It seems to me that the court is saying that religious speech in classrooms must be (perhaps explicitly) coercive in order to be unconstitutional (see here). — Paulm12
It's not about professional behavior, it's about separation of church and state versus freedom of speech. — Tate
the courts should have responded to his challenge with a note that said "lol". — Streetlight
Many recovery programs (AA) along with groups like Boy Scouts have references to a "higher power" or some idea of "god/God," though it is open to interpretation. At what point does it become coercive? — Paulm12
During a worship service in Colorado on Sunday, Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., told the congregation she is “tired of this separation of church and state junk” in the U.S. In her remarks given at the Cornerstone Christian Center, Boebert said the only reason the U.S. has so many “overreaching regulations” on religion is because “the church complied.” Boebert, who is on the ballot in Tuesday’s primary election, said to worshipers, “The church is supposed to direct the government. The government is not supposed to direct the church. That is not how our Founding Fathers intended it.”
The conduct is unprofessional, since is introduces the potential for excluding some students on religious grounds. The coach should have been aware of that possibility, and hence his behaviour was negligent. — Banno
One more thing about the "praying" football coach. Let's be really clear that this isn't about personal prayer. It is about a uniquely Christian intention to use "prayer" in a public place as a means to evangelize.
Ever notice how it's only ever evangelical Christians who insist on being permitted to practice their religion through expressions of public prayer, with captive audiences? Using public microphones, using influence as an authority figure, desiring not only to pray, but to do so publicly, in classrooms with students, at secular sports events, when everyone is still around, etc? Have you ever heard of a Christian suing for access to prayer when there wasn't a public audience involved? The true desire is not prayer, but evangelism.
I'm a Christian. I can pray personally anywhere I am, at any moment. Silently, or out loud if I'm alone. And I do, every day. It's easy. But what they are doing is pretending that the only possible way for them to pray privately is to hijack the microphone publicly, which enables them to exploit the trust and access that their public secular role affords them. ***The possibility of influencing others isn't a byproduct, it is the point.***
By enshrining this behavior as constitutionally protected religious practice, the government is now perpetuating - establishing - the Christian trojan horse strategy of rebranding evangelism as prayer. And it does so at the expense of mutual respect, autonomy, and healthy boundaries between authority figures and members of the public, in public spaces. — Tom Ryberg · Jun 28, 2022
perhaps I'd agree, but how is this any different than the teacher taking a knee during the national anthem, or putting up flags/using political slogans during the game to "evangelize" a political message? Of course, the difference is it is religious speech. But I think people make a good point when they argue if the government protects certain kinds of 1st amendment rights, even for educators, then religious speech shouldn't be an exception.The true desire is not prayer, but evangelism
This isn't the argument the Kennedy side is making (indeed he was offered a place to pray in private, and refused). He wasn't given or hijacking a microphone-if he was, this case would have been easy. The issue is balancing the 1st amendment's freedom of expression with the establishment clause of the constitution. Some would argue any religious speech by a teacher or coach on campus is a violation of the establishment clause. Others argue the silencing of such speech, (with an implication that there is a "correct" way to express one's religion) is a violation of the 1st amendment and/or the establishment clause....what they are doing is pretending that the only possible way for them to pray privately is to hijack the microphone publicly
...students have the right to engage in voluntary prayer or religious discussion free from discrimination, but that does not include the right to have a captive audience listen or compel other students to participate
[Heckler's Veto] Speech is not considered a substantial disruption if those that hear it cause their own disruption as a result. As long as the speech itself isn’t causing the disruption, it will be protected, regardless of how other people react to it
Creationism? How did that get mentioned? — Paulm12
As someone who works in addiction and metal health services there are many people who find the theism of AA and NA counterproductive and unhelpful. God is also a barrier. They prefer SMART recovery models. I personally think whatever works is useful because it's better to be a nascent theist than a dead heroin user, right? — Tom Storm
Honestly I don't think it was coercive. An atheist can stand by respectfully while the Christians do their rituals. That's emotional maturity. — Tate
Or the coach can have some maturity and stop doing the prayer when asked.
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