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The Battle Over School Prayer and Why It Matters

Posted: 01/02/2012 2:28 pm

Despite the dominance of economic issues in the upcoming Presidential election, Republican candidates have not foresworn using religious issues to attract the support of "Values Voters." In an effort to reinvigorate his faltering campaign, Texas Governor Rick Perry ran a commercial in Iowa touting his own evangelical faith in which he highlighted two favorites among religious conservatives: gay rights and school prayer. Later in an interview with FOX television's Chris Wallace, Perry defended introducing religion into the campaign, and he promised if elected President to support a constitutional amendment to return prayer and Bible reading to the nation's schools.

Not to be outdone, former Speaker Newt Gingrich went on CBS's "Face the Nation" where he too excoriated the holdings of the U.S. Supreme Court banning school prayer and Bible reading. Gingrich asserted that the justices should be subpoenaed by Congress to answer for such decisions (and potentially be held in contempt for refusing to comply, Separation of Powers be damned).

When conservative politicians wish to raise the temperature of a campaign, they frequently fall back on that old stand-by: the public war on religion in America. A cabal of intellectual elite, secularists, and federal judges seek to purge the public square of any expressions of faith. The chief battleground for this conflict remains the public schools, and the chief foil to realizing America's Christian nationhood has been the Supreme Court's decisions banning school-organized religious exercises. For religious and political conservatives, those decisions -- beginning with a ban on religious instruction in 1948 and peaking with holdings in 1962 and 1963 prohibiting prayer and Bible reading -- represent one of the nation's great moral failings. In addition, conservatives claim, those holdings contravene the nation's traditions while they go against the will of the majority of Americans.

The belief that the high court's holdings on church and state defy our history and traditions is widely held, but it lacks an appreciation of our past. Contrary to the dominant view perpetuated by conservatives but shared by many, the modern Court's decisions on religion in the schools were built on a jurisprudential foundation that was at least 100 years in the making. Rather than creating new law with its school prayer rulings, the justices affirmed a legal transition that had begun during the 19th century.

Controversy over the role of religion in public education arose with the founding of the nation's common schools in the early 1800s. Early on, education leaders realized that the dominant practice of doctrinal religious instruction -- consistent with evangelical Protestantism -- was unnecessarily divisive and contravened the conscience rights of religious minorities. Educators settled on teaching "universal" religious teachings -- termed "nonsectarianism" -- which they believed would be acceptable to children of all faiths. Teachers would read the Bible "without note or comment," and then only from those less controversial passages. But despite the effort at compromise, the system failed to satisfy religious skeptics on one extreme and conservative evangelicals on the other. School prayer and Bible reading remained controversial, and with the influx of Catholic and Jewish immigrants in mid-century, the issue exploded onto the national stage. Ohio became the first state to ban prayer and Bible reading in 1873, to be followed by Wisconsin in 1890 and a handful more at the turn of the century. Of greater impact, many urban school districts voluntarily halted the religious practices in response to complaints by Catholics, Jews, and other religious minorities. These actions reflected a growing appreciation for the nation's expanding religious pluralism and of the government's limited role in promoting piety.

To be sure, nonsectarian exercises remained the dominant practice in the nation's schools for many years, but a clear trend was underway. Education was being "secularized," to the chagrin of religious conservatives. By 1960, as the Supreme Court was entering the fray, less than 40 percent of the nation's schools -- chiefly in the South and Midwest -- mandated any religious exercises. And the bulk of those involved rote Bible reading, a practice unpalatable to many religiously devout people. In striking the practices, the justices not only affirmed that government has no business dictating religious matters; they were following a tradition of respect for religious pluralism that had been evolving for many years.

So Governor Perry and Professor Gingrich should check our history before they demonize the Supreme Court (by the way Rick, there are nine justices on the Court, not eight). While it makes for good political theatre, it misleads Americans about their history. It also validates a form of religious majoritarianism that is so common in other countries, but is anathema to American values and traditions.

 
FOLLOW RELIGION
Despite the dominance of economic issues in the upcoming Presidential election, Republican candidates have not foresworn using religious issues to attract the support of "Values Voters." In an effort ...
Despite the dominance of economic issues in the upcoming Presidential election, Republican candidates have not foresworn using religious issues to attract the support of "Values Voters." In an effort ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
soma77
Author, Speaker, Retreat Facilitator
08:30 PM on 02/15/2012
This is all about giving the bullies a pulpit.
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Allan Richter
06:37 PM on 01/08/2012
Red herring.
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09:13 PM on 01/07/2012
Never mind that the supreme court was deciding the issue because one set of believers was suing another set of believers because the first set didn't want the prayers of the second set taught by their children. Freedom of religion baby, let them fight one another while the atheists sit back and watch, then use the precedent to further secularism!
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02:10 PM on 01/07/2012
any excuse....religion is dying...thank god....:)
10:12 PM on 01/08/2012
Are you saying that God is dead?
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01:50 AM on 01/09/2012
was god ever alive?
09:35 AM on 02/29/2012
Nope, saying no such thing :)
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RD2007
12:55 AM on 01/07/2012
From the way these bozo's talk, you'd think they were trying to get elected as pastor of my church, not POTUS. People should look to their church for religion, and to their president for governing ability.
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rwgunn
Questioning a truth will not make it false.
05:23 PM on 01/06/2012
As soon as these guys say that it will be okay to force their kids at school to prostrate themselves on rugs facing Mecca and pray to Allah, I will take their complaints about being kept from having prayer in the schools as true persecution.
09:04 PM on 01/07/2012
Good point..
04:32 PM on 01/06/2012
Children can silently pray during homeroom, recess, quiet study halls, lunch, the periods between classes and on the bus to and from school. Exactly how much more praying do these kids need?

Of course, it's not about having the ability to pray in school. Prayer is just a foot-in-the-door tactic designed to eventually get more chistianity in the schools. They don't simply want prayer in school. They want the authority of the school to prop up their religion.
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DanaLane
Internet Rambos Don't Impress Me
10:13 AM on 01/06/2012
Why do people still believe in an invisible guy in the sky?
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dvglass3
Right, Left....Wrong
10:34 AM on 01/06/2012
Why are there still people who do not believe in God?
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DanaLane
Internet Rambos Don't Impress Me
12:45 PM on 01/06/2012
Stone kids to death for talking back
Kill wife on wedding night if she is not a virgin
on and on and on.

Murder, Rape, Genocide and absolute oppression of women. That is why. It is a fake story but has a real impact on the world (in a very bad way)/
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xenubarb
Nebulon V
12:51 PM on 01/06/2012
Because the whole thing just sounds silly. Why should I believe in something that is everywhere, all the time, with nothing better to do than monitor my behavior?

Isn't that Santa's job?
02:15 PM on 01/06/2012
Do you understand where gravity comes from? No one does, but yet you believe in it. You have faith that you will fall back to the ground when jumping. You have faith that your car will stick the road when driving and not fly off into space. But, yet you have no proof that it will happen. Believing in GOD is faith, you either have it or not.
04:24 PM on 01/06/2012
Um, gravity is proven every instant of every day. With each step I take, I prove that gravity exists. Each raindrop shows the force of gravity. There is direct, measurable evidence of gravity.

Having faith in things because of evidence and information is not the same as believing in things despite the absence of evidence and information.
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rwgunn
Questioning a truth will not make it false.
05:28 PM on 01/06/2012
Somehow, having an experiment that can be set up and tested (jumping up and having myself come back down) makes it feel less like faith.

Claiming that there is a reason that things happen and then having to constantly undermine that statement with "Well, God works in mysterious ways." and "We can't know the mind of God." just doesn't have the same feeling.
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Christine Fowler
Born again Human
09:54 AM on 01/06/2012
Prayer, IMHO, does not belong in schools. I do not even like the fact the our money has "In God We Trust" on it - I do not know this god they speak of, nor do I want to.
09:14 AM on 01/06/2012
I am not anti-prayer in schools. I believe prayer is a powerful tool no matter what sophisticated label one wishes to place on it. I do have a problem with "prayer" in schools being used as a religious depot for christian believers. I believe there should be time set aside in the mornings before school starts, perhaps 10 minutes, where if students wish, they can congregate with those who share their religious beliefs (which there are several religions to consider) to pray, meditate, have a moment of silence, or any other spiritual practice they are engaged in.
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dvglass3
Right, Left....Wrong
10:37 AM on 01/06/2012
Why not trade a study hall for a faith based class? I do not see why anybody would care if students want to pray at school.
12:05 PM on 01/06/2012
Having a class is different than having prayer. I believe prayer is essential and I believe space for prayer should be offered, but optional--but an option nonetheless. Starting the day with a prayer or some form of meditation may positively affect how you start and continue your day.
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Lifencompass
12:18 PM on 01/06/2012
A agree, so long as that is not singular to one faith. "prayer" is pretty generic considering that only about a third of the world is xtian and the rest are Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic (I know, they are the git of Abraham too) etc. So my question would be, "prayer time" would have to be protected as all faith prayer time... so really we could have it I think that the real magick happens when we have a UU example in a small town school with various faiths in harmony.
01:46 PM on 01/06/2012
I don't believe there is any legal impediment to that now. Most schools have at least that much time between the building opening and classes starting. I wonder why it doesn't happen. I can imagine walking into the cafeteria in the morning and seeing various groups of students deep in prayer or meditation in various parts of the room, without any suggestion or leadership by the government employees in the room. Yup. I can imagine it. Lol.
01:55 PM on 01/06/2012
Well, perhaps if enough of us imagine it enough, it will happen! I hope so...
10:37 AM on 01/05/2012
In the New Testament Jesus speaks about prayer many times. In every instance that I know of he speaks about it as being a private personal practice not done for show but as an act of worship between ones self and God. No law can remove this personal communication with God, our children can pray whenever they want if they choose to.
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Lifencompass
12:18 PM on 01/06/2012
HUZZAH!
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HGfromOmaha
A hungry, free man not a well-fed slave
01:21 AM on 01/07/2012
Maybe the kids should turn off the TV and put their noses in the books instead of praying for God to give them the answer to a test. ;-)

Yep, it's private. Keep it that way.
07:46 AM on 01/05/2012
All humans do not have a heart. Find a way to use the now for the future.
Or you will be sorry.
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bob riversmith
ain't nobody messin with you but you
10:50 PM on 01/05/2012
I saw people pray for victory in battle ... to enlist God's help in killing our fellow human beings. That's when it occurred to me that something was terribly wrong here.
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Asal Cliste
Is Feidir Linn
02:57 PM on 01/06/2012
All the humans that I have ever seen that do not have a heart are what is known as d.e.a.d.
07:44 AM on 01/05/2012
Civility through school prayer is the only sanity some kids will ever receive. Later in life you will hoped your future neighbor will have been rooted and grounded in CIVILITY.
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Nick Willis
WhenceComethEvil?
09:11 PM on 01/05/2012
civility based on the oppressive religious instruction? People should be responsible for how they act towards others regardless of belief.
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see-ellen2001
08:21 AM on 01/06/2012
A total lack of civility is telling Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, students that only Christian prayer is valued and accepted in this school. One faith's prayer in the classroom creates a dynamic of one group's superiority over others. My future neighbour can receive all the prayer according to their faith within their home and place of worship.
09:36 PM on 01/04/2012
It would not be a violation of the Constitution if Christian Bible reading and prayer were allowed in public schools -- IF reading of the Islamic, Buddhist, Hindu and other religious scriptures and prayers were given equal time.

In higher education there are classes in theology and comparative religion, and it could be the same in public school, IF it showed no preference or favoritism to any particular religion.

As the U.S. Supreme Court acknowledged, Thomas Jefferson was correct in saying that the freedom of religion clause in the First Amendment of the Constitution was written to establish "a wall of separation between church and state" -- so that no particular religion or religious group could rule.

Read Quotes from the Founding Fathers Regarding Religion, at http://messenger2.cjcmp.org/foundingfathers.html
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
08:30 AM on 01/06/2012
OK, and I would add reading atheist and agnostic texts in public school, total equality. I guess the only texts I would not like read there would be satanic texts.
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xenubarb
Nebulon V
12:57 PM on 01/06/2012
How about Dianetics?
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Karissa36
Saving lost boys and fighting pirates.
08:59 PM on 01/04/2012
This is just plain ridiculous. It should not even be an issue. How many businesses in America schedule a daily prayer for all employees at the same time? Zero, including those of all the advocates of school prayer.
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ecotopian
I am nerd, hear me geek
11:34 AM on 01/06/2012
Chick Fil A does require daily prayer before it opens. It is owned by a devout Southern Baptist.
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greengrl
The more you know, the less you believe.
11:58 AM on 01/06/2012
I can choose to not work at Chick Fil A. I do not get to choose whether or not I pay my property taxes which support the school system.
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DavidEm
Estne Volumen in Toga...?
12:37 PM on 01/06/2012
It also closes on the day after the Sabbath each week.