Permanent Religious Displays
Permanent Religious Displays
and the Supreme Court
A second category of Supreme Court decisions
focuses on permanent, rather than seasonal, religious
displays that involve some form of government
sponsorship. Most of these cases involve
displays of the Ten Commandments.
The Stone Decision
The court’s first such decision came in Stone v. Graham (1980), a case that focused on a Kentucky
statute requiring public schools to post a copy of
the Ten Commandments in every classroom. The
state of Kentucky argued that the statute was
designed to show students the secular importance
of the Ten Commandments as “the fundamental
legal code of Western civilization and the common
law of the United States.” But the court
overturned the statute, concluding that the state
lacked a plausible secular purpose for posting what
the court saw as “undeniably a sacred text.” An
important factor in the court’s decision was the
public school setting. Courts have been especially
wary of religious activity in the classroom because
children are a captive audience and also are more
impressionable than adults.
Stone v. Graham (1980)
| Majority: | Minority: |
| Brennan | Blackmun |
| Marshall | Burger |
| Powell | Rehnquist |
| Stevens | Stewart |
| White | |
The Supreme Court returned to the issue of government
display of the Ten Commandments in two
cases decided on the same day in 2005. Rather
than leading to clear, consistent rules, however, the
sharply divided decisions in these cases further
underscored the difficulty of the issues for local
and state governments as well as for the courts.
The McCreary County Decision
The first case, McCreary County v. ACLU of
Kentucky, involved two Kentucky counties that had
posted framed copies of the Ten Commandments
in their courthouses. When a lawsuit was filed
demanding that the Ten Commandments be
removed, the counties expanded the displays to include several additional documents, each of
which emphasized the important role of religion in
American history and law. After a federal district
court ordered the counties to remove the modified
displays, the counties added even more documents
along with a label:“The Foundations of American
Law and Government Display.” The displays
included the lyrics to The Star-Spangled Banner as
well as the texts of the Declaration of Independence,
the Mayflower Compact, the Bill of Rights,
the Magna Carta and the preamble to the
Kentucky Constitution, plus documents explaining
the displays.
Justice David Souter, writing for a 5-4 majority,
stated that the two Kentucky counties had a religious
purpose in posting the Ten Commandments
in the courthouses, thus violating the Establishment
Clause. Souter emphasized the principle of government
neutrality among religions, and between
religion generally and nonreligious beliefs. That
principle, he wrote, ensures that religion does not
ultimately cause political divisiveness and civic
exclusion. The threats of divisiveness and exclusion
are especially acute, he said, when government
permanently and prominently displays a text that
is unquestionably religious.
McCreary County v. ACLU
of Kentucky (2005)
| Majority: | Minority: |
| Breyer | Kennedy |
| Ginsburg | Rehnquist |
| O’Connor | Scalia |
| Souter | Thomas |
| Stevens | |
Souter argued that courts must determine the predominant
purpose of the display as it would be
seen and understood by a reasonable observer. In
this case, he said, a reasonable observer would conclude
that the two Kentucky counties wanted to
highlight the religious nature of the Ten
Commandments. Souter stated that although the
counties attempted to mask this religious purpose
by surrounding the Ten Commandments with
other documents, those documents failed to create
a genuine secular context.
Justice Scalia wrote the dissenting opinion in
the case, asserting that the display of the Ten
Commandments had a clearly secular purpose –
namely, to demonstrate the role of religious teachings
in the development of American law. The
Establishment Clause, he stated, did not preclude
government from recognizing the civic importance
of religion. Moreover, he argued, the state should
not be prohibited from acknowledging, and even
favoring, the widespread belief in a single Creator.
The Van Orden Decision
The second case, Van Orden v. Perry, involved a
challenge to the presence on the Texas state
Capitol grounds of a stone monument inscribed
with the Ten Commandments. The Fraternal Order of Eagles, a primarily secular group that
erected similar monuments in other states and
cities during the 1950s and 1960s, donated the
display to Texas in 1961. It stood on the 22-acre
Capitol grounds along with 16 other statues or
memorials commemorating significant people and
events in Texas history.
In Van Orden, a splintered court ruled that the
Establishment Clause did not require Texas to
remove the monument inscribed with the Ten
Commandments from the grounds of its state
Capitol. No single opinion received support from
a majority of the court, but Chief Justice
Rehnquist, in an opinion for a plurality of the justices,
restated a common theme in cases involving
the Establishment Clause. In deciding such cases,
the chief justice wrote, courts must maintain a
proper division between church and state, yet do
so without “evinc[ing] a hostility to religion by
disabling the government from in some ways recognizing
our religious heritage.”
In the chief justice’s analysis, the display of the Ten
Commandments on the grounds of the Texas
Capitol was acceptable because the display constituted
only a “passive” recognition of the country’s
religious heritage. The stone monument did not
compel people seeing it to read the text, he said.
Rehnquist also noted the monument’s setting.
Because the monument stood outside the Capitol,
he wrote, there was little or no risk the state
would use the text “to press religious observance
upon [its] citizens.”
Justice Stephen Breyer provided the fifth vote for
the majority in Van Orden, but he did not join
Rehnquist’s opinion and chose to base his conclusion
on narrower grounds. This is important because
over the years, the court has consistently ruled that
when no single opinion represents a majority of
the court, the narrowest opinion that supports the
court’s decision is the controlling one. Because
Breyer qualified his approval of the Texas monument
with a set of limiting conditions, his opinion is
narrower than that of the plurality and thus is the
most significant guide for the lower courts.
Van Orden v. Perry (2005)
| Majority: | Minority: |
| Breyer | Ginsburg |
| Kennedy | O’Connor |
| Rehnquist | Souter |
| Scalia | Stevens |
| Thomas | |
In explaining his vote, Breyer did not focus on the
government’s authority to acknowledge religion’s
historical role in public life. Instead, he stressed the
link between civic tranquility and government neutrality
on religion. Breyer wrote that the Free
Exercise Clause, which protects the right of religious
belief and practice, as well as the Establishment
Clause are intended to prevent religion from producing
the kind of social conflict that would weaken
both religion and government. To guard against such
divisiveness, he argued, the government should neither
favor nor disfavor any particular religion, or religion
generally. But even some versions of neutrality
can cause divisiveness, he wrote, as would happen if
government sought to be “neutral” by completely
banishing religion from public life. Neutrality must
be tempered with tolerance for some religious
practices that might run counter to an absolutist
view of church-state separation. Such tempering,
Breyer wrote, cannot be reduced to a simple, clear
test; it requires the “exercise of legal judgment.”
Applying such legal judgment to the Texas monument,
Breyer acknowledged the religious character
of the Ten Commandments text but then evaluated the text’s religious character in light of
the setting and the monument’s origins. A primarily
secular organization had donated the monument
as part of a campaign against juvenile
delinquency, and, as already noted, the display was
part of a larger, outdoor setting that included
other commemorative markers.
Another key factor in Breyer’s opinion was that
the Texas monument had generated little controversy
during the 40 years it had stood on the
Capitol’s grounds. Breyer reasoned that an order to
remove the Texas monument – and dozens of similar
monuments across the country – would
inevitably generate clashes and “thereby create the
very kind of religiously based divisiveness that the
Establishment Clause seeks to avoid.”
In dissenting opinions, Justices Stevens, Souter,
O’Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg argued that
a reasonable observer would see the monument’s
text – with its large heading, “I am the Lord Thy
God” – as an endorsement of religion by the state.
They contended that the Texas monument was little
different from the Kentucky courthouse displays
that the court held unconstitutional in
McCreary County. In both cases, they argued, the
government failed to demonstrate a predominantly
secular motive for the displays.
The court’s decisions in these two cases are not
easily reconciled. Together, however, the two
cases suggest that it is the intent of those who
put up a permanent religious display – rather
than the display’s effect – that determines if it is
permissible. If the evidence points to a predominantly
religious purpose, a display is likely to be
found unconstitutional. If little or no such evidence
is available – as may occur when displays
have stood for decades – the courts are more
likely to permit them.
Permanent Religious Displays
and the Lower Courts
Before the Supreme Court issued its decisions
in the 2005 Ten Commandments cases, the
lower federal courts took their cues from earlier
high-court rulings that emphasized the context
of the displays and the perceptions of a reasonable
observer.
For example, in Friedman v. Board of
Commissioners of Bernalillo County (1985), the
10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a
New Mexico county’s use of a seal that included
a cross and the phrase, “With This We Conquer.”
The court concluded that the seal represented
the heritage, history and cultural pride of
the county and therefore did not endorse
Christianity. In Freethought Society v. Chester
County (2003), the 3rd Circuit upheld a
Pennsylvania county courthouse’s front-and-center
display of a bronze plaque containing
the Ten Commandments. In that case, the court
stated that a reasonable observer would conclude
the plaque did not endorse religious sentiments.
The court also stressed the plaque’s significance
as a symbol of law, and noted both the plaque’s
small size and the near illegibility of the text.
After the Supreme Court’s pair of 2005 decisions
in the Ten Commandments cases, however, lower
courts changed their focus. They have started considering
more closely whether the displays have a
predominantly religious purpose – the approach
the Supreme Court used in McCreary County.
They also are examining more closely the context
of the displays and their potential for political
divisiveness – as Breyer emphasized in Van Orden.
In 2006, for instance, a panel of the 5th Circuit
ruled that a Texas county’s display of an open
Bible in a glass-topped case near the entrance of
the county courthouse was constitutionally unacceptable.
A major factor in the court’s decision in
this case, Staley v. Harris County, was the county’s
rededication of the monument in 1995, when it
was refurbished thanks to efforts by a locally elected
judge who had campaigned on the promise of
restoring Christian principles to government. The
court concluded that those circumstances demonstrated
that the Bible display was intended to promote
Christianity. In April 2007, after the full 5th
Circuit reheard Staley, it dismissed the county’s
appeal as moot because the courthouse had been
closed for renovations and the Bible monument
had been placed temporarily in storage. However,
the full court also ruled that the original order
barring the display should remain in force, and
that the original order’s terms would govern any
future display of the monument by the county.
In contrast, in 2005, the 6th Circuit upheld a Ten
Commandments display in Kentucky’s Mercer
County courthouse. In ACLU of Kentucky v. Mercer
County, the court emphasized that the exhibit
included 10 other historical documents, including
copies of the Magna Carta and the Bill of Rights,
all displayed with prominence equal to that given
to the Ten Commandments. The court found that
the county had established a predominantly secular
rather than religious purpose for the display.
In a 2005 case originating in Nebraska, a federal
district court as well as the 8th Circuit initially
found unacceptable the city of Plattsmouth’s display
of a Ten Commandments monument that was
donated by the Fraternal Order of Eagles in the
1960s and situated in a public park 10 blocks from
City Hall. After the Supreme Court’s decision in
Van Orden, however, the Court of Appeals granted
a rehearing. By a vote of 9-2, the full appeals
court reversed itself, this time approving the
Plattsmouth monument.
The 8th Circuit’s opinion in ACLU v. City of
Plattsmouth emphasized that similar monuments
can be found elsewhere in the United States, and
that the Plattsmouth monument had been standing
for 35 years before suit was filed. It also noted
that the monument is considerably further from
any public building than the comparable monument
in Van Orden. As a result, the court concluded,
the Plattsmouth monument was a “passive
acknowledgment of the roles of God and religion
in our Nation’s history,” not a government
endorsement of religion. Federal district courts
have reached a similar conclusion in every subsequent
challenge to a monument that was donated
by the Fraternal Order of Eagles during the 1960s.
In every instance, the district courts followed the
principles laid out in Van Orden.
Adding another level of complexity, some cases
challenging government religious displays involve
state constitutional issues. One such challenge
focused on a large Latin cross marking a veterans’
memorial on public property in San Diego. In 15
years of litigation, state and federal courts found
the cross to be a violation of the California
Constitution, which prohibits religious preferences
by the state. In 2002, in Paulson v. City of San
Diego, the 9th Circuit ordered authorities to
remove the cross. However, the U.S. Congress
transferred ownership of the site to the Interior
Department in 2006. Therefore, the issue now
must be considered only under the U.S.
Constitution rather than under the California
Constitution. As a result, the Supreme Court
blocked the 9th Circuit’s order to remove the
cross. Federal courts will now have to consider the
original purpose for placing the cross on the site
and weigh its religious character against the
potential divisiveness of removing it.
Photo credit: Corbis