buffalo said:
US federal court rejects separation of church and state
Cincinnati, Dec. 22 (
CWNews.com) - The First Amendment to the US Constitution “does not demand a wall of separation between church and state,” a federal court has ruled.
In a surprising decision this week, the 6th Circuit US Court of Appeals approved the display of the Ten Commandments in a Kentucky county. In writing the decision for a unanimous court, Just Richard Suhrheinrich rejected the arguments of lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union (ALCU), which protested the display. The judge wrote: “The ACLU makes repeated reference to the ‘separation of church and state.’ This extra-constitutional construct has grown tiresome.”
The phrase “separation of church and state” does not appear anywhere in the US Constitution, the judge observed. He added that American history “is replete with governmental acknowledgment and in some cases, accommodation of religion.”
more…
A great Christmas present.
Well that is because it is not there. Hoorah!!!
The constitution is clear that religion should not be infringed on by the government. This means that we should be free to practice our religion until the practice of our religion denies another of his Constitutional right to life, liberty and happiness. Practice of religion is primarily the means of worship.
The Constitution is clear that we have the right to assemble (whether as an atheist group or a Christian group) and petition our government. This means that either as an individual or as a group we can come together and influence our government by any lawful means available.
The problem we currently have is that judges/justices have errantly interpreted the 1st Amendment in a way such that religious organizations are denied rights afforded to non-religious groups (ie the ACLU, Sierra Club, Taxpayer organizations, Political Action Committees, political parties). In short, religious entities are essentially second class groups.
This all being said, we do have to watch for certain discriminatory “establishment” of religion issues. For instance, I suggest that one read a book on Charles Carroll (brother of the first Bishop in America) and the only Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence (I think he also was a signer of the Consitution). It will give you insight of the wording that he kept out of I believe both documents to insure that the rights of Catholics were protected and allowed to participate in the Government.
Personally, I see more issues w/ the 10 Commandments engraved in stone in government buildings especially court houses that are supposed to be blind to race, creed, religion, gender, etc. than I do school prayer. I think that the freedom to worship and assemble is absolute meaning that while the powers of the state can’t be used to force one to worship or participate in prayer, it is lawful for any American to assemble to worship even in a classroom. If a non-Christian is discriminated against, there is a violation of their rights. If the non-Christian feels umcomfortable, too bad.
If my child attended a school where the predominant religion in the area was buddhism and they said a prayer to Buddha, I’d instruct my child to quietly forego participation in the prayer, discretely make a sign of hte cross and say the Lord’s prayer to herself.
If my child attended a school where the predominant religion was Christian, I’d do my best to make sure that the prayer wasn’t contrary to our faith. If it was acceptable, I’d encourage her to pray it with her Protestant classmates as it is a way that we all come together as one. If the prayer was unacceptable, see the buddhist paragraph. Additionally, I’d instruct my daughter to respect the classmates who do not share our Christian faith and instruct her to remember her non-Christian classmates in a special way by asking the Holy Spirit to be w/ these classmates also.