Supreme Court declines to revisit school prayer loudspeaker ban
In a move that leaves many religious liberty advocates frustrated, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up an appeal involving pregame prayer at public school football games.
The case stemmed from a 2015 incident in which Cambridge Christian School was barred from delivering a pregame prayer over the stadium loudspeaker before a state championship game in Florida, and its effort to overturn longstanding legal precedent came to an end when the Court said no thanks to hearing the case, as CBS News reports.
Back in December 2015, Cambridge Christian faced off against University Christian at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, a public venue overseen by the Florida High School Athletic Association (FHSAA).
Prayer Request Denied Over Constitutional Concerns
Before the game kicked off, Cambridge Christian requested permission to offer a prayer over the stadium’s public address system. Their request was denied.
The head of school made a direct appeal to FHSAA executive director Dr. Roger Dearing, hoping to allow “two Christian schools to honor their Lord before the game and pray.”
Dearing pulled out the Establishment Clause playbook, citing concerns that using the loudspeaker—a government-controlled platform—could be perceived as state endorsement of religion. “The Citrus Bowl is a public facility and the FHSAA is a state actor,” Dearing stated, pointing to the Supreme Court’s precedent in Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe.
Players Still Prayed — Just Silently
Despite being denied the mic, both teams managed to pray together privately on the field before the game. So apparently it’s okay to pray in public—just not where people can hear it.
Cambridge Christian didn’t take the snub lying down. In 2016, they sued the FHSAA, arguing that their First Amendment rights were being trampled: both their freedom of speech and their free exercise of religion.
But by 2022, a federal district court ruled against the school. According to the court, anything said through the loudspeaker at a state event constituted government speech, not private expression.
Courts Rule Government Microphones, Government Message
Not surprisingly, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals stood by the lower court’s decision. The bench ruled that the FHSAA was regulating its own governmental expression and wasn’t violating anyone’s constitutional rights.
The appellate court also smacked down the religious liberty argument, rejecting claims that the school’s free exercise was burdened in any meaningful way.
That didn’t stop Cambridge Christian from appealing up the legal food chain. The school petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to not only reverse lower court decisions but also rethink the 25-year-old Santa Fe ruling that’s been the firewall against religious speech at public school events.
Supreme Court Silence Keeps Status Quo
This week, the Court refused to take the case—no commentary, no dissents, just a quiet door slam for those hoping for a shift in judicial winds.
Cambridge Christian’s legal team warned that letting the lower ruling stand meant “state actors will be able to claim that virtually all private speech and religious exercise in a government setting lacks First Amendment protection.” That’s not just a closed door—it’s a bolted one with a sign that reads “Private ideas not welcome.”
Ironically, after all the courtroom wrangling, the Florida legislature ended up passing a law that now allows schools to request brief remarks over the loudspeaker at such events. But that change came too late to affect past rulings—or the precedent that still holds sway from the Supreme Court’s own past.
No Mic for God, But Lawyers Still Get Air Time
For many Americans, especially those who still believe faith has a place in the public square, the ruling—and the Court’s silence—feels like a steady march toward cultural sanitization disguised as neutrality.
Pregame prayers aren’t about proselytizing. They’re about honoring beliefs, showing gratitude, and—as Cambridge Christian aimed for—uniting two teams under shared values, if only for a moment.
In the end, nobody was forced to pray. The only thing rendered compulsory was silence—from the Christian kids, and now from the nation’s highest court.





