New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan delivers the invocation during U.S. President Donald Trump's swearing-in as the 47th U.S. president in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda in Washington Jan. 20, 2025.
OSV News photo/Saul Loeb, pool via ReutersReuters
January 22, 2025
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As Catholics prayed across the United States for President Donald Trump as he was sworn in as the nation’s 47th president Jan. 20, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York was in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda in Washington offering an opening prayer during the inauguration ceremony minutes before Trump took the oath of office.
“Be still and know that I am God,” Dolan began, before evoking pivotal moments in U.S. history where the nation’s leaders turned to the Lord.
“Remembering Gen. George Washington on his knees at Valley Forge. Recalling Abraham Lincoln at his second inaugural, ‘with malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right.’ Remembering Gen. George Patton’s instructions to his soldiers as they began the Battle of the Bulge eight decades ago: Pray! ‘Pray when fighting. Pray alone. Pray with others. Pray by night. Pray by day.’ Observing the birthday of the Rev. Martin Luther King who warned, without God ‘our efforts turn to ashes,’ we, blessed citizens of this one nation under God, humbled by our claim that ‘In God We Trust,’ gather indeed this Inauguration Day to pray,” he said.
Dolan prayed “for our president Donald J. Trump, his family, his advisors, his Cabinet, his aspirations, his vice president; for the Lord’s blessings upon Joseph Biden; for our men and women in uniform; for each other, whose hopes are stoked this new year, this inauguration day.”
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops did not release an Inauguration Day statement Jan. 20, but did post an Inauguration Day prayer on X.
“Assist with your spirit of counsel and fortitude the President of these United States, that his administration may be conducted in righteousness, and be eminently useful to your people over whom he presides,” it began. “May he encourage due respect for virtue and religion. May he execute the laws with justice and mercy. May he seek to restrain crime, vice and immorality.”
The prayer also asked that the “light of your divine wisdom direct the deliberations of Congress” and for all U.S. citizens, “that we be blessed in the knowledge and sanctified in the observance of your holy law.”
In his inauguration invocation, Dolan referred to King Solomon’s appeal “for wisdom as he began his governance.”
“God of our fathers, in your wisdom you set man to govern your creatures, to govern in holiness and justice, to render justice with integrity,” the cardinal prayed. “Give our leader wisdom, for he is your servant aware of his own weakness and brevity of life. If wisdom, which comes from you be not with him, he shall be held in no esteem. Send wisdom from Heaven that she may be with him, that he may know your designs.”
At the inauguration’s benediction, Fr. Frank Mann, a retired priest of the Diocese of Brooklyn, prayed with gratitude for the “many gifts you have bestowed upon our lands,” and “the freedoms we cherish, for the strength of our communities and for the resilience of our spirit.”
“As our president and vice president embrace their newly appointed roles, we humbly implore that your everlasting love and wisdom will envelop them,” he prayed. “Grant them the clarity of mind to navigate the challenges that lie ahead and the compassion to serve all citizens with fairness and integrity.”
A version of this story appeared in the January 26, 2025, issue of The Catholic Register with the headline "Wisdom, strength, humility focus of Inauguration prayers".
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