Dear Friend,
Yesterday the U.S. Supreme Court issued a big win
for prayer and religious liberty!
In Kennedy v.
Bremerton School District, the Court considered the petition of
high school football coach, Joseph Kennedy, who often engaged in
prayer during and after games. After his employer, Bremerton School
District, asked him to stop the practice, Coach Kennedy refused. Upon
being terminated, Coach Kennedy sued the school district for violating
his First Amendment rights.
The question
before the Court was whether a public school employee’s prayer during
sporting events constituted protected speech, and whether it could be
prohibited to adhere to the Establishment Clause.
The Supreme
Court’s decision on Monday responded with a 6-3 decision siding with
Coach Kennedy. Justice Gorsuch explained in the Court’s
opinion:
"Here, a government entity sought
to punish an individual for engaging in a brief, quiet, personal
religious observance doubly protected by the Free Exercise and Free
Speech Clauses of the First Amendment. And the only meaningful
justification the government offered for its reprisal rested on a
mistaken view that it had a duty to ferret out and suppress . . .
Religious observances even as it allows comparable secular speech. The
Constitution neither mandates nor tolerates that kind of
discrimination."
Our sister organization, the Institute
for Faith & Family filed this
Amicus Brief in Kennedy
v. Bremerton School District, because we
believe some cities and counties in North Carolina have become
increasingly hostile to religious practice and speech in public.
Specifically, those cities that have passed nondiscrimination
ordinances that elevate sexual orientation and gender identity above
First Amendment rights may soon challenge the religious freedoms we
have traditionally held. Other cities in North Carolina have
challenged public prayer. Protecting religious freedom is of specific
interest and concern to us, and this ruling is a huge victory for
protecting religious freedom!
By filing Amicus Briefs on issues
affecting North Carolina, we represent you before the U.S. Supreme
Court. Last year we filed ten Amicus Briefs, and we’ve already filed
three this year. All of this has been made possible by your support of
efforts like ours to amplify the coalition's voice across the branches
and boundaries of your government.
Friend, if you
haven’t given recently to our work, would
you consider making a needed end-of-month
donation? Would you also consider making
a donation to IFFNC in gratitude for their hard
work making us 'friends of the court' by writing and filing dozens of
these amazing Amicus Briefs.
Gratefully,Tami
Fitzgerald North Carolina Values Coalition
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