Mississippi lawmakers have passed legislation that would legalize student-led prayer in the state’s public schools. Senate Bill 2633, which went to Gov. Phil Bryant March 6 for his signature, would also allow students to talk about their faith in the classroom and organize school Bible clubs, as well as pray at football games, graduation ceremonies, and during morning announcements.
Sponsors of the bill said that secular groups have intimidated and confused school administrators about the legality of religious expression in schools, and the law is meant to bring clarity. According to those on both sides of the issue, “Organized school prayer remains widespread in Mississippi, despite opponents’ efforts to curtail it,” reported the Associated Press. “In October, for example, the ACLU sent a letter to the Lincoln County school system demanding a halt to routine prayer at West Lincoln High School.”
The bill’s proponents insist it will not force students to pray, but will enable them to do so voluntarily. But Bear Atwood, director of Mississippi’s ACLU chapter, argued that students who do not wish to pray would still be a captive audience. Christianity Today quoted Atwood as saying that the new law could also lead to procedural issues and unwanted favoritism, such as with “school administrators selecting which students lead prayer in announcements or before a basketball game.”
One of the leaders in the campaign for school prayer over the past several years has been Republican State Rep. Mark Formby, who has introduced a school prayer bill every year since 2009. He said the measure is meant to dispel all confusion about what students can and cannot do in school relative to religious expression, including wearing religious-themed clothing, discussing their faith in the classroom, and voluntarily praying at school-sponsored events. “I’m not so much worried about what’s allowed as what’s disallowed,” Formby told Fox News. He added that he has had many conversations with parents concerned about the issue, and the bill is meant to clear the air. Formby explained that the measure “doesn’t have to restore school prayer,” but it “will allow children, on a voluntary basis, to pray or not to pray.”
However, other proponents of school prayer hope the measure is merely the first step in allowing one and all to voluntarily pray in public schools. “People ask me if this is a step toward getting prayer back in schools,” Paul Ott, a Christian radio and television host, told Fox. “I think this is THE step to getting prayer back in schools.”
Read More at the New American . By Dave Bohon.
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THIS SHOULD BE IN EVERY SCHOOL IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA…NO QUESTION ASKED. !!!
WHAT THE HELL HAS HAPPENED TO US ? WE HAVE BEEN KIDNAPPED ? WE HAVE BEEN TAKEN OVER BY THE ENEMY, SATAN !!!!
You are so right. Satan has been ruling us for too, too long. It’s about time we put God ahead of our schools and kick Satan out. Now, the ACLU will rant and rage, but I say tell them to shut up like they’ve been telling Christians for the last 50 years.
God Bless Them…………. We shouldn’t have to pass legislation………… God should never have been taken out of schools to begin with………….. God should be in everything that exists to man……….. As Wild Bill says: “America Bless God”
my notes: to phil and others, so right. everyone in their own state,should push this law. it’a a shame, what people are letting government get away with. we have the most wonderful country,with free speech,freedom,choice of religion,job, etc, and a hell of a lot of people do not understand this. fell real sorry for them. when our dictator,destroys america,then ,may they relize ,what they have done. pl,orl,fla
Can’t we ban the ACLU? If all hell were to ever break out in the U.S. they would all be terminated. THAT I’d love to see.
This can’t make Bozo and his criminal crew very happy. I wonder what kind of punishment he will soon come up with for Mississippi? I have no doubt that Mississippi will be severally punished, for fear that if they are not severally punished, other States might soon follow with similar l;legislation.