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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(5 pp) It is essential that it be understood that
separation of church and state, also in the First
Amendment, is a means of protecting religious
liberty by assuring that the government does not
improperly support one religion over another or all
religions over no religions. Separation church and
state is not a technical concept, then, but one
that goes deeply to the safeguarding of liberty in
this country. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBsepchS.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
one is considering the debate concerning religious expression in school, it is often addressed under the title of Separation of Church and State. Yet more rightly speaking it is
more appropriate to agreed to that separation under the title of Religious Liberty, and thats for two reasons. The first reason is that the First Amendment also protects free
expression of religion, and the American Civil Liberties Union has often supported the rights of those whom the state has abridged. Even more important, perhaps, it is essential that
it be understood that separation of church and state, also in the First Amendment, is a means of protecting religious liberty by assuring that the government does not improperly support
one religion over another or all religions over no religions. Separation church and state is not a technical concept, then, but one that goes deeply to the safeguarding of liberty
in this country (Dorsen ppg). History The debate regarding religion in our classrooms is by no means a recent phenomenon. With the development of the American public school system in
the 19th century, controversy erupted about the place of religious values and convictions in schools that welcomed children of many faiths (and none). In some communities, these questions led to
bitter conflict and debate. In Philadelphia, for example, full-scale riots and bloodshed erupted in the 1840s over which version of the Bible should be used in classroom devotions. In Cincinnati,
a "Bible War" divided the city in the 1870s after the school board discontinued Bible instruction. Following confrontations like these, many Americans came to realize that interfaith harmony and community
goodwill could best be realized by keeping public schools neutral on questions of religion. Contrary to current public perception, which seems quite content to shake a fist and declare that
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