Minor Axis
Well-Known Member
The answer is no.
Controversy regarding National Prayer Day when a Wisconsin Judge rules it unconstitutional. Of course the conservatives are jumping all over it as Sara Palin pronounces all of our founding fathers were "believers'. But she forgot a couple of things (if she ever knew them, any surprise?). Also note, Obama supports a National Prayer Day.
From Wikipedia:National Prayer Day.
Here is Newsweeks take on the issue.
Controversy regarding National Prayer Day when a Wisconsin Judge rules it unconstitutional. Of course the conservatives are jumping all over it as Sara Palin pronounces all of our founding fathers were "believers'. But she forgot a couple of things (if she ever knew them, any surprise?). Also note, Obama supports a National Prayer Day.
From Wikipedia:National Prayer Day.
Issues of government involvement with religion are often disputed because of the Establishment clause in the First Amendment. While the free-exercise clause allows for this type of event to be organized by non-governmental bodies, the U.S. Congress may not pass any laws enforcing religious observances.[9]
The contention was brought to attention by one of the Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson. On January 23, 1808 he wrote on the topic:
"Fasting and prayer are religious exercises; the enjoining them an act of discipline. Every religious society has a right to determine for itself the time for these exercises, and the objects proper for them, according to their own particular tenets; and right can never be safer than in their hands, where the Constitution has deposited it. ...civil powers alone have been given to the President of the United States and no authority to direct the religious exercises of his constituents."[10] ”
In 1822, James Madison wrote:
“ "There has been another deviation from the strict principle in the Executive Proclamations of fasts & festivals, so far, at least, as they have spoken the language of injunction, or have lost sight of the equality of all religious sects in the eye of the Constitution. Whilst I was honored with the Executive Trust I found it necessary on more than one occasion to follow the example of predecessors. But I was always careful to make the Proclamations absolutely indiscriminate, and merely recommendatory; or rather mere designations of a day, on which all who thought proper might unite in consecrating it to religious purposes, according to their own faith & forms. In this sense, I presume you reserve to the Govt. a right to appoint particular days for religious worship throughout the State, without any penal sanction enforcing the worship."[11]
Here is Newsweeks take on the issue.
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