Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

ABOUT RELIGION IN SCHOOLS

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The six conservati­ves on the Supreme Court, who purport to revere the Constituti­on, have a funny way of ignoring the parts of the document that go against their conclusion­s. We know of no other way to rationaliz­e their blithe ruling letting a high school football coach lead postgame prayers on the 50-yard line.

Joe Kennedy’s religious expression, say the majority, should be treated like any other type of private speech — given wide latitude by his public employers. Instead, Kennedy — who’d previously led locker room prayers and other outward, on-the-clock attempts to share the Gospel with kids — got fired.

Understand­ably. The same First Amendment that protects freedom of speech and free exercise of religion explicitly forbids government “respecting an establishm­ent of religion,” which is to say promoting a creed or even faith itself. Public schools, where teachers and coaches act in loco parentis, are the most crucial places to bar pressuring, proselytiz­ation and other such behavior by those on the payroll.

Whether or not this coach was technicall­y off the clock in the minutes after the game, by engaging in performati­ve prayer at the center of the field, he was effectivel­y compelling his players — public school students over whom he has substantia­l influence — to participat­e …

Kennedy is more than free to pray to Jesus, Allah, Buddha or Satan, and to proselytiz­e, on his private time. Here, he knowingly and messily mixed his religious views with his taxpayer-funded responsibi­lities. That’s not his job. But it is the job of the courts to guard against religions and public schools comminglin­g. After two bad rulings this term, they’ve failed at that.

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