Posted on 09/11/2014 9:27:10 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
(RNS) Arkansas State is removing a Christian cross decal from the back of its football helmets after a complaint that it violated separation of church and state, the university said Wednesday (Sept. 10).
Athletics director Terry Mohajir said he wanted to fight the decision because the decal was intended to honor former player Markel Owens and equipment manager Barry Weyer, who both died this year. However, Mohajir said he had little choice but to follow advice from the universitys legal counsel to remove or modify the symbol.
My job is to support our players and our coaches in their expression of any type of grief, and thats what I was doing, Mohajir said.
Rebecca Markert, an attorney for the Freedom From Religion Foundation, said her organization had been looking into the matter since hearing about the decals over the weekend but had not yet lodged a formal complaint with Arkansas State.
That is great news, Markert said of the schools decision. Putting religious imagery on public school property is unconstitutional.
The Freedom From Religion Foundation has been looking into potential church-state separation issues at college football programs during the past year, particularly at Clemson and Ole Miss. Markert said the organization recently filed an open records request with Ole Miss regarding its chaplain program.
According to documents provided to USA Today by Arkansas State, Jonesboro, Ark., attorney Louis Nisenbaum sent an email to University Counsel Lucinda McDaniel on Saturday, pointing out that he noticed the crosses while watching Arkansas States game at Tennessee earlier that day.
That is a clear violation of the Establishment Clause as a state endorsement of the Christian religion, Nisenbaum wrote. Please advise whether you agree and whether ASU will continue this practice.
On Monday, McDaniel emailed Mohajir, saying she found no specific legal cases that addressed crosses on football helmets but recommending that the bottom of the cross could be cut off so the symbol would be a plus sign.
While we could argue that the cross with the initials of the fallen student and trainer merely memorialize their passing, the symbol we have authorized to convey that message is a Christian cross, she wrote. Persons viewing the helmets will, and have, seen the symbol as a cross and interpreted that symbol as an endorsement of the Christian religion. This violates the legal prohibition of endorsing religion.
Mohajir said the original idea for the decal came from a leadership committee of players and that wearing it was voluntary.
Any time our players have an expression of faith and wanting to honor two members of the football program, Im 100 percent behind them, he said.
I want to know if the players are a state or a church? Which is it?
players should walk out
Football is a religion in many areas, so that makes them a Church.
I used to live in Jonesboro near the university. This was back before they changed the team names from the Arkansas State Indians to the Arkansas State Red Wolves. Totally politically correct these days.
Cowards.
If America is not a Christian nation, it will be part of the Islamic nation.
In a sane world Rebecca Markert would be taken out
and flogged, as an example to the rest of her organization.
...and this breaks which law, exactly?
Pandering is a mistake. Pandering to the ignorant is a bigger mistake. Acting out of cowardice is the biggest mistake.
Only if "the state" means "everything."
But in this insane world, nattering nabobs such as herself have the suits who run our universities petrified with fear, like rabbits in front of boa constrictors.
I wish the football team had said in unison, “Go to hell! We’re not changing our helmets.”
And then told this Rebecca broad to shove it.
Freedom From Religion Foundation
... much like Slavery is Freedom
The War on Christianity continues..
It’s time for this sh*t to end....
Ms. Markert should join the team. I’m certain that she would make a great tackling dummy.
“...violated separation of church and state...”
Where exactly is this phrase in the Constitution of the United States of America????????
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