Posted on Sun, Nov. 07, 2004
Preachers take 'war' to Topeka
BY ROY WENZL
The Wichita Eagle
What happened in May ticked off pastors Joe Wright and Terry Fox. They felt belittled, rejected.
Legislators rejected their plea to put an amendment to a statewide vote that would have defined marriage as being between one man and one woman.
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So, the two pastors cleared their schedules and drove Kansas for months, pleading with church leaders to get evangelical Christians to vote in November.
They succeeded.
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Fox gave close to 100 interviews to radio stations and newspapers. He and Wright went to 40 towns and cities.
The sparks began to fly, Wright said. A flood of calls and e-mails came, offering help. Everywhere they went--Parsons, Emporia, Manhattan, Hutchinson and elsewhere--pastors turned out in dozens to meet, make plans and listen to coaching about how to preach without crossing the legal line that sparks IRS interest. Wright and Fox's lawyers helped coach them: don't criticize or endorse any candidate; just tell people to vote. Wright told people: "You know whom to vote for."
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Statewide, Wright said, everything meaningful that has been rejected by courts, legislators and liberals could come up for debate now: prayer in schools, evolution, the Ten Commandments displayed in public buildings.
more.....
http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/10119640.htm