I Stand Sunday rally draws more than 6,000 in Houston

HOUSTON – As pastors embroiled in a lawsuit against the city rallied thousands Sunday to Grace Community Church for the cause of religious liberty and with chants of “Let the people vote,” their cohorts in the battle were also crying out for the church to repent for its retreat from the public square and its role as the public conscience.

Part revival meeting, part civics lesson, the I Stand Sunday rally Nov. 2 drew more than 6,000 people to the Houston church of one of five pastors subpoenaed for their role in a legal fight against city hall. An additional 300 churches and 765 homes were logged into the live stream webcast. Interwoven throughout the evening was the message of religious liberty, the church’s culpability for the current cultural malaise, and the need for repentance.

“We are in this place in America today not because of the mayor of Houston. It is not because of what she did. It is because of what so many people in our churches have failed to do,” Mike Huckabee, former governor of Arkansas told the audience.

The lack of civic participation on the part of Christians has resulted in the cultural conflicts arising throughout the nation with Houston as a flashpoint in the national clash between religious liberties and government policies.

And though Mayor Annise Parker directed City Attorney Dave Feldman last week to withdraw subpoenas against five pastors, the mayor’s critics called the court order an act of political intimidation that could not be undone with the removal of the subpoenas. For the pastors, and more than a dozen speakers gathered on their behalf, the primary issue remained—the city administration’s unauthorized dismissal of thousands of signatures on a referendum that thwarted the resident’s right to vote on the issue.

The ordinance that sparked the legal battle was passed by Houston’s city council in May and gives civil rights designation to individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity. Over 50,000 signatures were gathered on a referendum to put the ordinance to a vote in Houston. And though enough signatures were verified by City Secretary Anna Russell to put the measure on the Nov. 4 ballot, Feldman disqualified thousands of pages of signatures for reasons not prescribed in the city charter.

The coalition sued the city to have the signatures certified and the ordinance put to a vote by the city’s residents. As part of their defense, the city subpoenaed five pastors calling for their sermons, speeches and other communications with their church members.

“It’s not about the issue of transgender rights. It’s about the fundamental issue: Do all citizens have equal rights? And those rights include the right to vote,” Huckabee said in a press conference prior to the rally.

The issue is all the more profound for three of the five subpoenaed pastors. As immigrants or the child of immigrants to America they spoke passionately about fleeing the abuses of communism and enjoying religious and civil liberties as Americans.

Khanh Huynh, senior pastor of Vietnamese Baptist Church, a Southern Baptist Church, was among the two million “boat people” refugees seeking asylum in America in the 1970s.

“The freedom of speech and freedom of religion were among the first to be lost in Vietnam. And now I’m facing the same marching boots of tyranny right here where I live,” Huynh told the audience.

Magda Hermida, founder of Magda Hermida Ministries told how she and her husband left Fidel Castro’s Cuba almost 50 years ago where they lived under the scrutiny of a police state.

“We never thought we would see what is happening—that is now happening in this country—here in Houston, in our beloved America,” she said.

The son of South American emigrants, Hernan Castano, pastor of Iglesia Rios de Aceite, said pastors should be able to speak about the issues of society from a biblical perspective without being afraid “to be condemned, to be subpoenaed, or to be intimidated.”

“I stand here today so that no government will abuse the power that people gave it to come against the church,” Castano said to a standing ovation.

There were many such ovations during the rally.

The lead sponsor of I Stand Sunday, the Family Research Council, demonstrated through videos and speakers the growing conflict between Christians living out and speaking of their faith in the public square and government policies and social pressures that seek to silence them. The images were stark, but the church is not held blameless for the state of affairs.

“In this country that means we have not just the right to vote but, if we love God, we have a responsibility to vote and to be the salt and the light for our nation. And we have failed,” Huckabee said.

Dave Welch, executive director of the Houston Area Pastor Council and one of the subpoenaed pastors, noted that just over 10 percent of eligible Houston residents voted in the 2013 mayoral election. Less than a month after Parker’s re-election, she began development of the Equal Rights Ordinance.

“We cannot blame the people who do not love God,” Huckabee said. “We’d better look inwardly and say, ‘It’s because we’ve told our people that they could effectively be wonderful Christians just going to church and reading their Bibles and praying, and voting wasn’t that important.”

Prominent Southern Baptist pastors drove that message home calling on Christians to repent of their apathy and to recognize that cultural change does not happen at the ballot box but in the hearts of those who call on Christ in faith.

Ed Young, pastor of Second Baptist Church in Houston, said, “This gathering will be construed by a lot of people as a political gathering [saying], ‘They were here mad and militant and violent,’ but we are here as worshippers of our Lord and savior Jesus Christ.”

Young added that Christians pray for those in leadership, including Parker.

Drawing his comments from Rev. 3:22, SBC President Ronnie Floyd asked what the Spirit of God is saying to the church of America.

He concluded, “It is time for the church in America to look at its own sin, to repent of our own apathy. … It is time for us to wake up from our slumber. It is time for us to understand that our greatest problem is not in the White House, nor is it in the State House; but it is in the church house of Jesus Christ. We must get our lives right with the Lord.”

And with that he called on the audience to take a posture of prayer, leading them in a prayer of repentance and revival “to do only what God can do.”

“That our heartbeat would not be simply to see a culture changed but to see millions and millions and millions of lives changed by the gospel of Jesus Christ. Because that is our hope.”

Phil Robertson, the patriarch of Duck Dynasty fame, and his son Pastor Alan Robertson; brothers David and Jason Benham; Alliance Defending Freedom attorney Erik Stanley; Pastor Willie Davis, a plaintiff in the lawsuit against Parker; FOX News commentator Todd Starnes; and Vision America President Rick Scarborough spoke of the challenges Christians face in an increasingly secular society but told them to stand strong.

Tony Perkins, president Family Research Council, said just one person contending for the faith in the face of political and societal scorn can encourage others to do the same.

What to do with the political opposition that seeks to silence and even punish Christian voices?

“We need to lift up the word of God with one hand and the love of God with the other,” Floyd said. “And we need to stand unwaveringly, unapologetically, but always compassionately with those who choose to disagree.”

TEXAN Correspondent
Bonnie Pritchett
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