Posted on 10/30/2015 8:04:12 AM PDT by kindred
High school football coach Joe Kennedy was suspended Wednesday for praying after games at the 50-yard line. Itâs like straight out of a movie.
High school football coach Joe Kennedy, inspired by the Christian faith-based film âFacing the Giants,â walks to the 50-yard line after games to thank God for the players he has the opportunity to coach.
As of Wednesday, Kennedy has been suspended and is no longer able to participate in football program activities because of his post-game prayers.
A letter sent to Kennedy by the school district informed the coach that he has been placed on paid administrative leave.
âWe tried to meet with the school officials in-person but they refused to meet,â Hiram Sasser, deputy chief counsel for Liberty Institute, said in a statement. âWe were only able to have a brief hour and a half call with their lawyer, and the result was a letter banning private prayer just a few hours before last Fridayâs game. It is unfortunate this school district is choosing litigation instead of a simple meeting.â
Kennedy is âdevastatedâ over the ordeal. âI love my players and I hope I can continue coaching them and being a part of their lives,â he said, according to Liberty Institute.
Kennedyâs tradition started seven years ago when he thanked God for the game and the players after coaching his first game at Bremerton High School.
A few games into his private practice, students began to ask the coach what he was doing.
âI was thanking God for you guys,â Kennedy remembered saying to his players, according to a Liberty Institute statement. âThen a couple said they were Christians and asked if they could join. I responded, âItâs a free country, you can do whatever you want to do.ââ
On Sept. 17, the superintendent of the school district issued a letter to coach Kennedy to inform him that he was going against the policies of the school district.
In the letter, Superintendent Aaron Leavell pointed to a policy that includes the following statement:
As a matter of individual liberty, a student may of his/her own volition engage in private, non-disruptive prayer at any time not in conflict with learning activities. School staff shall neither encourage nor discourage a student from engaging in non-disruptive oral or silent prayer or any form of devotional activity.
Kennedy was informed in the letter of standards that he is expected to adhere to, like not participating when students are engaged in religious activity as to not show âendorsement of the activity.â
He is free to provide âmotivational, inspirational talksâ to the students, but this does not include âreligious expressionâ such as prayer.
Facts about coach Kennedyâs post-game verbal prayers: 1.He does not pray to a specific religion or deity. 2.He does not say âamenâ after the prayers. 3.Students voluntarily congregate near Kennedy while he prays.
âCoaches, students, and teachers donât lose their religious freedom the second they step onto school grounds,â said Melody Wood, who works in the DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society at The Heritage Foundation. âSchool bureaucrats should stop discriminating against people of faith engaging in completely voluntary prayer.â
On Oct. 14, Liberty Institute sent the school district a demand letter to inform the district that coach Kennedy is not in violation of any law. It states that Kennedy would continue to pray post-game.
âThe school district violated federal law by denying Coach Kennedyâs request for religious accommodation,â Mike Berry, senior counsel for Liberty Institute, said in a statement. âTheir violation of the law cannot go unanswered.â
The school responded to Liberty Institute by stating that the request to allow Kennedy to pray could not be met due to a âpotential liability.â
Despite the order to cease prayer, on homecoming night, Oct. 16., Kennedy walked to the 50-yard line as he always does post-game.
âIâm going to do what Iâve always done and I will do my prayer,â KIRO-TV reported Kennedy stated.
Locals news outlets provided coverage of the post-game prayer as Kennedy found himself surrounded by Centralia Tigers football playersâthe opposing teamâkneeling down with their rival coach.
âIf the school is concerned that the coachâs prayer may be interpreted as government speech, there is an easy solution: The school district can simply say that the coachâs prayer is his own speech,â said Sasser. âThen they should stand back and let him pray.â
The school district does not agree. âAny further violations will be grounds for discipline,â an Oct. 23 letter from Superintendent Leavell reads.
Kennedy continued his tradition by kneeling on the field to pray following football games on Oct. 23 and Oct. 26.
Kennedy and his legal team at Liberty Institute began to initiate legal proceedings against the Bremerton School District on Oct. 26.
In a letter sent to the school district this week, 47 members of Congress showed their support for the âadmirable and respectableâ actions of Kennedy, âas they represent his commitment to the welfare of the young men on his team.â
He is a modern day Daniel!
Bttt
He is a man who stands for liberty and freedom of religion and speech against he demrino haters of God, country and freedom, and it is a shame that that all three branches of government are now run by communist demrino’s.
The coach will sue the school which is outstanding. It’s always a good thing for Christians to fight back instead of sitting there like sacrificial lambs waiting to be slaughtered. I doubt God put us here to be a bunch of spineless wimps to the forces of evil.
This is a byproduct of the silent church.
Now what if the football players refuse to play until their coach is reinstated? This coach took a brave stand. Is he the only adult in that school district? Where are the parents? They all should be at the school board meetings, demanding his full reinstatement AND the Superintendent’s resignation.
Kennedy: “I responded,’It’s a free country, you can do whatever you want to do.’”
That was seven years ago. Now it’s his famous last words.
Fundamental transformation indeed.
The school officials won’t meet with him or his representatives because they are big, fat cowards and cannot defend the position they have taken.
So disgusting.
"Aslan is not a tame lion"
Amen, good man.
Get used to it coach. The United States you knew is dead and it isn’t coming back.
Let’s face it, all the things that are taking place have been taking place for 50 years or more. For 50 years we have been saying, “if this goes on much longer we won’t be able to reverse it.” How long is “much longer”? Hasn’t enough time passed that the damage is irreversible? We can’t fix this mess. It has to be destroyed and begun again but with a new group of people.
Organize 500 people to attend the game, and afterwards, all go out and pray at mid-field
and this notion that Jesus was some peacenik wuss? He wasn’t. He fashioned a whip and beat the sh*t out of the market vendors who turned the temple into a mall. I think He roundhouse kicked some jackhole who was selling obama trinkets...
The coach is not the one violating the Constitution. It is the school district because as the government, it is telling the coach that he cannot express his religious belief as he wants or feels necessary. That is what the Constitution forbids, not the coaches actions.
That’s how it works now. There is no freedom of speech. When you can lose your job for being a Christian, we have already lost the country.
Does the coach pray in the middle of the field on the 50 yd line or on the sideline at the 50 yd mark?
The school would use police to bar people from the field and arrest all trespassers.
If he’d read from the Koran on the 50 yard line, they’d be praising him.
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