“The prayer was intended to … invoke divine guidenc in town affairs….”  And it 
wasn’t even a longstanding tradition in that town — started in 1999.  An 
indefensible opinion on these facts unless one really accepts that only 
coercion violates the establishment clause -- endorsement is fine.


-- 
Prof. Steven D. Jamar                     vox:  202-806-8017
Director of International Programs, Institute for Intellectual Property and 
Social Justice http://iipsj.org
Howard University School of Law           fax:  202-806-8567
http://sdjlaw.org


"The aim of education must be the training of independently acting and thinking 
individuals who, however, see in the service to the community their highest 
life achievement."

Albert Einstein






On May 5, 2014, at 4:35 PM, Conkle, Daniel O. <con...@indiana.edu> wrote:

> The Court says that Marsh is not merely “an exception,” but it goes on to 
> write an opinion linked specifically to the context at hand, i.e., 
> legislative prayer.  As I read Kennedy’s opinion, the Court is saying that if 
> history and tradition clearly approve a practice, then there is no need to 
> invoke any broader or more general test.  Conversely, the Court might need 
> such a more general test if history and tradition are not so clear in the 
> specific setting at hand.  In any event, I don’t read the Court to be burying 
> either Lemon or the endorsement test, at least not explicitly, even though 
> the Court does not apply them here.
>  
> It’s interesting that even the dissenters accept Marsh as valid even though 
> they would reach a different result under their “fact-sensitive” (Breyer’s 
> language) approach.
>  
> Dan Conkle
> ************************************************ 
> Daniel O. Conkle 
> Robert H. McKinney Professor of Law 
> Indiana University Maurer School of Law 
> Bloomington, Indiana  47405 
> (812) 855-4331 
> fax (812) 855-0555 
> e-mail con...@indiana.edu 
> ************************************************
>  
>  
>  
>  
> .
>  
> From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu 
> [mailto:religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Marc Stern
> Sent: Monday, May 05, 2014 1:33 PM
> To: Law & Religion issues for Law Academics
> Subject: RE: Supreme Court Decides Town of Greece
>  
> One thing that stands out  as important for Justice Kennedy is  the absence 
> of an intent to prefer the majority faith. .But what of the effects 
> test,which is still part of the law until Lemon is formally 
> overruled.(Interesting that the plurality  did not even discuss the vitality 
> of Lemon.) Is that test irrelevant here only because of  the history and 
> tradition of legislative prayer? Or is something else at work?.
>  
> Marc D. Stern        
> General Counsel
> 212.891.1480
> ste...@ajc.org
>  
> LIKE US: Facebook.com/AJCGlobal
> FOLLOW US: Twitter.com/AJCGlobal
>  
> <image001.png>
>     AJC Global Forum:  May 12-14
>    ACCESS Summit:  May 11-12
>  
> From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu 
> [mailto:religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Rick Garnett
> Sent: Monday, May 05, 2014 1:24 PM
> To: Law & Religion issues for Law Academics
> Subject: RE: Supreme Court Decides Town of Greece
>  
> Dear colleagues,
>  
> I thought that Prof. Marc DeGirolami (St. John’s) made a number of 
> interesting and helpful observations – which suggest that at least some 
> matters might have been clarified a bit -- about Justice Kennedy’s opinion in 
> this post (“The Jurisprudence of Tradition”): 
> http://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2014/05/the-jurisprudence-of-tradition-10-points-on-justice-kennedys-opinion-in-town-of-greece.html
>   Here are two of his “10 points”:
>  
> 1. By far the most prominent theme in Justice Kennedy's opinion is the role 
> of tradition and historical practice in validating the practice of 
> legislative prayer. That point is repeated no less than six or seven times in 
> all kinds of contexts. The practice is "part of our expressive idiom" and our 
> "heritage." Justice Kennedy writes that "Marsh is sometimes described as 
> "carving out an exception" to the Court's Establishment Clause's 
> jurisprudence," inasmuch as no "tests" were applied in Marsh, but in reality, 
> "[t]he Court in Marsh found those tests unnecessary because history supported 
> the conclusion that legislative invocations are compatible with the 
> Establishment Clause" That's important. It indicates that the mode of 
> analysis in Marsh was not a carve-out, so much as the place where all 
> Establishment Clause analysis begins, and, under certain circumstances, where 
> it ends.
>  
> 2. Note the emphasis on both history and particularism in the following: 
> "Marsh stands for the proposition that it is not necessary to define the 
> precise boundary of the Establishment Clause where history shows that the 
> specific practice is permitted....A test that would sweep away what has so 
> long been settled would create new controversy and begin anew the very 
> divisions along religious lines that the Establishment Clause seeks to 
> prevent." Very interesting. The claim seems to be that it is the rigidity of 
> the tests themselves in this area, and their failure to grant a kind of 
> presumptive validity to entrenched social practices and traditions, which 
> itself generates religious division.
>  
> Best,
>  
> Rick
>  
> Richard W. Garnett
> Professor of Law and Concurrent Professor of Political Science
> Notre Dame Law School
> P.O. Box 780
> Notre Dame, Indiana 46556-0780
> 574-631-6981 (w)
> 574-276-2252 (cell)
> rgarn...@nd.edu
>  
> To download my scholarly papers, please visit my SSRN page
>  
> From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu 
> [mailto:religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf OfSteven Jamar
> Sent: Monday, May 05, 2014 1:17 PM
> To: Law Religion & Law List
> Subject: Re: Supreme Court Decides Town of Greece
>  
> Doesn’t do much to clarify the topic, does it.  So, cannot coerce.  Sectarian 
> is ok.  Should not be seen as endorsing because we’ve done it for so long.  
> It isn’t really that important anyway.  And besides the Town tries to spread 
> it around–it’s just that the only religious folk in town are Christian.
>  
> We still can’t tell the line between endorsement and non-endorsement.  We 
> can’t even know whether we are now into just a coercion test to be measured 
> by some sort of formerly-known-as-endorsement balancing of a bunch of stuff.
>  
> So advising city and town councils on how to meet the current establishment 
> standards would require what?  A safe harbor would be do it non-sectarian.  A 
> slightly less safe harbor would be go ahead with the sectarian, but try to 
> balance who does the prayer among denominations and religions formally 
> represented in your community.  Probably ok would be just one guy from one 
> religion doing it for years on end in a sectarian manner, as long as it 
> wasn’t coercive (whatever that might mean in this setting) and so long as 
> some sort of indication was given, regardless of how pro forma and even 
> insincere, that it the government was not endorsing that particular view or 
> even religion in general.
>  
> It is clear that separation is almost gone from establishment jurisprudence 
> now and that we are deep into accommodationist mode and that neutrality means 
> not as between religion and non-religion but only as among religious sects — 
> in this singular sort of context.
>  
> Over a third of my students report that every school day in public schools 
> started with a prayer over the PA system in their schools.
>  
> Steve
>  
> 
> -- 
> Prof. Steven D. Jamar                     vox:  202-806-8017
> Director of International Programs, Institute for Intellectual Property and 
> Social Justice http://iipsj.org
> Howard University School of Law           fax:  202-806-8567
> http://sdjlaw.org
>  
>  
> "In these words I can sum up everything I've learned about life:  It goes on."
>  
> Robert Frost
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  
> On May 5, 2014, at 12:44 PM, Friedman, Howard M. 
> <howard.fried...@utoledo.edu> wrote:
>  
> 
> The Supreme Court decided Town of Greece today, upholding town's prayer 
> practices in a 5-4 decision.  Details at Religion Clause at  
> http://religionclause.blogspot.com/2014/05/supreme-court-upholds-sectarian_5.html
>  
> Howard Friedman
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