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NeoGreen

(4,033 posts)
Wed Dec 19, 2018, 08:59 AM Dec 2018

Ex-School Board Member Cites Anti-Atheist Law to Justify Christian Invocations

https://friendlyatheist.patheos.com/2018/12/18/ex-school-board-member-cites-anti-atheist-law-to-justify-christian-invocations/




Ex-School Board Member Cites Anti-Atheist Law to Justify Christian Invocations
By Hemant Mehta, December 18, 2018

A former member of the Rockingham County Board of Education in North Carolina, in his first act as a civilian after 12 years on the board, used the public comments portion of a recent meeting to urge the new board to institute Christian prayers as part of the monthly agenda.

Ron Price, an ordained minister, said he was always outnumbered when he made the proposals while on the board, but he’s still holding out hope that the new members can break the law.

But having signed up for the public comment portion of Wednesday’s meeting, Price took to the podium as a civilian and announced his wish to bless the new board members.

He then led the packed meeting room of nearly 100 in about three minutes of Christian prayer.

He can do that as a citizen. If the board did it, they would be subject to a lawsuit — and they would lose.

What’s even more appalling than his suggestion was the justification he used. There’s a portion of the North Carolina constitution that forbids atheists from holding public office. In a section explaining who’s disqualified from public office, it explicitly mentions “any person who shall deny the being of Almighty God.”

But that law is superseded by the U.S. Constitution which bars any religious test for public office. It’s toothless. Yet Price still used it to imply Christian prayers were legally acceptable:

Before praying, Price cited an outdated law from the state’s constitution that holds that any individual running for public office in North Carolina must believe in “Almighty God.”

The state law, however, has been in violation of federal law for nearly 60 years, explained Mike Meno, communications director for the North Carolina headquarters of the American Civil Liberties Union in Durham, who spoke to RockinghamNow on Thursday.

The mandate “has been found to be unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court and unenforceable,” Meno said.


So a Christian who’s too ignorant to understand the law argued that new board members should subject the district to potential lawsuits by using their meetings to advertise his personal faith.
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Ex-School Board Member Cites Anti-Atheist Law to Justify Christian Invocations (Original Post) NeoGreen Dec 2018 OP
Need to get that law off the books exboyfil Dec 2018 #1
It doesn't count unless everyone can see how pious they are. Mariana Dec 2018 #2

exboyfil

(17,995 posts)
1. Need to get that law off the books
Wed Dec 19, 2018, 09:08 AM
Dec 2018

Also why do the council members need a public prayer. Can't those of like faith belief get together before the meeting and pray.

Mariana

(15,095 posts)
2. It doesn't count unless everyone can see how pious they are.
Wed Dec 19, 2018, 05:21 PM
Dec 2018

Yes, I know Jesus very clearly told his followers to do the exact opposite. Clearly, they know better than Jesus about how Christians are supposed to behave.

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