Monday, January 30, 2012

Islam controversies not mentioned in general's OC talk

Pastor John Abent gives the opening prayer at the Ocean City Mayor's Prayer Breakfast as Pastor Paul Klaverweiden, Ocean City Hotel-Motel Restaurant Association Executive Director Susan Jones, Mayor Rick Meehan, retired Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin and Worcester County State's Attorney Beau Oglesby bow their heads.
Pastor John Abent gives the opening prayer at the Ocean City Mayor's Prayer Breakfast as Pastor Paul Klaverweiden, Ocean City Hotel-Motel Restaurant Association Executive Director Susan Jones, Mayor Rick Meehan, retired Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin and Worcester County State's Attorney Beau Oglesby bow their heads. / THOMAS MELVILLE/THE DAILY TIMES
OCEAN CITY -- Lt. Gen. William G. "Jerry" Boykin spoke to an audience gathered for breakfast about his belief that God will forgive anyone for anything, and that a relationship with Jesus Christ is more important than following the rules of an organized religion.

The retired Army general supplemented his thesis with stories of his time in combat when he says his faith was rewarded, and other times when it was tested and restored. In one case, Boykin believes the Holy Spirit spoke to him in a time of doubt, telling him that "If there is no God, there is no hope."


Boykin avoided discussing another religious belief during his speech at the Mayor's Prayer Breakfast: Islam. The retired general has been outspoken on that topic at times, arguing that mosques have no place in America and describing Islam as a "totalitarian way of life." His invitation to Ocean City aroused dismay from People for the American Way and the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and those groups urged Mayor Rick Meehan and Ocean City Town Council members to rescind Boykin's invitation, or not attend his talk. The annual event name-checks the Mayor's Office but is organized and funded privately, not by the town.


In the end, the mayor and one of the seven councilmembers, Doug Cymek, attended; and Boykin didn't stray from the path of discussing Christianity. He shared stories of his reliance on prayer during dangerous missions he embarked on during his lengthy career with the Army's Delta Force, including one occasion during the infamous "Black Hawk Down" mission he commanded in Somalia when he prayed for God to save the life of a man who had his renal artery severed during a mortar blast. Lying next to Boykin in a hospital, the man told him to tell his wife he loved her, then closed his eyes, unconscious. Hospital staff rushed in with anti-shock trousers, and the man was revived.




"You can say, 'Boy, you're a nut,' and I probably am, but as far as I'm concerned, I saw a dead man rise from the dead," Boykin said to applause from the about 400 people who attended the breakfast at the Clarion Hotel. Norman Briddell of Berlin leapt from his seat, shouting "Hallelujah."

During the earlier stages of "Black Hawk Down," when Boykin saw some of his troops die in combat, he said he began thinking God did not exist -- that he had been living a lie believing in a higher power. It was during this time he claims the Holy Spirit spoke to him. He repented, he said, and was immediately forgiven by God.

"That's the only real message I have today," he said. "There is nothing you've ever done that God won't forgive you for, and you might say, 'Well, you don't know what I've done,' but you, you don't know what I've done."




Meehan said he felt Boykin's speech had matched the tradition and spirit of the event, resonated with the audience and conveyed a positive message.



The perception that Boykin brought with him a tint of religious intolerance is "certainly not" accurate, according to Meehan. That was an argument made in an editorial by The Sun in Baltimore, "'Islamophobic' Ocean City?," saying if elected leaders attended it would "reflect badly on them and the resort town they lead."




"Perception can be very tough to deal with, but Ocean City is open to all faiths and beliefs, and we absolutely embrace everybody," said Meehan. "We want to make sure that message is very clear."



Meehan added that anyone who attended the breakfast could vouch that Boykin's speech as inoffensive. Briddell said it was "excellent," and that it served as a good reminder there is "always hope, no matter what."



Peter Montgomery, a People for the American Way senior fellow, attended the event, and agreed Boykin had stayed away from the vein of inflammatory comments he's made in past speeches. But given Boykin's past statements, Montgomery said, it was still disappointing the event's organizers invited him to speak.



"I don't doubt that the mayor and council didn't know about (Boykin's) past," he said. But after they learned about his views on Islam, he said, it became a question of holding public officials accountable.
Boykin's appearance among town officials gives the impression they were giving credibility to his comments, Montgomery said.



 

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