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AmericaMaking the Bible official state book forces religion upon Tennesseans | Opinion

Making the Bible official state book forces religion upon Tennesseans | Opinion

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The Tennessee Statehouse needs to stop attempting to foist Christianity upon the residents of the state and start working to address their real needs.

ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw== Making the Bible official state book forces religion upon Tennesseans | Opinion

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  • Annie Laurie Gaylor is the co-founder and co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation

A proposal to anoint the Bible as Tennessee’s official state book is not only unconstitutional, it is also an affront to true religious freedom.

A resolution to do so passed the House on April 1 and has been sent to the Senate floor. The Tennessee Constitution specifically guarantees “that no preference shall ever be given by law to any religious establishment or mode of worship.”

What could show more preference than having a state legislature designate one religion’s so-called holy book as its official book?

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Such attempts have happened in the past

In 2016, former Gov. Bill Haslam properly vetoed a similar bill after Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery noted that it violates both the federal and state constitutions. 

Imagine the uproar and consternation that would attend the introduction of a bill to designate the Quran as Tennessee’s official state book. It is equally contrary to our nation’s religious freedom to single out the Christian Bible.

Under the First Amendment, citizens are free to choose any “holy book” they like, or none at all — the choice of 26% of the American population that is currently religiously unaffiliated.

The United States was not founded on the Bible or any “holy book,” but on our secular and godless Constitution, which grants sovereignty not to a deity or a “holy book” but to “We the People.”

The founders were well aware of the horrors of the Inquisition, the Crusades, the Thirty Years War, the witch hunts, and the persecution of various faiths in the individual colonies. That’s why they wanted no part of religion in government.

This bill is fiscally irresponsible, as it would almost certainly result in a preventable lawsuit that would cost state taxpayers dearly.

The General Assembly’s Fiscal Review Committee in 2016 estimated such a lawsuit could have cost Tennessee more than $100,000.

Religious faith is a matter for private conscience, not state endorsement.

In his decision upholding the Freedom From Religion Foundation’s challenge of Christian indoctrination in Rhea County public schools in Tennessee, Chief U.S. District Judge R. Allan Edgar of Chattanooga wisely noted, “A state-created orthodoxy puts at grave risk freedom of belief and conscience, which is the sole assurance that religious faith is real, not imposed.”

In a pandemic, with so much at stake, the Tennessee Statehouse needs to stop attempting to foist Christianity upon the residents of the state and start working to address their real needs.

Annie Laurie Gaylor is the co-founder and co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, a national nonprofit with more than 35,000 members and several chapters all across the country, including hundreds of members and a chapter in Tennessee. FFRF protects the constitutional separation between state and church and educates about nontheism.

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