School-Sponsored Prayer |
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Fact Sheet: School-Sponsored Prayer The classroom is an indispensable venue for teaching tolerance, advancing understanding of various religious traditions, and giving students an opportunity to discuss strategies for dealing with diversity. But neither now nor at any other time does the nation or religion benefit from government officials instructing students to pray or to reflect. It is possible to cherish the right to religious freedom afforded to us by our nation's founders without supporting school-sponsored prayer. In promoting the positive role of religion in public life, we must be careful not to undercut the vitality and integrity of this interfaith nation. Promoting religion for a narrow, sectarian purpose would only lead to an environment detrimental to our nation and its faith communities. Several attempts have been made to push legislation through Congress that would allow for school-sponsored prayer. The religious community recognizes the dangers and pitfalls such legislation would have on religious liberty and plurality. * Any effort to promote school-sponsored prayer is unnecessary. The
U.S. Constitution protects the rights of students to voluntarily pray
in public school. In fact, under current law, students can pray and read
the Bible privately, say grace at lunch, distribute religious materials
to their friends and join voluntary religious clubs in middle and high
schools. The Coalition to Preserve Religious Liberty is a
group of religious and civil rights groups which was created to oppose
Rep. Ernest Istook's efforts to amend the constitution to allow for school
sponsored and government sponsored prayer. New -> Election News for Prince George's County Looking for Prince George's County History? Click here for PGHistory.org |
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