Saturday, November 07, 2009 Last Update:07:14 pm ET

Education|Sat, Jun. 06 2009 12:44 PM EDT

Students, Legal Groups Stand Against Anti-Religious Court Order

By Eric Young|Christian Post Reporter

The school year has officially ended for the students in Florida’s Santa Rosa County School District but the controversies stemming from an anti-religious court order have not.

And they may not for up to the five years that all Santa Rosa County School District employees are banned from engaging in prayer or religious activities under the consent decree that resulted from a lawsuit filed six months ago by the ACLU.

“The Court’s order, based on the defendants’ own admissions, will help ensure that public school officials do not inject their personal religious beliefs into the students’ education,” said Daniel Mach, director of litigation for the ACLU’s Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief, after January’s ruling.

But critics say the order has gone too far and not only violates the First Amendment rights of school faculty and staff, but also students, some of which have already felt the brunt of the decree.

Members of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and the Christian World Order at Jay High School, for example, were denied access to benefits and privileges available to other student groups because of the religious nature of their speech. Teachers at the same school were also told not to participate in private baccalaureate services sponsored by a local ministerial association despite the fact that the school property was rented for the event in accordance with district policy.

“While we appreciate the District’s concern for abiding by the recent Consent order ... treating FCA and CWO equally with other student clubs in no way violates this Order,” wrote David A. Cortman, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund, in a letter last month to the principal of Jay High School, the superintendent of the Santa Rosa County School District, and members of the Santa Rosa County School Board.

After receiving the letter, school officials reversed the decisions it had made, allowing FCA and CWO equal access to benefits and privileges and granting permission to teachers to attend private baccalaureate services.

But religious freedom groups say there is still work to do.

At Pace High School, the student body and senior class presidents were barred from speaking at their own graduation ceremony due fears of prosecution.

In response, nearly 400 graduating seniors stood up last Saturday during their commencement ceremony in protest against the ACLU and recited the Lord’s Prayer. Many of the students also painted crosses on their graduation caps to make a statement of faith.

Though the ACLU has not taken any legal action yet, the legal group has stated that something should have been done to stop the prayer.

Mathew D. Staver, founder of Liberty Counsel and dean of Liberty University School of Law, however, argues that any attempt to make schools religion-free is unconstitutional.

“Neither students nor teachers shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate,” he stated Thursday, the last day of school for students in the Santa Rosa district’s eight high schools. “The students at Pace High School refused to remain silent and were not about to be bullied by the ACLU.”

According to Staver, Liberty Counsel has decided to represent faculty, staff and students of Pace High School, “because the ACLU is clearly violating their First Amendment rights.”

Notably, while the First Amendment stands against “establishment of religion” by the government, it also bars the government from “prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

In the consent decree, school officials are “permanently enjoined” from “promoting, advancing, endorsing, participating in, or causing Prayers” and also not allowed to “orally express personal religious beliefs to students during or in conjunction with instructional time or a School Event,” among other requisites.

After five years, a court will discuss whether or not there is a need for further continuation of the order.

Sort by: Newest | Oldest | Agree | Disagree
All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Christian Post or its staff.
  • Fri Jun 19, 2009 2:32 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I wonder if it would be too much of a bother for the posters on this site to be polite, to not negatively label those with whom you disagree, and to treat others with respect. After all, many things may be said in the heat of a verbal argument where tone and body language may incite other parties to respond angrily or viciously. But in a format, where one can thoughtfully compose one's reply to bring others around to your point or at least have them consider it, is provided. Why not try to reach someone intellectually rather than insult them?

  • Thu Jun 11, 2009 9:14 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 3

    At Pace High School, the student body and senior class presidents were barred from speaking at their own graduation ceremony due fears of prosecution.

    In response, nearly 400 graduating seniors stood up last Saturday during their commencement ceremony in protest against the ACLU and recited the Lords Prayer. Many of the students also painted crosses on their graduation caps to make a statement of faith.

    Good for them!!! :)

  • Tom2 »
    Mon Jun 08, 2009 9:59 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Alockslee may not have heard that the SCOTUS fully incorporated as applicable to the states, the 1st, 4th and 6th Amendments. Further, the 5th was incorporated except for clause guaranteeing criminal prosecution only on a grand jury indictment. The 8th was incorporated with respect to the protection against "cruel and unusual punishments," but not on "excessive fines" and "excessive bail" protections. Intolerant attitudes are welcome because they speed the long trip to privatization of this mess. It's a bad idea for government to indoctrinate its children.

  • Mon Jun 08, 2009 8:23 pm Agree: 9   Disagree: 4

    You might want to review what you believe to be a violation of First Amendment Rights and what is not.

    The First Amendment applies to Federal Government action and this was State level so no Federal violation occurred and the students were in violation of the court order. It most likely was orchestrated in protest and to satisfy the will of the local religious zealots and done to simply rebel against the court order. It didn't accomplish anything except to show the level of control the local zealots have over the students. It is quite humorous to see the advice from the Alliance Defense act as though they are the dictators of all things Constitutional when they get smacked around quite often, with the public unaware of the real number of times these folks are seriously backhanded with their stupid and illogical positions and even more frivolous lawsuits and the slap down the courts hand them repeatedly.

    The order was more than necessary since the rest of the school's students were constantly subjected to the overbearing mind controlled minions babbling on and on about their beliefs when they need to keep their personal relationship exactly that personal and not go around proselytizing to others who neither need or want to hear it. The private ceremony was for those who wanted to sit along the other god-squaders and listen to the rhetoric over and over again as if their regular brainwashing jibberish sessions weren't enough to endure.

    Glad to hear that the ACLU kicked the fools down and are able to shut them up for at least 5 years and hopefully that will be extended across the country to rid us all of ever having to listen to that type of babble again.

    TFR

  • Mon Jun 08, 2009 12:00 am Agree: 4   Disagree: 5

    Yes it was anti-religious, and the students should be applauded for taking a stand. They shouldnt' be barred from expressing their beliefs, as long as the school isn't sanctioning it or anything.

    Besides, America needs to wake up and realize that things were a lot better when we let God in the schools. if we'd stop kicking him out, maybe we wouldn't have kids killing each other and beating each other up. As long as the school isn't affirming any particular faith or banning it, it's not in violation. I understand why it's pretty much impossible to have school prayer or anything but the schools need to stop being so overzealous.

  • Sun Jun 07, 2009 11:29 pm Agree: 6   Disagree: 3

    Flagged as inappropriate. show There was nothing anti-religious about the case. The court simply upheld the Constitution by prohibiting the god-botherers from imposing their particular brand of religion on students who did not want to be harrassed by overzealous proselytizing. hide

  • Sun Jun 07, 2009 10:26 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    tom, thanks for getting back to me. sorry for my delay will follow up later.

  • Tom2 »
    Sat Jun 06, 2009 9:55 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Plano West Senior High School has the subject weight room but that's just an example. They also have luxuries for many extracurricular programs. The band spend $20,000 on steel drums and the biology students are assigned whole pigs to dissect. My point is recipients of such opulent programs should pay their own way. I love football but believe the stadiums should be available to the entire community because the entire community paid for them. And on the flip side, the community should choose whether or not to fund the stadiums -- they all have them you know. Headware is forbidden but hijabs are overlooked while Kwanza caps are not.

    Here in Texas, most schools have JROTC because we respect the military. Some communities on the east and west coasts have ejected the programs. Private schools on a scale equivalent to current government schools, would provide choices for parents. If they prefer Christian devotionals, or not, they have a choice. They'd have band, sports, military, homosexual, dance, aviation, science -- whatever -- choices. Private schools would realize economies of specialization and salaries would be competitive instead of fixed by the union. Government needs to govern and leave education to free enterprise. I'd recommend private industry be permitted to establish schools parallel to government schools, funded by taxes from refunded to participating parents. In time, I believe we can recover from the current government school mess.

  • Sat Jun 06, 2009 9:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    viking, I don't know about million dollar weight rooms but in some of the football powerhouse high schools I know the football players are very well tended to and big money is invested in the football programs.

  • Sat Jun 06, 2009 8:45 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Tom2,
    I don't disagree with your core sentiment and in fact am an advocate of charter schools. Here in Maine we have a 200 year tradition of private schools serving students at public expense. That being said hyperbole does not advance this cause.
    If what you say is true we should see no problems of violence, drugs, politics, etc., etc. in private and charter schools. This is simply not true.
    Also could you tell me which public schools in your area have million dollar weight rooms for footballers only.

  • Sat Jun 06, 2009 4:57 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 6

    Flagged as inappropriate. show The spirit of anti-Christ can wear a judges robe.... hide

  • Tom2 »
    Sat Jun 06, 2009 4:33 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 3

    Haven't we all, Christians, Jews, Muslims, Atheists, Druids, et al., had enough of this ineffective government education. I use the term education loosely because I've seen our system morph from small publicly funded schools into the grotesque behemoths of government indoctrination centers that are now bankrupting us. I for one am fed up with the million-dollar weight rooms available to footballers only; and the lavishly priced steel drums for the band; and the travel budgets that dwarf most businesses.

    Mr. President, privatize this system! Privatization will eliminate this ridiculous "separation" issue forever. And it also will eliminate problems with violence, drugs, politics, military, evolution, intelligent design, illegal aliens, curricula, text book accuracy and on and on. And the best of it is we'll have many choices from a new industry that earns profits for America. It's a simple choice -- expensive government indoctrination or economical education from private industry.

Please help us to monitor our message boards by flagging comments that are unlawful, harmful, threatening, abusive, harassing, defamatory, vulgar, obscene, libelous, hateful, or racially, ethnically or otherwise objectionable.
Contact Us if you have any questions, comments, or concerns.
Comment on this story
ID Password

Don't have a Christian Post ID? Signing up is easy. Click Here

  • icon1
  • icon2
  • icon3
  • icon4
  • icon5
The Christian Post reserves the right to terminate the account of any User who violates our Terms of Use.
Advertisement
Advertisement
CP Shopping
  • Jewelry
  • Health
  • Gifts
  • DVD
  • Coins

Bracelets | Chains | Crosses | Earrings | Gemstone |

Featured contents & Giveaways
Zondervan

Struggling to succeed in the Nashville music scene, talented singer/songwriter Parker James finds the competition fierce even deadly. A young woman's murder, industry corruption, a

Featured Advertiser Links