|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Tennessee attorney general says Bible classes OKBy Michael FoustPublished May 8, 2008
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP) — Tennessee schools can teach a nonsectarian academic class on the Bible without violating the U.S. Constitution or previous U.S. Supreme Court precedents, Tennessee’s attorney general says. State Attorney General Robert E. Cooper Jr. delivered the opinion at the request of state Sen. Roy Herron, who is sponsoring a bill that would permit public schools to offer a class on the Bible’s impact in literature, art, music culture, and politics. The bill is bill No. 4104 in the Senate and bill No. 4089 in the House. Several school districts in Tennessee already offer Bible classes. Herron, a Democrat, told The Tennessean newspaper he requested the opinion in part to give other schools the OK. Cooper said the bill meets the high court’s “Lemon test,” a three-prong test that has been used for more than 30 years to determine the constitutionality of an establishment clause case. “The bill has a secular purpose – to authorize an elective public school course that is a nonreligious, nonsectarian, academic study of the Bible and its impact in literature, art, music, culture, and politics,” Cooper wrote in the April 1 opinion. “The bill’s principal or primary effect should neither advance nor inhibit religion. Nor does the bill appear, either in intent or in actual effect, to foster ‘excessive government entanglement’ with religion.” If the bill had failed any of the three tests – purpose, effect, or entanglement – Cooper said he would have declared it unconstitutional. |
|
||||||||||||||||
About Us | Contact Us | Subscribe | Advertise |
||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2008, The Christian Index, All rights reserved, Unless otherwise noted. |
||||||||||||||||||
Site developed and powered by Sonova Systems |
||||||||||||||||||