From State Sen. Joey Hensley
I’ve published this information for many years, and every year it seems to reach more people than it did the year before. My hope is it will serve as a reminder to everyone what Christmas is truly about, and that each year it reaches someone new. I hope you enjoy it.
As Christmas approaches, and we celebrate the holiday season, many wonder just what the law says about religious expression. I want to offer some clarification about what is legally acceptable seasonal religious expression in our community.
Over the past few years, it seems that misunderstandings of the origin and meaning of the phrase “separation of church and state” have encouraged a few to try to remove all references to religion from schools, government buildings, and public property.
The phrase “separation of church and state” doesn’t appear in the Constitution. It originated in 1802 in a private letter from Thomas Jefferson to a group of Baptist ministers in Danbury, Conn., - 13 years after the First Amendment was passed.
Courts have consistently ruled since then that eliminating all signs of religion from the public square is just as unconstitutional as establishing a religion. In response to recent efforts to censor Christmas in our country, it might help to clarify forms of religious expression that are legal under the Constitution in case law.
Students are free to express religious beliefs in school. As long as it’s not materially disruptive, students may express their beliefs verbally with phrases such as “Merry Christmas”; through clothing that conveys religious messages with words, colors, or symbols; or through written materials like school assignments, religious cards, gifts, or tracts given to teachers and classmates. (Lovell v. City of Griffin, 303 U.S. 444 [1938]; Westfield High School L. I. F. E. Club v. City of Westfield, 249 F. Supp.2d 98 [D. Mass. 2003].
Legislation allowing school officials and students to say Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, or Happy Holidays to one another has become law in the past years. The statute seeks to allow the greeting to be exchanged in schools without fear of a lawsuit.
At school, students can sing Christmas carols at concerts, teach the biblical origins of Christmas, and perform the Christmas story of Mary, Joseph, Jesus, and the shepherds.
The Constitution does not require the exclusion of religion from public institutions. Christmas is part of our heritage and ingrained in our culture; therefore, expression of it through art, music and teaching of it as history serve religious and secular purposes.
Provided these activities promote the “advancement of the students’ knowledge of our society’s cultural and religious heritage; an opportunity for students to perform a full range of music, poetry, and drama that is likely to be of interest to the students and their audience,” any of these activities can be conducted in public schools without creating an Establishment Clause problem (Flory v. Sioux Falls School District, 619 F.2s 1311 [6th Cir. 1980]; Stone v. Graham, 449 U.S. 39 [1980].
Nativity displays can be placed in schools, parks, and government buildings. No Supreme Court decision has ever forbidden a private citizen from setting up a nativity display in a public park, as parks, streets, and sidewalks are all public forums traditionally devoted to “assembly and debate.” Such displays may also be placed in public buildings, provided the government has opened the property for expressive activity.
The Free Exercise Clause assures religious speakers the same access to public forums given to secular speakers (Americans United for Separation of Church and State v. City of Grand Rapids, 980 F.2d 1538 [1992]. Nor can private citizens be forced to include objects such as snowmen in faith-based displays (West Virginia v. Burnette, 319 U.S. 624, [1943].
Furthermore, even under current decisions, city governments may include a nativity in a seasonal display provided 1) there are enough secular objects along with religious ones, 2) secular objects are in close proximity to the religious ones, and 3) overall, the display is sufficiently secular. (Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 U.S. 668,671 [1984].
U.S. Constitution laws and court decisions are constructed to protect and permit religious expression in public schools and government buildings. Attempts to remove Christ from Christmas do not stem from the Constitution, but from those who simply seek to silence the Christian message. That act is a violation of the Constitution. Merry Christmas to each of you, and my best wishes for a joyous New Year.
Contact Senator Hensley at 425 5th Avenue North, Suite 74 Nashville Tenn., 37243.
His office telephone number is 615-741-3100, or toll free at 1-800-449-8366 ext. 13100 or fax 615-253-0231.
Hensley lives at 855 Summertown Highway, Hohenwald, Tenn., 38462. His home telephone number is 931-796-2018; cell phone 931-212-8823 and E-mail is sen. joey. hensley@capitol,tn, gov
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