ACLU just lost their case against prayer in Jesus name by Louisiana school 
board.
   
  
http://www.christianpost.com/article/20070727/28638_Judges_Overturn_Ban_on_School_Board_Prayer.htm
   
  This victory by ADF is worthy of celebration and wide-spread publicity.
   
  In Jesus name,
  Chaplain Gordon James Klingenschmitt
  719-360-5132 cell
   
  -----------------------
   
    Judges Overturn Ban on School Board Prayer  By   Doug Huntington
  Christian Post Reporter
  Fri, Jul. 27 2007 12:41 PM ET
   
    A Louisiana school district that has been riddled with religious lawsuits 
got some backing Wednesday after a panel of judges overturned a decision that 
had formerly barred them from opening their meetings with prayer.
   
  The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled that the Tangipahoa 
Parish School Board – which has had five religious-related lawsuits brought 
against it in the past 13 years – could not be held accountable for an 
“offended observer” and has the right to have voluntary prayer at their 
meetings.
   
  According to attorneys from the faith-based legal group Alliance Defense Fund 
(ADF), the decision severely undercuts the American Civil Liberties Union 
(ACLU), which has been filing the suits, in their use of the Establishment 
Clause.
   
  “The court today has delivered a serious blow to the ACLU by affirming that 
the far left can no longer bully its way into court without any proven, 
concrete injury,” explained ADF senior legal counsel Mike Johnson in a 
statement. Johnson presented the oral argument on behalf of the school board 
defendants on May 22.
   
  “Simply claiming that one is ‘offended’ by religious speech or symbols is not 
enough to spark a federal case,” he added.
   
  For several decades, the Louisiana school board has opened all their meetings 
with prayer. But in October 2003, the ACLU sued the board on behalf of an 
anonymous plaintiff, claiming that the practice offended him.
   
  After it went to trial, a decision was made in February 2005 by federal 
district court judge Ginger Berrigan, who also happened to be a former state 
president of the ACLU. In the ruling, she called for the board to permanently 
cease the prayers, because she argued that it was violating the plaintiff’s 
rights under the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.
  Following the situation, attorneys from ADF and their co-counsel from the law 
firm Adams and Reese filed an appeal, and the court granted their request.
   
  After looking over the case, the 5th Circuit judges decided to overturn the 
district court’s opinion, with a majority statement explaining that it “spares 
this court from issuing a largely hypothetically-based ruling on issues of 
broad importance to deliberative public bodies in this circuit and beyond.”
   
  The board members will now be able to resume their prayers at meetings.
   
  “The practice of opening public meetings with prayer is and always has been 
lawful and appropriate,” added Johnson. “The Constitution does not ban citizens 
or elected officials from invoking divine guidance and blessings upon our 
public work.”
   
  Other lawsuits that ACLU attorneys have brought up against the Tangipahoa 
Parish School Board include allowing the evangelical group Gideons 
International to hand out Bibles during school hours and allowing a “pizza 
preacher” who distributes pizza and teaches Christianity during lunch.
   
   



       
---------------------------------
Yahoo! oneSearch: Finally,  mobile search that gives answers, not web links. 
_______________________________________________
To post, send message to Religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change options, or get password, see 
http://lists.ucla.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/religionlaw

Please note that messages sent to this large list cannot be viewed as private.  
Anyone can subscribe to the list and read messages that are posted; people can 
read the Web archives; and list members can (rightly or wrongly) forward the 
messages to others.

Reply via email to