Overview:

โ€ข Louisiana has become the first state to require the posting of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms, sparking controversy.
โ€ข The law, signed by Gov. Jeff Landry, also allows the display of historical documents.
โ€ข Legal experts anticipate litigation given previous Supreme Court rulings on similar issues.

Louisiana is not a stranger to controversy over religion in schools. In 2023, it joined almost 20 states that require or allow officials in public schools to post the national motto, โ€œIn God We Trust.โ€

Now, the Bayou State has become the first in the nation to require the posting of the Ten Commandments in classrooms in public schools, colleges and universities.

Gov. Jeff Landry signed House Bill 71 into law on June 19, 2024, requiring officials in public schools, including colleges and universities, to post a specific version of the Ten Commandments. The text is similar to the King James translation of the Bible used in many Protestant churches.

Officials must post a context statement highlighting the role of the Ten Commandments in American history and may also display the Pilgrimsโ€™ Mayflower Compact, the Declaration of Independence and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, a federal enactment to settle the frontier โ€“ and the earliest congressional document encouraging the creation of schools.

One of the billโ€™s supporters, state Sen. J. Adam Bass, defended it on the grounds that its โ€œpurpose is not solely religious.โ€ He told fellow lawmakers that the Ten Commandments are important because of their โ€œhistorical significance, which is simply one of many documents that display the history of our country and foundation of our legal system.โ€

As someone who teaches and researches law around religion and education, I believe the law is problematic. It is likely to invite litigation at a time when the Supreme Courtโ€™s thinking on religion and state is shifting.

How SCOTUS has ruled before

Litigation over the Ten Commandments is not new. More than 40 years ago, in Stone v. Graham, the Supreme Court rejected a Kentucky statute that mandated displays of the Ten Commandments in classrooms.

The court reasoned that the underlying law violated the First Amendmentโ€™s establishment clause โ€“ โ€œCongress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religionโ€ โ€“ because the mandate lacked a secular purpose.

The justices were not persuaded by a small notation on posters that described the Ten Commandments as the โ€œfundamental legal code of Western Civilization and the Common Law of the United States.โ€

Twenty-five years later, the Supreme Court again took up cases challenging public displays of the Ten Commandments, although not in schools. This time, the justices reached mixed results.

The first arose in Kentucky, where officials had erected a county courthouse display about texts including the Ten Commandments, the Magna Carta, the Declaration of Independence and a biblical citation. In a 2005 ruling in McCreary County, Kentucky v. American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, the five-person majority agreed that display of the Ten Commandments violated the establishment clause, largely because it lacked a secular legislative purpose.

On the same day, however, the Supreme Court reached the opposite result in Van Orden v. Perry, a case from Texas. The court upheld the constitutionality of a display of the Ten Commandments on the grounds of the state capitol as one of 17 monuments and 21 historical markers commemorating Texasโ€™ history.

Unlike the fairly new display in Kentucky, the one in Texas, which had existed since the early 1960s, was erected using private funds. The court permitted the Ten Commandments to remain because, despite their religious significance, the monument was a more passive display than in Stone: spread out across 22 acres, rather than posted on the courthouse door.

The dome of a white, ornate building rises in the background, and a gray monument with writing sits in the foreground.
The 5-foot-tall stone slab bearing the Ten Commandments near the Texas State Capitol. A challenge to the display reached the Supreme Court.
AP Photo/Harry Cabluck

Louisianaโ€™s law

Louisianaโ€™s law requires public school officials to display framed copies of the Ten Commandments in all public school classrooms. Posters must be at least 11-by-14 inches and be printed with a large, easily readable font. The legislation allows, but does not require, officials to use state funds to purchase these posters. Displays can also be received as donations or purchased with gifted funds.

The billโ€™s author, state Rep. Dodie Horton, previously sponsored Louisianaโ€™s law mandating that โ€œIn God We Trustโ€ be posted in public school classrooms.

In defending the Ten Commandments proposal, she said it honors the countryโ€™s religious origins.

โ€œThe Ten Commandments are the basis of all laws in Louisiana,โ€ she told fellow lawmakers, โ€œand given all the junk our children are exposed to in classrooms today, itโ€™s imperative that we put the Ten Commandments back in a prominent position.โ€

Justifying the bill, Horton pointed to Kennedy v. Bremerton School District, a 2022 Supreme Court decision. Here, the justices held that educational officials could not prevent a football coach from praying on the field at the end of games, because he engaged in personal religious observance protected by the First Amendment.

โ€œThe landscape has changed,โ€ she said.

New frontier

Indeed it has.

For decades, the Supreme Court used a set of criteria often called the Lemon v. Kurtzman test to assess whether a government action violated the establishment clause. Under this test, when a government action or policy intersects with religion, it had to meet three criteria. A policy had to have a secular legislative purpose; its principal or primary effect could not advance religion; and it could not result in excessive entanglement between state and religious officials.

Another test the Supreme Court sometimes applied, stemming from Lynch v. Donnelly in 1984, invalidated governmental actions appearing to endorse religion.

The majority of the current court, though, abandoned both the Lemon and endorsement tests. In the majority opinion in Kennedy v. Bremerton, Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that โ€œthe Establishment Clause must be interpreted by โ€˜reference to historical practices and understandings.โ€™โ€ He added that the court โ€œlong ago abandoned Lemon and its endorsement test offshoot.โ€

What that new standard means remains to be seen.

In my view, the Louisiana lawโ€™s supportersโ€™ reliance on Kennedy is mistaken. That decision upheld voluntary, private prayer, not mandated postings of religious statements, overlooking many studentsโ€™ beliefs.

More than 80 years ago, in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette the Supreme Court decided in a 6-3 opinion that students cannot be compelled to participate in saluting the American flag, including the words โ€œunder Godโ€ in the Pledge of Allegiance, if doing so goes against their religious beliefs.

Under Louisianaโ€™s new law, students need not recite the Ten Commandments. Yet, given their distinctly religious message, I believe House Bill 71 faces a dubious future.

This article was updated on June 19, 2024 after Louisianaโ€™s governor signed House Bill 71 into law.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Charles J. Russo, University of Dayton

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Charles J. Russo does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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