RIGHT TO PRAY IN THE NAME OF JESUS RESTORED IN NORTH CAROLINA
A federal district court lifted its order against the prayer policy of Forsyth County, North Carolina, Thursday in light of the Supreme Court's decision affirming prayer before public meetings.
After
winning that lawsuit in May, Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys
representing Forsyth County asked the district court to lift its order
against the county's prayer policy. The order required the county to
censor the way people pray to ensure only generic prayers are offered at
public meetings.
"All Americans should have the liberty to pray without being censored,
just as the Supreme Court found only a few months ago, and we are
delighted to see this freedom restored in Forsyth County," said ADF
Senior Counsel Brett Harvey. "The Supreme Court affirmed the freedom of
Americans to pray according to their consciences before public meetings.
For that reason, the district court was right to lift its previous
order against Forsyth County's prayer policy, which is clearly
constitutional."
The U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the U.S. District
Court for the Middle District of North Carolina's order in Joyner v.
Forsyth County in 2011. Although the Supreme Court declined to review
the case, it upheld a similar policy from the town of Greece, New York,
on May 5 and affirmed that Americans are free to pray according to their
own beliefs at public meetings. That cleared the way for uncensored
prayers to resume in Forsyth County.
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