Law Suit Against Ten Commandments’ Display in Schools and Our Solution

Source: The Huffington Post

By  Posted: 05/12/2013 1:55 pm EDT  |  Updated: 05/12/2013 11:12 pm EDT

The little town of Muldrow, Okla., is in turmoil after a national nonprofit organization reportedly threatened a lawsuit if postings of the Ten Commandments aren’t removed from the walls of a public high school.

A letter from the Wisconsin-based Freedom From Religion Foundation (FRFF) was sent to school officials after an anonymous student contacted the organization about the postings of the Ten Commandments at his high school, according to multiple reports.

In the letter, the nonprofit group, which advocates for the separation of church and state, asked the school to pull the postings down. The foundation indicated that a lawsuit would result if the school refused, the Sequoyah County Times reported Friday.

Ever since the letter arrived, the community has been up in arms.

Multiple petitions have been signed by hundreds of people, pray-ins have been held at the school, pro-Christian messages lit up Twitter with the hashtag #FightForFaith, and church officials and politicians have railed against the request to remove the religious postings.

“A nation that refuses to allow educators to teach children right from wrong will become a corrupt nation, where sin prevails, evil abounds, and everyone does as they please,” said Republican state Rep. John Bennett, according to the Sequoyah County Times.

“It’s Christianity under attack,” Muldrow First Baptist Church Pastor John Moore inveighed. “It was promised in the scripture [that this would happen].

A local church even bought hundreds of T-shirts, printed with the Ten Commandments, and offered them for free to students to wear to school.

The school, for its part, reportedly said students who wore the shirts would be forced to turn them inside out, the Sequoyah County Times reported.

Meanwhile, the anonymous student who first contacted the FRFF took to Reddit to lament that his classmates have “started to figure out” it was he who sent the letter.

“All I have received [since then] were dirty looks and an argument with a rather large linebacker,” he wrote. “I am not upset at that because I expected that, what I am upset about is the fact that my little sister has been yelled at by a school bus full of brainwashed children.”

Yet in spite of the backlash, it appears the Ten Commandments will probably have to come down.

Muldrow school administrators who consulted legal experts said that a 1980 court ruling meant the plaques would likely have to be removed, according to the Southwest Times Record.

In 1980, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a Kentucky statute that had mandated every public school classroom have the Ten Commandments posted on its walls. The ruling has been interpreted to mean public schools cannot have the Ten Commandments on display year-round.

The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,” a statement that has been interpreted through the years to prohibit governmental preference of one religion over another.

The Muldrow School Board is scheduled to meet Monday evening to discuss the matter of whether or not to remove the Ten Commandments from school walls, according to the Southwest Times Record.

Reference

The Muslim Times’ Solution

Our solution is very simple.  Christianity does not have monopoly over morality, nor does it over perversion or corruption.

All religions should have equal representation or lack there of, in the public square, given the First Amendment, which is quoted in this article.

All the well known religions should be offered equal space to quote from their scriptures and atheists and agnostics should be allowed equal space as well.

 

Categories: Americas, Law and Religion

2 replies

  1. All Trinitarian Christians are in constant violation of the first three of the Ten Commandments?

    “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.”

    “You shall have no other gods before me.”

    “You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth.”

    The Muslims and the Jews believe that by taking Jesus to be co-equal and co-eternal with God the Father and making his images, the Christians have violated these three Commandments.

    The Ten Commandments are mentioned twice in the Old Testament and not in the New Testament and we should first learn about them from the Jews.

    Reference: Exodus 20:1-17, and Deuteronomy 5:4-21.

  2. Only few days before his accident Imran Khan gave a statement against Ahmadiyya community and other side he is saying we shall give rights to every person it is no problem from which religion they belong.

Leave a Reply