States seek to put 10 Commandments in schools, sparking legal battles
Red states in growing numbers are boldly reclaiming America’s moral roots. Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas have passed laws mandating the Ten Commandments be displayed in public schools, sparking fierce legal battles, as Newsweek reports. These fights could soon land before the U.S. Supreme Court, testing the line between faith and government.
Laws in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas require public schools to post the Ten Commandments, prompting lawsuits claiming these measures violate the First Amendment’s separation of church and state.
Critics argue this is a Christian nationalist push, tied to initiatives like Project 2025. Supporters, however, see it as a return to foundational values that shaped the nation.
In Arkansas, seven families sued after Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed a law requiring the Ten Commandments in classrooms and libraries.
They claim it tramples constitutional rights. This isn’t just about plaque -- it’s about whose values get to define public education.
Louisiana law rejected
Louisiana’s similar law didn’t survive a federal appeals court. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals called it “plainly unconstitutional” in a ruling days after Arkansas’s lawsuit. Attorney General Liz Murrill vowed to appeal, eyeing a U.S. Supreme Court showdown.
Texas faced its own challenge when Dallas families and faith leaders filed a federal lawsuit.
They argue that the law forces students into religious conformity, violating freedom of belief. It’s a classic clash: individual liberty versus collective heritage.
Critics like Rachel Laser of Americans United for Separation of Church and State cry foul, claiming these laws push “one narrow set of religious beliefs” on kids. Laser’s wrong -- schools aren’t churches, but displaying historical moral codes isn’t coercion. It’s a nod to the principles that built the West.
Christian nationalism or historical roots?
Laser also warns that Christian nationalists see allies in the Supreme Court’s conservative majority. She fears the court might ignore precedent like Stone v. Graham, a 1980 case striking down a Kentucky Ten Commandments law. Her panic overlooks the court’s duty to balance tradition with liberty.
By February of this year, at least 15 Republican-led states had introduced similar bills, per Stateline. This isn’t a fringe movement -- it’s a groundswell. Conservatives argue these laws restore the moral clarity public schools have lost to progressive agendas.
Mikey Weinstein of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation calls Christian nationalism a “weaponized” distortion of faith. He’s half-right: faith shouldn’t be a club to beat others with. But dismissing the Ten Commandments as mere religious dogma ignores their role in shaping Western law.
Framers’ intent debated
Weinstein claims the Constitution’s framers rejected Europe’s church-state entanglements, citing the Salem Witch Trials. True, they built a wall between church and state—but not an iron curtain. The Ten Commandments’ influence on American law is undeniable, from property rights to prohibitions on murder.
Patrick Elliott of the Freedom From Religion Foundation argues that displaying the Ten Commandments favors Christianity and coerces belief. Coercion? Hardly -- nobody’s forcing kids to pray; it’s a display, not a sermon.
Kevin Bolling of the Secular Student Alliance insists the government shouldn’t endorse any religion. He’s got a point, but the Ten Commandments aren’t just religious -- they’re a historical artifact. Banning them feels more like erasing history than protecting freedom.
Texas defends historical approach
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott defends the law, emphasizing the Ten Commandments’ influence on Texas history. He’s not wrong -- those principles guided the state’s founders. Critics might scoff, but history isn’t erased by discomfort.
Texas Rep. Brent Money pushes further, urging Bible study in schools. His enthusiasm for faith is refreshing, but it risks alienating those who value secular education. Balance matters -- history can inform without dictating.
Rep. Candy Noble frames the law as recognizing the Ten Commandments’ educational and judicial importance. Critics like Heather L. Weaver of the ACLU celebrate the Louisiana ruling as a win for public education. They’re both right: it’s about heritage, but schools aren’t Sunday schools.




