Can students pray in public schools? Can teachers say Merry Christmas? What the law allows --

Posted by Chauncey Koziol on Thursday, July 18, 2024

The claim that public  schools are hostile to Christians may rev up caucusgoers in Iowa, but  there’s only one problem: It isn’t true.

Truth  be told, students of all faiths are actually free to pray alone or in  groups during the school day, as long as they don’t disrupt the school  or interfere with the rights of others. Of course, the right to engage  in voluntary prayer or religious discussion does not necessarily include  the right to preach to a captive audience, like an assembly, or to  compel other students to participate. 

Visit public schools  anywhere in America today and you’re likely to see kids praying around  the flagpole, sharing their faith with classmates, reading scriptures in  free time, forming religious clubs, and in other ways bringing God with  them through the schoolhouse door each day.

As for celebrating  Christmas, students are free to say “Merry Christmas,” give Christmas  messages to others, and organize Christmas devotionals in student  Christian clubs.

It’s true that some public school officials still misunderstand (or ignore) the First Amendment  by censoring student religious expression that is protected under  current law. But when challenged in court, they invariably lose.

In  fact, contrary to culture-war mythology, there is more student  religious speech and practice in public schools today than at any time  in the past 100 years.

When politicians demonize the courts for  banning God from schools, they count on public confusion about the First  Amendment distinction between government speech promoting religion,  which the establishment clause prohibits, and student speech promoting  religion, which the free-exercise and free-speech clauses protect.

The  U.S. Supreme Court has never ruled that kids can’t pray in school. What  the Court has done — and continues to do — is to strike down  school-sponsored prayers and devotional exercises as violations of  religious liberty.

As a result of those decisions, school  officials may not impose prayers, or organize prayer events, or turn the  school auditorium into the local church for religious celebrations.

Students, however, aren’t the government; they can — and often do — openly pray and share their faith in public schools.

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