From Secular Coalition for America <[email protected]>
Subject Heretic on the Hill: Put me in Coach, I'm ready to pray
Date April 30, 2022 2:00 PM
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We went to the Supreme Court the morning they heard the praying football coach case.

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Put Me In, Coach, I’m Ready To Pray

I’ve previously mentioned the Supreme Court case ([link removed]) involving a high school football coach who led some players in prayer at the 50 yard line. The Court heard oral arguments ([link removed]) this week and we were outside on the steps at a rally for the school district being sued by the coach. The Secular Coalition for America (SCA) has signed on to an amicus brief supporting the school district.

Here’s the issue: Did assistant coach Joseph Kennedy have the First Amendment right to pray in that setting with students right after a game, or was he as a public official and a coach effectively coercing some of them to pray who didn’t want to. The Supreme Court is on Capitol Hill, and many of the separation-of-government-and-religion policy decisions are being made by the Court lately, so this Heretic on the Hill is about a football coach.

The coach was outside the Court for a while, football in hand, ready for his photo-op praying on the steps. We were attending a good sized rally in which Congressman Jamie Raskin gave a ten-minute summary of the relevant case law and the First Amendment protections that were being threatened. Several church officials from Bremerton, Washington, where the high school is located, spoke about why they objected to the coach’s prayers. I was surprised that there was no counter-rally by those supporting the coach. Maybe they realized they had the advantage going in.

The facts of the case are fairly extensive. Different times the coach prayed alone or with players, various alternatives the school proposed to him so he could pray privately, various warnings they gave him, whether he was fired or just didn’t reapply when his contract was up. As often happens, the justices asked a number of hypothetical questions. What if the coach just briefly crossed himself on the sideline before the game? What if he took a knee during the national anthem? What if someone brought a Ukrainian flag out to the 50 yard line?

Some legal experts say this case should never have been taken up by the Supreme Court. The coach lost decisively at the district court and appeals court levels. But courts are made of people and some of those on the Supreme Court were not impressed. The line of questions during the oral argumentsdidn’t seem promising ([link removed]) for finding five justices who agree with the school. A feature of the recent religious freedom cases taken up by the Court is one aggrieved citizen whose rights may have been violated versus a mass of faceless students or school officials or bureaucrats or public health officials trying to cope with a formidable First Amendment dilemma. It’s getting easy to predict which side the Court will take.

Justice Alito focused on the fact that this is essentially an employment discrimination case that revolves around whether the coach was fired and what reasons were given by the employer at the time. He said some of the surrounding events are superfluous. This could be the difference between a narrow verdict for the coach and a sweeping win for school prayer. Coach Kennedy would be able to move from Florida back to Bremerton and resume his $5,000 per year job. The verdict will be announced this summer.
Debbie Allen, Secular Coalition for America, Congressman Jamie Raskin, Jennifer Hawks, Baptist Joint Committee, and Nicole Carr, American Humanist Association

As we were about to head back to the office, SCA’s executive director Debbie Allen walked over to the one pro-prayer demonstrator there, the guy with the Protect Religious Freedom sign (see the last Heretic on the Hill ([link removed]) for how that phrase has been reimagined). She just started talking to him, which she often does with people on the other side of our issues. It’s safe to say that no minds were changed in those few minutes but I heard him thank her for the reasonable conversation.

Reasonable conversations should be the way to resolve a question like where can a coach pray after a game. When questions get into the courts, the First Amendment protections we have assumed for decades go under question themselves. Long-standing precedents are in danger of being limited or even overturned in this one case. That’s why it was important for us to join the rally that morning for freedom from religion on the football fields at every school.

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The Secular Coalition for America works every day to defend the separation of religion and government and to fight anti-democratic ideologies like Christian nationalism. Your support for this work is vital. Please click here if you would like to help us fight for secular government in 2022. ([link removed])

Your advocate,

Scott MacConomy
Director of Policy and Government Affairs
Secular Coalition for America
P.S. Please consider leaving a legacy gift to the Secular Coalition for America ([link removed]) . The protection of our secular values requires eternal vigilance.

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Copyright © 2022 Secular Coalition for America, All rights reserved.
Contributions to the Secular Coalition for America are not tax-deductible; they support our effective, citizen-based advocacy and lobbying efforts. Tax-deductible donations, including from Donor Advised Funds and IRA Rollovers, can be made to the Secular Coalition for America Education Fund.



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