Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Must not be respectful of prayer?

I sometimes am in the position of being present where prayers are being said and, even though I am an atheist, I always bow my head to some extent as a mark of respect for the occasion and the feelings of the people around me. So bowing your head may or may not indicate what your beliefs are and it is an impertinence to be making any enquiry about it or making any criticism of it. It is an entirely personal matter
Several public high school football coaches in Westmoreland, Tenn. are in trouble for bowing their heads during a student-led prayer before a recent game. According to local NBC affiliate WSMV, the coaches didn’t say anything aloud themselves, but bowed their heads in observance alongside the students.

Word got back to the principal and the school district, which found the coaches’ participation to be an uncomfortable mix of religion and public school. “We’ve been telling our principals to kind of be looking for those things, because that is kind of a shift in how things have been done,” district spokesman Jeremy Johnson told WSMV. “It can in no way appear like it’s endorsed by Sumner County Schools personnel.”

The coaches weren’t disciplined, but were made to sign letters indicating they understood the school’s policy, which prohibits staff from appearing to participate in a student prayer in any way, even if it takes place after hours.

But resident Tony Bentle, who has been refereeing football games in the town for years, said crackdown “blew [his] mind.” “We’re just respectful, God-fearing people up here,” he said. “Nobody in this town is offended if you pray. Nobody.”

Source

6 comments:

Brian from Rochester said...

Heck, they weren't even praying, just showing respect. Now that's frowned upon?

A. Levy said...

I don't blame the shcool officials for this. I blame the local resident for tolerating this kind of behavior by their local bureaucrats. If you act like sheep, people will assume that you are.

"Political correctness is a greater threat to our freedom and liberty than is terrorism..."

Use the Name, Luke said...

Heck, they weren't even praying, just showing respect. Now that's frowned upon?

Give'm a few years. Then they will get in trouble for not actively shouting the students down.

Ironically, if any of the couches were atheists, they were demonstrating actual tolerance.

Anonymous said...

Luke, I did not know that furniture can be atheists. Must be in the Bible.....

Use the Name, Luke said...

Oops. That should be "coaches".

It's interesting how a single letter in the wrong place can change a meaning. Darned fumble fingers…

Anonymous said...

“Nobody in this town is offended if you pray. Nobody.” Well, apparently the principal was. How does "Congress shall make no laws..." translate into high school coaches being told not to bow their heads?!?