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Prayer in public schools protected under Constitution, Trump admin says

The U.S. Education Department released new guidelines on “prayer and religious expression in public schools.”

School, Students, Desks
A boy writing in a notebook on a school desk. Credit: RDNE Stock Project/Pexels.

Prayer in public schools, provided it isn’t coerced, is protected under the Constitution, according to new guidance from the U.S. Department of Education.

“Parents and children have a constitutional right to take part in public school in ways that align with their sincerely held religious beliefs,” the department said. “School officials should allow members of the public school community to act and speak according to their faith.”

The update is required periodically under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, the government said.

The prayer is protected as long as others’ rights are respected and schools don’t engage institutionally in religious acts or speech or prioritize one faith over another or secularism over religion, according to the department.

“The Trump administration is proud to stand with students, parents and faculty who wish to exercise their First Amendment rights in schools across our great nation,” stated Linda McMahon, the U.S. education secretary.

“Our Constitution safeguards the free exercise of religion as one of the guiding principles of our republic, and we will vigorously protect that right in America’s public schools,” she said.

The guidance replaces the prior guidelines released by the Biden administration in 2023.

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“This week we are reminded that with true faith, eternal hope and the power of prayer, nothing can stop the people of God.”