A federal judge ruled against the display of the Ten Commandments in schools, but these same commandments are proudly displayed in the chambers and the building of the Supreme Court of the United States!
A federal judge in Texas has struck down a new law requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments in classrooms, marking yet another chapter in America’s long struggle to balance tradition, faith, and constitutional principles.
The ruling, handed down by U.S. District Judge Fred Biery, has immediate consequences for 11 school districts, including those in Austin and Houston, but its implications could stretch far beyond Texas.
The blocked law, Senate Bill 10, was signed earlier this year by Governor Greg Abbott. It mandated that every public classroom display a copy of the Ten Commandments, a measure its supporters argued honored American tradition and underscored the moral foundation of the law.
Opponents, however, saw something more troubling. Families of multiple faiths and nonreligious Texans challenged the law with support from the ACLU, and the Freedom from Religion Foundation. Their argument was simple: the law compels religious expression, violates the First Amendment, and imposes one particular version of the Ten Commandments that does not reflect all faith traditions.
Judge Biery agreed, noting that public school students are a “captive audience.” If the Commandments were displayed, he wrote, teachers would inevitably be drawn into religious discussions, blurring the line between education and evangelism. His ruling joins similar decisions in Louisiana and Arkansas, where courts have also blocked laws attempting to mandate religious displays in classrooms.
Steve Eichler, JD – Founder of the Patriot Command Center In today’s interview: “During my first year in law school, I learned the Ten Commandments serve as the foundational bedrock of law for the United States, and from these commandments, jurisprudence springs. This is a fact and not a religious statement.”
While the ruling applies only to specific Texas school districts for now, the case is almost certain to climb the appeals ladder, with many observers predicting it could land before the U.S. Supreme Court. If that happens, the consequences will ripple nationwide. A Supreme Court decision could either reinforce or dismantle decades of precedent limiting religious displays in public schools.
This raises an uncomfortable paradox: How can a lower courts strike down Ten Commandments mandates; the Commandments themselves appear in America’s highest court of justice?
Inside the U.S. Supreme Court chamber, Moses is depicted holding tablets inscribed with Hebrew script. Sculpted friezes and pediments honor the Ten Commandments as part of a broader tapestry of historical and moral codes, standing alongside symbols of secular law.
Supporters of SB10 argue that if the Ten Commandments can be carved into the very walls of the Supreme Court, why should schools be barred from displaying them? For them, the Commandments symbolize not only religious belief but also the moral underpinnings of Western legal traditions. To remove them, they argue, is to deny history.
But critics draw a crucial distinction: in the Supreme Court, the Ten Commandments are displayed as historical art within a mosaic of many influences on law. In a classroom, however, the Commandments are presented directly to impressionable students, often without context, creating the appearance of state-endorsed religion. This difference, they argue, is what makes classroom displays unconstitutional. However, if every student is provided context, clearly delineating the fact that the rule of law is based upon these ancient commandments, which extend into today’s society then the student can be free of religious overtones.
For now, Texas joins a growing list of states where efforts to post the Ten Commandments in classrooms have hit legal roadblocks. But the debate is far from settled. Conservatives see such laws as a way to state what America was founded upon and to teach generations that they are guidelines for society even without religious implications. Civil liberties advocates see them as unconstitutional government overreach into forced religion.
Ultimately, the Supreme Court may be asked to decide if the Ten Commandments can be viewed as a social construct or a religious symbol.
The question plaguing the court is, is Moses on the chamber wall a celebration of history or an endorsement of faith? And if the justices uphold classroom displays, will the wall separating church and state, so carefully constructed over centuries, be fortified by clearly demonstrating that religion may be in the eye of the beholder and not plastered on the wall?
Final Word: What type of a nation would America become if every person obeyed the Ten Commandments…exactly my point!
Replies
Truth!!! I have to wonder how they're being paid to do so....and why! Well I know why. It's to destroy the greatest country ewver on this planet.
They are being paid somehow, even if it's insider trading. Cash, stock, properties, who knows, but they all have reaped tremendous wealth and barely show up, only long enough to vote against the country and against small business, but surely for corporate America. The love of money is the root of all evil. Let their pride take them down. Let justice reign and rule.
It is truth that a nation without common language cannot survive, it becomes each for their own. remember satan never sleeps either. Michael Savage: Borders. Language. Culture.
Indeed!!! AND remove ALL of congress to get rid of this trash and start over with adults. The commie trash is on both sides of the aisle.
There should be TERM LIMITS for congress just like the President. There are always qualified people willing to work for the country without becoming career politicians. We need fresh ideas occasionally and the stale career politicians are not giving it to us.
Totally agree!!!
Politics was never meant to be a career. The Founders envisioned citizen legislators who did their job and returned home, not career politicians.
True that - -
Yep.
Just for the heck of it all: Webster's 1828 dictionary online teaches and defines truthfully, as a glimpse into Our History: How many of these have to do with the Bible of Christianity??