Invocation for the
California Congress of Republicans
Endorsing Convention,

March 4, 2024

by
Peter Coe Verbica,
Chair emeritus

This invocation will begin on land, but because we are in California, will then transition to the ocean.  

From the onset, let me apologize for my Anglican inclinations and the profoundest appreciation for each column, buttress and steppingstone which comprise the Temple of Western Civilization.  For I am an unequivocal admirer of every piece of this masonry.  I feel the collective weight of this edifice, as if I am the ground beneath it.  It compresses all of us with its glorious and vast enormity.

Abraham Lincoln advises in one of his speeches, “Every word is so closely noted that it will not do to make trivial ones.”  Before proceeding, if we apply this regimen, I suppose there exists no greater prayer than to simply ask: ‘May all that is good and positive in the universe be channeled through us.’  Let us be emissaries of the Divine; let us be ambassadors to that Awesome Presence which infuses both the ordinary and the extraordinary.

Ideally, as Republicans, we humbly serve as guardians at the gates of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”  The California Congress of Republicans, at its best, is a protector, not just of our Constitution, but also of those Natural Laws espoused by our Country’s founders.  Monarchs, tyrants and theologians are no longer the sole ambassadors to the Great Architect of the Universe.  Each of us carries a golden passkey to opportunity; to accountability; to ownership.

In our quest for freedom, mercy, justice, and prudence, let us walk wisely and with confidence.  While we are passionate and empowered, I also believe that we are deliberate.  While we hold fast to our core beliefs, we balance the lesser equities to chart a truer, more reasoned course.  We offer a larger tent because though we are strong, we appreciate and revere restraint.   

An invocation is a call to a Higher Order.  One ideal code of conduct is proposed to us in Philippians, Chapter 4, verse 8; attributed to the Apostle Paul while he was in a Roman prison, circa 60-62 AD, his concluding wish for his friends and followers reads as follows:

“Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.”

Honorable colleagues, if you were sailors, I would wish you ‘fair winds and following seas.’  Perhaps we can think of this convention as the beginning of an noteworthy journey, and if such, I believe that it is perfectly appropriate for me to wish each of you, ‘Godspeed.’