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Supreme Court to hear case of high school football coach who lost job after onfield prayers
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<blockquote data-quote="chad kincham" data-source="post: 76477641" data-attributes="member: 240255"><p>Prayer being removed from schools is a compete con job by activist judges, who claim the constitutional clause (that only limits the ability of Congress to make a law establishing or prohibiting a state religion), prohibits all expression of Christianity in every part of government - which it does not.</p><p></p><p>Proof that our founding fathers intended no such thing as absolute separation of church and state, is the fact that from day 1, Congress set up a federally funded congressional Christian chaplains office to open each session with PRAYER; set up Christian chaplains in every branch of the military; put depictions of Moses receiving the ten commands in the Supreme Court; used a bible to swear in the first, and every subsequent president; <strong>held church services in the capital and treasury buildings, (</strong>which by the 1800s had become the largest churches in America).</p><p></p><p>The first congress also used federal funds to import KJV bibles for use as readers in the schools.</p><p></p><p>All the above proves that the founding fathers - the guys that wrote and signed the constitution, and set up the federal government - showed by their actions that they did not put separation of church and state in the constitution, (but just reading the so-called separation clause proves that) and that firing a teacher or coach for doing in public what the congressional chaplain does regularly in Congress, is what is unconstitutional.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="chad kincham, post: 76477641, member: 240255"] Prayer being removed from schools is a compete con job by activist judges, who claim the constitutional clause (that only limits the ability of Congress to make a law establishing or prohibiting a state religion), prohibits all expression of Christianity in every part of government - which it does not. Proof that our founding fathers intended no such thing as absolute separation of church and state, is the fact that from day 1, Congress set up a federally funded congressional Christian chaplains office to open each session with PRAYER; set up Christian chaplains in every branch of the military; put depictions of Moses receiving the ten commands in the Supreme Court; used a bible to swear in the first, and every subsequent president; [B]held church services in the capital and treasury buildings, ([/B]which by the 1800s had become the largest churches in America). The first congress also used federal funds to import KJV bibles for use as readers in the schools. All the above proves that the founding fathers - the guys that wrote and signed the constitution, and set up the federal government - showed by their actions that they did not put separation of church and state in the constitution, (but just reading the so-called separation clause proves that) and that firing a teacher or coach for doing in public what the congressional chaplain does regularly in Congress, is what is unconstitutional. [/QUOTE]
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Supreme Court to hear case of high school football coach who lost job after onfield prayers
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