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Speak Up! - View Question #423 |
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Question: Would practicing religion in public school be against the law?
Answer: The First Amendment of the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution states 'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof . . ..' This means that the government must be separate from any religion. Since public schools are run by the government, the Bill of Rights means that schools must remain neutral on religion - not aid any particular religion, not prefer one over the other, not practice any religion as part of the school. So the answer to your question is that, no, practicing religion in school is not against the law. What is prohibited is a school practicing religion - making people pray, having school run religious events, etc. Your own personal religious practices while conducted at a school are not prohibited.
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Comments |
26 thru 26 of 26 comments |
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On 10/30/01
Magan from MN said:
There should be no prayer in school. It wastes a child's learning time. It also discriminates against those who do not believe in God. Pray on your own time please. Or don't make a big deal out of it.
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26 thru 26 of 26 comments |
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