Activist pastor who has criticized Trump arrested while praying inside Capitol
Source: The Independent
Monday 28 April 2025 22:59 EDT
North Carolina pastor famous for decades of activism for progressive causes was arrested in the Capitol rotunda on Monday, less than a week after the formation of the Trump administrations task force on anti-Christian bias at the Justice Department.
The arrest occurred Monday afternoon as Reverend William Barber and others were praying at the Capitol; earlier in the day, the reverend delivered a sermon on the Capitol steps and also delivered a Moral Monday address at the Supreme Court. First reported by Jack Jenkins of Religion News Service (RNS), photos showed Barber and others surrounded by US Capitol Police officers, including one wearing a crime scene vest.
Jenkins reported in a follow up tweet that Barber and two others were arrested at the scene. Others were cleared from the vicinity of the Rotunda, which is often open to tours and members of the public. Bishop Rev. Dr. William Barber II and Rev. Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove were among those arrested this afternoon while praying in front of a statue that honors suffragettes in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda, Barbers group, Repairers of the Breach, said in a statement Monday afternoon.
The arrests occurred after an interfaith gathering of leaders from across the nation delivered a moral message to the nation this morning at the U.S. Supreme Court seeking to sound the alarm on the immoral budget cuts and proposed budget cuts being pursued in Washington D.C. at the expense of the poor, working people, children, women, and families, the statement continued.
Read more: https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/us-politics/william-barber-trump-christian-task-force-b2741146.html

LiberalArkie
(18,047 posts)walkingman
(9,160 posts)Lochloosa
(16,524 posts)Docreed2003
(18,139 posts)CurtEastPoint
(19,412 posts)SunSeeker
(55,624 posts)
lapfog_1
(30,840 posts)The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain.
mpcamb
(3,076 posts)Trump appointee whose bio says she's "fighting for religious freedom and humanitarian rights, and advocating for the voiceless".
BumRushDaShow
(151,663 posts)Martin68
(25,614 posts)I won't hold my breath waiting for MAGAt "Christians" to protest this act.
SunSeeker
(55,624 posts)
groundloop
(12,821 posts)Mr.WeRP
(775 posts)In other words arrested for being black and critical or Shitler
SunSeeker
(55,624 posts)In March 2023, far-right musician and activist Sean Feucht led a worship service in the very same space, joined by lawmakers like Lauren Boebert. No arrests were made then.
But Biden was president...and the Constitution was still in force.
electric_blue68
(21,204 posts)
G_j
(40,496 posts)The Quietest Outcry: Reverend William Barber and the Prayer That Was Too Much
We live in times when a silent prayer in the halls of power is seen as a threat. Times when even words of faith, carried by a weary, upright man, are surrounded by uniformed officers, as if they were an uprising, not a plea.
On the afternoon of April 28, 2025, as heavy light fell upon the columns of the U.S. Capitol Rotunda, Reverend William Barber knelt down. Together with Reverend Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove and Steve Swayne, director of the St. Francis Springs Prayer Center, he began to pray. Within minutes, they were encircled by dozens of police officers, plastic handcuffs at the ready.
They prayed in turns, their voices rising like a faint breeze against a wall of suspicion:
"Against the conspiracy of cruelty, we plead for the power of your mercy."
As the police moved closer, Barber declared:
"When we cannot depend on the courts or the legislative power of human beings, we can still depend on the power of your love, your mercy, and your truth."
It took only fifteen minutes before they were arrested. Three men, three prayers and a government so fragile that it could not withstand the whisper of justice.
While it is not unusual for demonstrators to be arrested inside the Capitol, this time the response was dramatically severe: after verbal warnings, police cleared the entire Rotunda, locked the doors, and expelled even credentialed journalists, cutting off any view of what was unfolding. Reporters and visitors were instructed to leave the entire floor.
Barber, who suffers from a chronic illness that limits his mobility, later described his interaction with the officers as "cordial," although the ordeal left him in significant physical pain. His detention was brief, but the significance of his arrest reverberated far beyond the marble walls of the Capitol.
Because this was not about noise. It was not about disruption.
It was about a stubborn, silent prayer against a Republican-led budget that would strip millions of their basic protections a budget threatening access to Medicaid, social programs, and school meals.
Barber, founder of the Center for Public Theology and Public Policy at Yale Divinity School, had earlier spoken from the steps of the Supreme Court, marking the launch of a new phase of his "Moral Monday" movement: weekly protests, rooted in the conviction that silence is complicity.
"If their foolish budget plans could strip healthcare from 36 million people ... if they would take school lunches from millions of poor children ... if they refuse to raise the minimum wage to $16 an hour then we must pray: God, give us the courage to stand!" Barber had cried at a "Hands Off" rally earlier in April.
And again in the Rotunda, he lamented:
"To think that we came into the Capitol to pray to pray against a budget, yes, but still to pray and now prayer is treated as a violation of the rules. If we do not stand for justice now, soon there may be no voice left to hear."
The police defended their actions: demonstrations in congressional buildings are prohibited, they said including sitting, kneeling, group praying, singing, or chanting. Even the press, they insisted, had no right to remain during an unauthorized event inside the Rotunda.
Yet the contrast was glaring: in March 2023, far-right musician and activist Sean Feucht led a worship service in the very same space, joined by lawmakers like Lauren Boebert. No arrests were made then.
Why are some allowed to pray and others not? Wilson-Hartgrove asked after his release.
"I pray as part of my pastoral responsibility."
The arrest of Barber was even more striking given that just days earlier, President Donald Trump had announced a "Task Force on Anti-Christian Bias" at the Department of Justice, led by Pam Bondi.
"How can a government claiming to protect Christians arrest a man like Barber for praying?" asked Anthea Butler, professor of religion at the University of Pennsylvania.
Reverend Paul Raushenbush of the Interfaith Alliance added:
"They aren't interested in protecting Christians only those Christians who are loyal to Trump."
The rally preceding the prayer session was organized by Barbers group, Repairers of the Breach. Speakers included Teresa Hord Owens (Christian Church, Disciples of Christ), Sheila Katz (National Council of Jewish Women), Imam Talib Shareef (Masjid Muhammad), and Marc Morial (National Urban League), who condemned the devastating effects the proposed budget would have on women, children, and workers.
But for Barber, it was never merely about statistics or policy lines. It was about the soul of a nation.
"Someone must speak. Someone must oppose this budget."
He marched with clergy from the Supreme Court to the Capitol, determined to remind the people's house whom it was meant to serve. Dozens of officers were already stationed at the entrance before he arrived.
Thus, April 28 did not simply become a day of arrests.
It became a silent uprising against a new definition of loyalty that tolerates faith only when it serves the powerful.
Barber himself left no doubt:
"Just as Jesus overturned the tables of the money changers, we must be willing to put our bodies on the line to awaken the nation. Not for the sake of being arrested but to arrest the attention of a country that is forgetting its soul."
And as the dome of the Capitol gleamed in the fading sunlight, something lingered in the shadows of its columns:
the echo of a prayer, stronger than the chains meant to silence it.
posted by Rainer Hoffman
SunSeeker
(55,624 posts)That was when we still had the 1st Amendment and the Equal Protection clause.
barbtries
(30,367 posts)It is not too soon for civil disobedience. Poor People's Campaign is I believe the place to donate:
https://ppc-nc.org/donate/
I just did; these days I only send $5.00 at a time because there are so many worthy causes. This way I can still do something to help.
hamsterjill
(15,791 posts)That was my first exposure to him, and I've followed his social media, etc. since that time. He's an amazing individual.
SunSeeker
(55,624 posts)Seems like that task force is after something other than "anti-Christian bias"...
ffr
(23,185 posts)Don't you look like fools now! Look yourself in the mirror and tell yourself, you did this!
electric_blue68
(21,204 posts)DFW
(57,850 posts)No more prayers. Thoughts only.
California Kid
(44 posts)marble falls
(65,029 posts)littlemissmartypants
(27,414 posts)Plus marched with him on more than one occasion in Raleigh. I knew that the article was about him before I even looked at it.
Bishop Reverend Doctor Barber is a great man and a scholar. We could all learn a lot about life from him and he more than deserves our attention.
I love him.
If any one wants to hear him, there's a post of him preaching in the NC Group.
❤️
Farmer-Rick
(11,741 posts)He is an amazing person. And I am an atheist and humanist.
It's just a matter of time before everyone who hates the pedophile, and convicted felon in the white house, will be arrested or shot by our own American military.
littlemissmartypants
(27,414 posts)
electric_blue68
(21,204 posts)Very famous Baptest Church in NYC👍
Joinfortmill
(17,911 posts)Traildogbob
(11,070 posts)The White Christians in North Carolina loved that black fat ass We need more Killing preacher, Robinson, the candidate for Governor. Trump endorsed him. Reverend Barber just prescribes that weak ass love shit and bows to a different God, not the orange one.
The I have a black friend reasoning, Robinson, so they a not be racist.
Somebody tell me, did Uncle Tim Scott marry his Canadian sweetheart, and how are they dealing with the war against Canada? Just curious.
et tu
(2,171 posts)again very deep doo doo is upon us
TexasBushwhacker
(20,878 posts)BumRushDaShow
(151,663 posts)It's an OLD "crime".
Martin Luther King, Jr. is arrested for "loitering" in Montgomery, Alabama, in September 1958. (Wikimedia Commons)
Martin Luther King Jr. is jailed in Birmingham
Letter from a Birmingham Jail