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Battle Over Scriptural Banners Reaching Biblical Proportions
What began with one resident's complaint about the use of run-through banners decorated with Bible verses at Kountze (Texas) High School football games has turned into a national controversy. Reporters from coast to coast have invaded this small southeast Texas town of fewer than 2,200 people that has become — at least for now — the center of the debate over religious freedoms.

On Thursday, an estimated 80 cheerleaders, parents and other supporters gathered in the Hardin Country Courthouse as State District Judge Steve Thomas declared that he needs more time to issue a final ruling on whether the large scriptural banners — "But thanks be to God, which gives us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 15:57) read one recent banner — violate the First Amendment. So he extended a temporary order granted last month to allow the banners for at least another two weeks. A new hearing is scheduled for Oct. 18. (Kountze's regular-season football schedule runs through Nov. 9.)

After cracking down on school districts in Georgia and Mississippi for what it calls First Amendment violations involving pregame prayers and other symbols of faith at high school sporting events, the Madison, Wis.-based church-and-state watchdog Freedom From Religion Foundation forced the Kountze Independent School District to ban the red-and-white banners, which measure 30 feet long and 10 feet high.

During Thursday's proceedings, cheerleaders — who in this case are represented by attorneys from the conservative Liberty Institute in Plano, Texas — testified that the idea to use Bible verses on banners took root at a cheer camp this summer, without any involvement from the squad's advisors. When the district banned the banner, "it felt like my religion wasn't really accepted," Kieara Moffett, a 16-year-old Baptist, told the judge, according to The Los Angeles Times.

"This is government speech. It's on public property" countered Tom Brandt, attorney for the school district, adding that Kountze's cheerleaders signed a "cheerleader constitution" that limited their behavior and designated them as school symbols. "The cheerleaders represent the school."

In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe that student-initiated prayer at football games was unconstitutional.

For now, though, it's business as usual in Kountze, and the cheerleaders are expected to hold their heads — and banners — high at tonight's home game against Woodville.
Posted At 10:23 AM • Comments (6)

Congratulations to all those schools and residents who continue the fight for an open society that practice their God given right to openly worship Him as they see fit. What a shame America and it's Christian society has been outlawed by probably .05 % that are Athiests. Seperation of church and state has been misrepresentated. It was written to mean the state cannot tell what church a person must attend. Period.
Comment By Tom At 10/5/2012 11:36 AM
So, only non Christians have the right of free speech? Like the guy that made the terrible film that caused harm to our forces in the mid-east?
Comment By Richard At 10/5/2012 11:49 AM
Richard no one made a film that caused harm in the middle east. Just an excuse from the left becasue their here Obama will not stand up to anyone but will apologize. The State Depatmetn had information that an attack was going to happen but agind under this President we do nothing but pass blame. Step up and be a man.
Comment By Seriously At 10/5/2012 12:01 PM
Tom, Richard, and Seriously, as a 15 year old christian playing soccer in Iraq, would you feel really free to tell your fellow teammates that you didn't want to pray to their god before each game? And even if you three would be brave enough to do that, do you think most kids are? That is why religion shouldn't be supported at schools. An individual doing something is fine, a group of individuals doing something is fine, but when your actions separate someone who has every right to be part of a group that has no basis in religion that isn't fair or free.
Comment By tim hammond At 10/5/2012 12:53 PM
It would seem to be that only Fundamentalist Christian worship should be allowed at football games? Otherwise, I'm sure all of you would argue for the right to alternate a Bible verse one week on the banner with a passage from the Quran the next? Perhaps a Buddhist saying also?
And I'm disappointed in the delay from the judge. This issue has been decided time and again--the banner is unconstitutional. It would seem that he will delay a ruling until after the football season. Sadly.
Comment By Rob Bishop At 10/8/2012 12:11 AM
'What a shame America and [its partly-]Christian society has been outlawed by probably .05 % that are [atheists]. [Separation] of church and state has been [misrepresented]. It was written to mean the state cannot tell what church a person must attend. Period.'
1. No one has outlawed the USA.
2. No one in the USA has outlawed Christian culture or society.
3. People who don't believe in 'god(s)'--which is all that atheists are--constitute something closer to 20% of the US population.
4. Separation of church and state--which IMHO has been a major reason for religion's continuing *strength* in the US, compared to other developed countries that have state-supported churches and are now majority atheist--is a principle that has been settled via more than two centuries of rulings by the Supreme Court. (SCOTUS, which determines what the Constitution and law says, to my knowledge has never had an atheist justice.) The Constitution says 'establishment of religion' and not 'establishment of A religion'; government speech (which that banner certainly is--the school district's lawyer is correct) may not support any religion or all religion. 'Period.'
5. People who want religion in their school activities are free to go to religious schools. Public school? No.
Comment By Greg At 10/8/2012 6:49 PM
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