Yes, they can
do that in public school
Principals in America no longer have
excuse for squashing religious freedom
Published: 3
hours ago
by Drew Zahn
Drew Zahn is a
former pastor who cut his editing teeth as a member of the award-winning staff
of Leadership, Christianity Today's professional journal for church
leaders. He is the editor of seven books, including Movie-Based Illustrations for Preaching & Teaching,
which sparked his ongoing love affair with film and his weekly WND column,
"Popcorn and a (world)view."
Every
public school in America is about to receive a wake-up call that will eliminate
any excuse for stomping on students’ and teachers’ religious liberty.
Ever
since the Supreme Court ruled in 1969 that neither students nor teachers “shed
their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse
gate,” activists of various stripes – most recently from atheist and homosexual
groups – have tried to find ways around the ruling, to squash free speech, and
religious speech in particular, in America’s public schools.
Last
year, for example, Florida teacher Jerry Buell at Mount Dora High School faced
suspension after the homosexual advocacy group Equality Florida demanded he be
disciplined for voicing disapproval of same-sex marriage on Facebook.
Though
Buell used his personal computer, on his personal time to post his opinion on
his personal Facebook page, he lost three days in the classroom to suspension
before the Lake County School Board realized its mistake and decided to
exonerate and reinstate the teacher.
Just
this month, Missouri State Rep. Mike McGhee explained to the Missourian that
the state’s newly passed “right to pray” constitutional amendment was needed
because he heard about children who were asked not to pray after getting a
school lunch, a girl being told not to take her Bible to study hall and a
parent explaining how an adult at her child’s school told her son to change the
words in the song “Jesus Loves Me” to “My Mom Loves Me” while he was on the
school playground.
Though
voters passed the “right to pray” amendment by a roughly 5-to-1 margin,
standing against it was the Washington, D.C.-based Americans United for
Separation of Church and State.
WND
has covered dozens of stories in recent years – such as the censorship and
humiliation 15-year-old Brandon Wegner faced from Wisconsin’s
Shawano School District for writing an assigned paper in opposition to
homosexual adoption or a Virginia lawsuit against a display of the 10 Commandments
or a New York City attempt to ban churches from using school buildings – in
which students, teachers and community groups have been wrongfully told it’s
“unconstitutional” to carry their faith onto campus.
But
now Liberty Counsel,
a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing religious freedom, has
announced it is sending 99,750 copies – one for literally every public school
in America – of an exhaustive guide on religious liberty in school to
principals, vice principals and school administrators around the country.
Thousands of sponsors have made the mass mailing possible.
“Over
the past few years, Liberty Counsel has seen a surge of complaints from school
administrators, educators and students, whose rights were egregiously
violated,” said the organization in a statement. “Secular activists attempt to
remove religious expression from our public schools, indoctrinate students in
alternative lifestyles and bully through intimidation and blatant
misrepresentation. To be proactive in countering this growing threat, Liberty
Counsel developed and distributed the ‘Patriot’s Handbook of Religious Freedom in Public Schools.’
“This
booklet,” the organization explains, “clarifies the rights of students to pray,
form Bible clubs and engage in religious expression in public schools,
including holiday celebrations and the rights of teachers, parents and
guardians.”
“The
public school is not a faith-free zone,” said Mat Staver, founder and
chairman of Liberty Counsel. “Students need not leave their spiritual beliefs
on the schoolhouse steps. Liberty Counsel is here to educate and, if need be,
litigate to defend their First Amendment rights.”
America’s
public school system, which had long included religious elements such as daily
prayer and even biblical passages and stories as part of the common primers
from which many of our nation’s presidents learned to read, faced a significant
crisis of faith in 1962 and 1963 when a pair of landmark Supreme Court cases
first found unconstitutional state-sponsored prayer in schools, then struck
down Bible readings and other state-sponsored religious activities.
But
in 1969, the Supreme Court’s Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School
District case reaffirmed the rights of the individual students and teachers,
concluding, “It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed
their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the
schoolhouse gate. This has been the unmistakable holding of this Court for
almost 50 years.”
Though
the case was originally about three students wearing arm bands to protest the
Vietnam War, many cases since have pointed to the 1969 decision and the “Tinker
test” to affirm a right to religious expression as well.
Nonetheless,
Liberty Counsel notes, several questions, controversies and even lawsuits over
free speech and religious liberty in public schools pop up every year,
including questions about students, teachers, curriculum, graduation
ceremonies, public access to school facilities by religious groups and more.
“That’s
why Liberty Counsel has developed an invaluable resource compiled through
decades of experience defending the rights of educators, students,
administrators and community members from radical activists who want to
suppress our precious freedom of religious expression in public settings,” the
organization states.
Liberty
Counsel’s goal in distributing the “Patriot’s Handbook of Religious Freedom in
Public Schools” is to dramatically reduce the number of instances when school
administrators erroneously censor or punish religious expression. By having the
guidebook in hand or on file, the organization hopes, schools will look to
sound advice on protecting religious liberty when confronted by activist
organizations that demand students, teachers or community groups be silenced.
“Our
nation’s public schools must allow the full and free exercise of every
American’s First Amendment rights to free speech, free association and
religious expression,” Liberty Counsel states. “There must never be restraints
or prohibitions on any American expressing religious sentiments in public
settings. There is no place in our democracy for anti-religious bigotry.”
http://www.wnd.com/2012/08/yes-they-can-do-that-in-public-school/


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