Prayer in School
By: Jon • Essay • 396 Words • December 25, 2009 • 1,212 Views
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Prayer In School
A very controversial widespread issue today is the right to have prayer
in public schools. The proposed amendment reads:
“To secure the people’s right to acknowledge God according to the dictates
of conscience. The people’s rights to pray and to recognize their belief,
heritage or traditions on public property, shall not be infringed. The
government shall not require any person to join in the prayer or religious
activity, initiate or designate school prayers, discriminate against any
religion, or deny equal access to benefit on account of religion. (AVSP)”
This would permit but not mandate school prayer. I think that the
government should be focused on the school’s academics, not what religion
they are to study. The proposed amendments would cause nothing but
trouble considering that there would be many arguments on what beliefs
should be taught. Religion is private and schools are public.
Having any prayer in school goes against the basis in which our
country was formed upon. America came into being because colonists
wanted religious freedom. Our founding fathers carefully wrote the
constitution to grant the freedom of separation of church and state. A
prayer created and supported by a government violate the very essence of
the spirit in which the US was formed. (Haas35)
Therefore, having a prayer in school would be unconstitutional. “A
radical school prayer amendment would attack the heart and soul of the bill
of