Studyspark Study Document

Prayers in the Public Schools Term Paper

Pages:3 (1070 words)

Sources:1+

Subject:Other

Topic:Torch

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#4766735


Prayers in Public Schools

In the case of Engel v. Vitale (1962), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that prayer in the U.S. public school system was unconstitutional and that such prayers "breached the constitutional wall of separation between Church and State." Ever since, the courts around the country have consistently turned down the efforts to reinstitute even the most innocent expression of religious devotion in public funded schools in complete disregard of an equally consistent American public opinion that has expressed its support for prayers in public schools. I believe that prayers in public schools should be allowed just as they were allowed during the first 200 years of our country's existence and shall argue in this essay why I believe so.

If we examine the U.S. constitution closely, it would be apparent that the founding fathers and the framers of the U.S. constitution had never intended a ban on prayers. In fact, several of the founding fathers fervently believed in the essential role of religion and morality in the life of the nation. James Madison, the author of most of the U.S. constitution wrote in 1785: "Religion [is] the basis and Foundation of Government." (Quoted in "James Madison," 2003) It is also interesting to note that the phrase "wall of separation to between the Church and State," which is often used by supporters of the prayer ban to justify the ruling never appear in the U.S. constitution even once. The expression was used by Thomas Jefferson in response to a letter from the Baptists who had approached him in 1802 and urged him to promote religious freedom of the minority religious groups. (Shelby, 1992)

For the next, almost 200 years, the U.S. courts as well as parts of the government and the American public were unanimous in their interpretation of the U.S. constitution and no objection was raised to the practice of reciting prayers in schools. Surely, the people including a number of judges and judicial experts who had lived in a period closer to the eighteenth century United States (when the U.S. constitution and the Bill of Rights were written) could understand the intentions of the founding fathers better.

Moreover isn't it a contradiction in terms when the we find the Congress praying at the opening of every session; federal officials and witnesses in courts taking their oaths on a Bible; "In God we trust" being stamped on our national currency and the Ten Commandments featured prominently in the Supreme Court building. The only place where even the slightest murmur of a prayer is prohibited is at the public schools.

The first two clauses of the First Amendment that have been used by the courts to prohibit prayers in public schools (known as the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause respectively) read as follows:

"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

The Establishment Clause has been interpreted by the U.S. Courts to strike down any kind of prayers in public schools. Although I have no quarrel with the contention that the religious beliefs of a particular sect (even if it's the religion of the majority) should not be thrust down the thoughts of…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

'James Madison." (2002) One Nation Under God. America's Christian Heritage. Updated: 14 July 2002. Retrieved on November 22 from http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/cdf/onug/madison.html

'Public Schools Don't Have a Prayer." (2004). U.S. Gov Info / Resources. About.com. Retrieved on November 22 from http://usgovinfo.about.com/library/weekly/aa070100a.htm

Shelby, Mark. (1992). Separation of Church and State: Has it gone too far? Retrieved on November 22 from http://www.forerunner.com/forerunner/X0183_Separation_of_Church.html

Southers, Michelle Marie. (2002). School Prayer. National Parliamentary Debate Workshop July 10, 2002. Retrieved on November 22 from http://www.willamette.edu/cla/rhetoric/workshop/DebateResearch/michellesouthers.doc.

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Public School Prayer: Is It Constitutional and

Pages: 8 (2711 words) Sources: 6 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #75239009

Public School Prayer: Is it Constitutional and Moral? Proponents of allowing public school prayer cite both legal and moral reasons to allow prayer in public schools. On a legal basis they state that banning prayer in public schools is a violation of our First Amendment right of Free Exercise. From a moral standpoint they cite the so-called degeneration of the public school system and the so-called declining quality of public education

Studyspark Study Document

Prayer in Public Schools

Pages: 3 (1005 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #19865320

Prayer in Public Schools The issue of prayer in public schools has been the subject of intense debate. That is because religious people would like for their children to be able to follow their religious teachings by praying in school but people who are not religious would prefer that religion was kept out of the public schools altogether. Prayer in public schools is also sometimes a problem for people who are

Studyspark Study Document

Prayer in School There Was a Time

Pages: 4 (1193 words) Sources: 4 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #2138911

Prayer in School There was a time in America, where although the constitution guarantees a separation of church and state, many of the government institutions still encouraged or at least included components which were based on religious practices. In the past, the children of American public schools would enter the classroom, stand at attention for the pledge, and then join in with the class in prayer. In the locker room, the

Studyspark Study Document

Prayer in School and Its Historical Context:

Pages: 2 (639 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #56065989

Prayer in School and Its Historical Context: Prayer in schools is one of the major issues that put teachers, parents, and administrators at odds to an extent that even simple discussions regarding the subject can degenerate into heated debates. In most cases, discussions on prayer result in heated sidebars about morality, rates of crime, and the Constitution. Even though parents, teachers, and administrators continue to debate about prayer, children still have

Studyspark Study Document

Prayer at Public School Events

Pages: 3 (856 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #38116824

Prayer at Public School Events During the last few years there has been passionate debates concerning prayer in public schools and at public school events. Advocates believe that it is not only a moral issue but prohibition of prayer in public schools denies their right of freedom of religion, while opponents claim it is a violation of separation of state and church. In fact, over recent decades, one of the most litigious

Studyspark Study Document

Prayers in Public Schools Should Be Allowed

Pages: 3 (1293 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #74020659

Prayer in public schools has been a subject of controversy ever since the Supreme Court ruled in 1962 that "any kind of prayer, composed by public school districts, even non-denominational, is unconstitutional government sponsorship of religion" (U.S. Supreme Court Decisions on Separation of Church and State web site). The next year the Court found that "Bible reading over the school intercom was unconstitutional" because it forced a child "to participate

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".