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Federal appeals court wrestles with Boston City Council invocation issue
By adamg on Tue, 05/07/2024 - 3:47pm
The Courthouse News Service reports on a hearing today before the First Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston on the City Council's decades-long policy of having a local member of the clergy open its weekly meetings with an invocation.
The hearing came on the Satanic Temple's appeal of a district court judge's ruling allowing the council to continue not inviting the group to give an invocation.
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Have any of the councilors
Have any of the councilors commented on the issue? You'd think at least one of them would acknowledge they should just retire the Invocation system.
Yes, there were several quotes in the article we are discussing
So...
...favoring an establishment of religion is "having a positive impact on my community"?
(I guess if it's your religion, yeah...)
We're going by where the church is headquartered?
So only invocations given by Christian Scientists then?
Christian Scientists, rabbis
Christian Scientists, rabbis whose synagogue isn't affiliated with any larger Jewish organization, if one of them is in Boston proper, maybe some non-denominational Protestant ministers, there's probably a Wiccan priestess or priest whose coven is within city limits...
but not most of the people they're currently inviting.
I wasn't quite sure on non-denominational etc
Couldn't you technically argue they don't have any headquarters at all?
But regardless, as far as "out of town headquarters", Salem is a lot closer than Rome, Constantinople, London, King of Prussia...
I love the troll by the satanistas
You can't exclude, if you are inviting religion into the body politic, you have to let everyone's faith in
Send in the goons
Send in the goons
Establishment Clause
The U.S. Bill of Rights
Amendment 1
This isn't hard. City council shouldn't get to use the power of the government to promote their favorite religions or exclude the ones they dislike.
Councilors can go knock on doors like Jehovah's Witnesses or Mormons if they want to "spread the word" or head to the churches/temples for campaigning to religious groups.
just for the record
The 14th Amendment means that states can't choose either a church to establish within the state. In the early years of American independence, some though not all states did favor a specific Christian church.
(Broadly speaking, the Supreme Court ruled that the 14th Amendment means the Bill of Rights applies to actions by individual states; this also means people can demand a jury trial in state courts. And, I suppose, that they can't make you house state National Guard troops in your spare bedroom.)
Which city councilor called it absurd …
… allow them to do an invocation?
It’s absurd to have any invocation.