Education

Right-To-Pray Proposal Unveiled

By Mark Walsh — April 02, 1997 1 min read
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Republicans in Congress last week unveiled their latest proposal for a constitutional amendment designed to guarantee the right to pray and display religious symbols in public schools and other public places.

Rep. Ernest Istook, R-Okla., said he would introduce a 52-word amendment that would guarantee people the right to pray in public, including students in public schools. But the measure would prohibit the government from composing school prayers or from compelling anyone to join in prayers.

“This amendment is the only way we can end 30 years of court decisions that turned First Amendment rights upside down,” said Rep. Istook, who will formally introduce the measure after Congress returns from its spring recess. During the last Congress, competing proposals for prayer amendments divided Republicans in the House, and no measure ever reached the floor. (“Despite Promise, School-Prayer Measure Appears Dead,” Sept. 25, 1996.)

Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry J. Hyde, R-Ill., the sponsor of a measure that competed with Mr. Istook’s proposal during the last Congress, has indicated that he will not introduce his own language this term. Mr. Hyde’s measure included broader language on religious expression that did not specifically mention prayer.

Rep. Istook’s language was endorsed by Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., as well as by such conservative groups as the Christian Coalition, the Family Research Council, and the American Family Association.

Ralph Reed, the executive director of the Chesapeake, Va.-based Christian Coalition, appeared at a news conference last week with Mr. Istook and said his group will spend up to $2 million in support of the proposed amendment.

However, at least three conservative Christian organizations have signaled that they will withhold their support from Mr. Istook’s approach, which they believe could be detrimental to religious minorities. The groups are the National Association of Evangelicals, the Christian Legal Society, and the Southern Baptist Convention’s Christian Life Commission.

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