Samantha Jones, a senior at Highland
Regional High School in New Jersey, is going to court to defend her right to
say the Pledge of Allegiance … including the words “one nation under God.” Samantha and her family filed a response to a
lawsuit from an atheist association which seeks to prevent public school
students from reciting the Pledge in its entirety.
“When I stand up, put my hand over
my heart and say the Pledge of Allegiance, I am recognizing that my rights come
from God, not from the government,” said Jones. “If anyone wants to remain
silent, that is their right; but it is not their right to silence me.”
This is the second time the atheist
group, the American Humanist Association
(AHA), has sued in the state of NJ
(read my blog dated April 30). Yet
another suit, raising identical claims, was unanimously rejected by
Massachusetts’ highest court earlier this year.
When the Jones family found out
about the lawsuit against the Pledge, they sought to intervene to defend their
children’s rights. A NJ state court
recently allowed them to join the case. They
are represented by the Becket Fund for
Religious Liberty (BFRL). Also allowed to intervene in the case are the Knights of Columbus – the world’s largest
Catholic fraternal organization and one of the Pledge’s historic defenders … along
with the American Legion.
“The Pledge is not a religious creed
or a prayer. It is a statement of our
nation’s political philosophy that rights come not from the state, but from
something higher—as our Declaration of Independence puts it, (‘Nature's God’)”
said Kristina Arriaga, Executive Director of the BFRL. “We are confident that
the court will uphold the right to say the Pledge in its entirety.”
The BFRL has successfully defended the Pledge of Allegiance at the
federal and state level. Courts have
pointed out that the Pledge is a voluntary patriotic exercise that teaches
American history and civics, and that no schoolchild is required to recite the
Pledge.
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
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