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School Policy Allowing Bible Distribution Ruled Unconstitutional

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Christian Post Reporter
Fri, Jan. 11 2008 12:44 PM ET
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A federal judge has ruled a Missouri school district's policy permitting Bible distribution unconstitutional, but an attorney representing the district has vowed to appeal.

The case against the South Iron School District was filed two years ago by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of four sets of parents who are Christian. An appeals court ordered the district last August to temporarily halt the handout of Bibles to fifth graders by Gideons International, known for its widespread distribution of the Holy Book in hotels nationwide.

The school district in Annapolis then altered its open access policy, permitting Gideons and other groups – including the Red Cross, Missouri Water Patrol, and Girl Scouts – to give away Bibles or other literature before or after school or during lunch, but not in classrooms.

But U.S. District Judge Catherine Perry ruled Tuesday that both practices violated the Establishment Clause and granted a permanent injunction against any Bible distributors.

In her opinion, she held that both practices are “the promotion of Christianity by distributing Bibles to elementary school students."

"The policy has the principle or primary effect of advancing religion by conveying a message of endorsement to elementary school children," she wrote.

Although Christian, the parents who sued believe religious beliefs should be taught in the home, not school, said Anthony Rothert, legal director of the ACLU of Eastern Missouri, according to The Associated Press.

Matthew Staver, president of Liberty Counsel, a Christian legal group representing the district, said Wednesday he would appeal.

"I think the current policy creates an open forum that allows secular as well as religious persons or groups to access the forum to distribute information," said Staver, according to AP.

In prior reports, the Florida-based group argued that equal treatment for religious speech under the open access policy is required by the Constitution.

"The court has clearly misread the First Amendment and the cases regarding free speech," added Staver.

The ACLU lawsuit against the southeastern Missouri school district represents one of many legal challenges the group has pursued against Bible distribution by Gideons in recent years.

Last November, a Florida federal judge upheld the constitutional rights of a member of Gideons International, allowing him to resume passing out Bibles on a public sidewalk outside a school until his case is resolved.

“It is in the public interest to protect constitutional freedoms,” wrote U.S. District Court judge K. Michael Moore in the written ruling.

Christian legal group Alliance Defense Fund is representing Thomas Gray of Gideons Key Largo Camp in the latest case.

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Comments

Most recent comments
susjelagkefra
  • Wed Apr 16, 2008 7:23 pm
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if jesus were in the classroom, it might cause a lot bad feelings.
people can talk to jesus wen the'r at home
by the way, i heard jesus was pregnant.
jesusfreakgal
  • Sat Apr 05, 2008 1:15 am
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If Jesus was allowed in schools we would not have the amount of kids on drugs,teen susides,murders and pregancies we have .PERIOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Why can't people support GOD like all the bad habits of the world,there not going to get us to heaven!!!!!!!!!!!!!
moderate
  • Mon Feb 25, 2008 8:54 pm
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Slacker,
the ACLU would appreciate Christianity more if we were just a little more fanatic. Jihad, anyone?
song2vs4
  • Mon Feb 11, 2008 1:45 pm
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Agentorange, the Indus Valley civilization first arose about 2000 BC. Around 1500 BC tribes called Aryans entered India from the northwest mountain area and overwhelmed the native populations. With them they brought a new language, Sanskrit, new gods and a new social structure to India. The religious and social customs that were brought laid the foundation for India's 2 distinctive cultural features: the first Hinduism and the second the caste system. So you see Hinduism didn't exist before 1500 BC. Thanks class for your attention during this history lesson. (P.S. Abraham was born in Ur, in Chaldea in 1996 BC)
YetAnotherTeenageTragedy
  • Fri Feb 01, 2008 9:27 pm
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"Congress shall make no law respecting an establisment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..."

Did you take high school history?
YetAnotherTeenageTragedy
  • Fri Feb 01, 2008 9:20 pm
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Slacker
In the Bill of Rights, in the first amendment! Have you ever read the Constitution?
Slacker
  • Fri Jan 25, 2008 1:23 am
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Where in the constitution does it say anything about a wall of seperation between church and state. That is something the ACLU created to remove God from everything. It is very unconstitutional, because if removes the expression clause from individual freedom...
agentorange
  • Sun Jan 20, 2008 2:07 pm
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"Agentorange, neither Hinduism nor buddhism predates Judaism, '

Laughable. Hinduism dates back to the birth of Krishna, which is right around 3000 BCE, at the very least a good 1000 years older than the birth of Abraham and Judaism. Your're rigth on Buddhism, it is younger than Judaism, but still older than Christianity.
citsonga
  • Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:27 pm
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maranatha7593:: " am all for science which gives credit to God for His creation and His sustenance of the universe. Many of our most prominent scientists who made the groundbreaking discoveries which transformed our world were and are, too."'


OK, if God exists, we will give God the credit.
Chris333
  • Mon Jan 14, 2008 7:26 am
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Bob,

Yeah and we only have to look at Russia and China to see what basing your society on atheism does.

Agentorange, neither Hinduism nor buddhism predates Judaism, from whence Christianity came. Judaism most likely came before other mesopatamian myths as well, because of all of them it has the least extreme exageration, there is evidence that they had one common source though, this does not mean they are all necessarily wrong, it only means that they would all seem similar, and differences came later.
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