conduct their lives in freedom and justice. We beg you to remember, as we pledge to remember, those who are not free; those who suffer for freedom’s cause; those who are poor, out of work, needy, sick, or alone; those who are persecuted for their religious convictions, those still ravaged by war.

And most of all, God Almighty, we thank you for the great gift of our beloved country.

For we are indeed “one nation under God,” and “in God we trust.”

So dear God, bless America. You who live and reign forever and ever.

Amen!

 


For all current news, visit our News home page.


 
Further information:
Sound Off! CatholicCulture.org supporters weigh in.

All comments are moderated. To lighten our editing burden, only current donors are allowed to Sound Off. If you are a current donor, log in to see the comment form; otherwise please support our work, and Sound Off!

  • Posted by: John J Plick - Sep. 09, 2012 5:00 PM ET USA

    I have carefully read over Cardinal Dolan’s prayer, and there are a few elements conspicuously absent. One is any direct reference to “sin.,” either that it in fact exists as a reality independent of any affirming or contradicting “civil law” and “that,” whether or not it is specifically condemned by “civil law” there are unavoidable consequences notwithstanding.Also, nothing about the only remedy for that sin, and that is “the Blood of Christ. “No pain,no gain,” Either for Jesus or the Cardinal

  • Posted by: John J Plick - Sep. 08, 2012 5:07 PM ET USA

    I, for one, sensed “no prophetic impulse” in what the Cardinal prayed. Scripture says that “the Word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword...” When St Stephen, merely a deacon, confronted the Sanhedrin with his admonition, the crowd became so furious that they began to scream and stopped up their ears... Where is that power now???

  • Posted by: nanajessey2119 - Sep. 08, 2012 10:11 AM ET USA

    Bravo Cardinal Dolan, a perfect prayer. Thank you for standing up for all of us Roman Catholics who follow Christ and His Church, the Holy Father and our Cardinals and Bishops. We must all pray very hard so that the Devil does not win this battle.

  • Posted by: koinonia - Sep. 07, 2012 8:30 PM ET USA

    Not bad at all. The efficacy in altering the disturbing Democrat Party platform is a different matter. Perhaps an act of contrition for the convention's work was a bit too much to ask.

  • Posted by: tasha1996 - Sep. 07, 2012 8:22 PM ET USA

    Cardinal Dolan confronts the devils head on. He was ordained to do so, following the example of our good Lord when He went around the land of Canaan expelling demons.

  • Posted by: hartwood01 - Sep. 07, 2012 8:07 PM ET USA

    Wow,I'm surprised the good Cardinal didn't get the hook for asking God to give us the "courage to defend life". That's not a wish for the party who let the Planned Parenthood big shot prance out and shove her ideology down out collective throats.

  • Posted by: John J Plick - Sep. 07, 2012 7:59 PM ET USA

    If the Cardinal had been stoned, or thrown bodily out of the Hall, or perhaps even verbally abused, than I would have been impressed. As it was, it would seem to be just another "generic" prayer. Everyone "did their dance," they "went through the motions" and then returned to business as usual.

  • Posted by: AgnesDay - Sep. 07, 2012 2:24 PM ET USA

    Reasonably pointed, I would say. It was certainly the most respectful the crowd was all through the convention. Maybe it took root in a few hearts and will guide the course of the election.