Monday, February 13, 2012

Rev. Burks may choose to declare this link pornographic.

Currently there is nothing whatever on the agenda for Thursday's city council meeting, which means onlookers can devote the entire evening to spurious arguments from advocates of the Christian theocracy, to the effect that there must be an "invocation" to open each of the body's meetings.

The friend who sent me this link observed:

Since Thursday will be frittered away on "religious liberty" folderol, it might not hurt to point out that the Supreme Court chose not to overturn the circuit court that outlawed the erection of a sectarian portal through which citizens must pass before participating in government.

Indeed. This isn't the decision of Legal Bagel, who plays Erika's legal advisor on her screech blog. It is actual law, and on Thursday, perhaps we'll see how Rev. Burks reacts to such inconveniences.

Supreme Court rejects government prayer case


WASHINGTON, Jan. 17 (UPI) -- The U.S. Supreme Court passed up the chance Tuesday to decide whether sectarian prayers can be used as invocations before government meetings.


The rejection of the case left in place a lower-court ruling against the invocations using Jesus' name in Forsyth County, N.C. The invocation at a county commission meeting, given by a local minister, used the language, "For we do make this prayer in Your Son Jesus' name, Amen," and made a number of references to specific tenets of Christianity, from "the Cross of Calvary" to the "Virgin Birth" to the "Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ."
Two women who attended the session filed suit, saying the invocation and the policy that allowed it were unconstitutional.


Eventually, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit agreed in a 2-1 vote.


The majority said Supreme Court precedent, and its own circuit precedents, "establish that in order to survive constitutional scrutiny, invocations must consist of the type of non-sectarian prayers that solemnize the legislative task and seek to unite rather than divide. Sectarian prayers must not serve as the gateway to citizen participation in the affairs of local government. To have them do so runs afoul of the promise of public neutrality among faiths that resides at the heart of the First Amendment's religion clauses."

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