San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Coach has his prayers answered by high court

- By Mark Silk

The majority opinion in Kennedy v. Bremerton, the decision the U.S. Supreme Court handed down on June 27, begins with a lie: “Petitioner Joseph Kennedy lost his job as a high school football coach in the Bremerton School District,” it reads, “after he knelt at midfield after games to offer a quiet personal prayer.”

In fact, the coach lost his job after he told his superiors at the school that he would continue his practice of praying at the 50-yard line immediatel­y after games and insisted students not be prevented from praying with him, despite his employers’ cautions that the prayer sessions were getting out of hand: His post-game devotional­s had turned into a media event.

Kennedy v. Bremerton is all about how a resolvable situation was turned into a test case that succeeded in eliciting a consequent­ial judicial decision.

Kennedy had made his religion part of a public high school’s football program, conducting prayerful motivation­al meetings in the locker room and incorporat­ing a prayer session into post-game ceremonies. Players were not required to attend, but some said they felt under pressure to do so.

How this kind of teacher-led religious practice went on for years without raising school administra­tors’ concerns is worth wondering about in itself. But when their attention was called to it by an opposing coach, school officials realized they had a problem. Since the Supreme Court’s prayer and Bible-reading decisions of the early 1960s, it’s been clear that teacher-led religious exercises in public schools violate the First Amendment’s ban on religious establishm­ents.

Taking the situation in hand, the school district told Kennedy that while he was free to pray privately after games, he would have to cease and desist from leading students in prayer while he was on the job. And he briefly complied, refraining from prayer in the locker room and waiting until the stadium was empty before going to the 50-yard line and taking a knee.

But after school authoritie­s raised no objection, he decided (having acquired counsel) that he needed to resume his prior post-game orisons. After being suspended with pay, he filed suit, contending that the school district had violated his rights of religious free exercise and free speech.

Last Monday, the Supreme Court agreed with him.

The court’s 6-3 decision, written by Justice Neil Gorsuch, would be bad enough if it had relied on the recent standard for assessing establishm­ent clause cases. Sandra Day O’Connor’s endorsemen­t test, worked out in1984, guided courts in judging whether “a reasonable, informed observer” would consider a particular object or activity to constitute government­al endorsemen­t of religion.

I, for one, believe that such an observer would conclude that the scene of a coach surrounded by praying players at the end of a football game could only take place with official sanction, but I’m prepared to concede that reasonable people might disagree.

But that is not what Gorsuch’s opinion does. Instead, it rejects O’Connor’s endorsemen­t test out of

hand and seeks to lock in a new standard of interpreta­tion. As of today, the establishm­ent clause “must be interprete­d by ‘reference to historical practices and understand­ings.’ ”

The embedded quote comes from former Justice Anthony Kennedy’s decision in Town of Greece v. Galloway, a 2013 decision that permitted a town in upstate New

York to continue its practice of opening its monthly board meetings with (largely) Christian prayer.

That decision harked back to the court’s 1983 Marsh v. Chambers decision upholding the Nebraska Legislatur­e’s practice of beginning its sessions with prayer by a paid chaplain.

Although it is reasonably clear what “historical practices and understand­ings” means when it comes to invocation­s in legislativ­e bodies, how far the court might go in applying that standard to public schools is anyone’s guess.

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