I sent out a bulletin when I learned that the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals had reversed lower federal courts and approved the Texas law mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in every classroom.
Peter Greene read the opinion and in this post he shows what a lot of malarkey it is. The more than five million children in Texas public schools are attached to many different faiths or to none at all, but the state is promoting only one. The Founding Fatheres would be horrified.
Greene writes:
Texas was one more state passing a law to mandate the display of the state-approved version of the Ten Commandments. That law was challenged, and U.S. District Judge Fred Biery blocked the law; Texas AG Ken Paxton asked the full 17 judges of the conservative 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to revisit the case and overturn the decision. This week they found in favor of the law. “It doesn’t violate the First Amendment at all,” declares the court in a ruling that depends heavily on some really special reasoning.
Anyway, the full court went by a slim majority for Paxton, the decision written by Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan.
First the court disposes of the Establishment Clause. And boy do they dispose of that.
If you’ve been following the dismantling of the wall between church and state, you may recall that Kennedy v. Bremerton, the case of the coach who wanted to lead prayers on the 50 yard line– a case that SCOTUS decided by actively ignoring facts— put a final stake through the heart of the Lemon Test, a three-pronged test for whether or not someone was violating the Establishment Clause (legal scholars have assured me that Lemon was not really used, anyway, but let’s move on). This new decision makes it a point to dance on Lemon’s grave and then announce the new test of the clause–
In place of Lemon, courts now ask a question rooted in the past: does the law at issue resemble a founding-era religious establishment?
In other words, is the state trying to “establish” a religion the same way that the King of England established the church of England. Colonies in the 1600s achieved religious uniformity through civil power. If we don’t see “laws compelling attendance at the official church; laws controlling doctrine, worship, and governance; laws punishing dissenters; laws exacting religious taxes; and laws deploying churches for public functions,” then there’s no infringement of the Establishment Clause.

The Texas law doesn’t “tell churches or synagogues or mosques what to believe or how to worship” and it doesn’t punish anyone for rejecting the Ten Commandments. It rejects the plaintiffs’ argument that putting the decalogue up in a classroom is inherently coercive. “Not so,” says the glib-ass judges. The law doesn’t require religious observance. So, no Establishment Clause violation, because this law doesn’t all look like the Church of England in the late 1700s.
The plaintiffs had a go at using the historical argument themselves, saying there’s little evidence that schools had a “tradition” of posting the Ten Commandments. But that, says the court, is a whole other thing. The plaintiffs try to argue that “if a practice does not fit within some historical tradition, it violates the Establishment Clause,” but “that does not follow.” See (stay with me here) if something has a root in 18th century tradition, then it is okay, but just because it doesn’t have a root in tradition, that doesn’t mean it’s not okay– so argues the court.
Meanwhile, in states across the country today, simply allowing students to be exposed to a rainbow on a classroom poster is considered too intrusive and might offend some people’s religious beliefs.
Anyway, that’s the new rule according to this court– the state can endorse, publicize, support, pick religious winners and losers, and expose students to as much religion as it wants, as long as it doesn’t start punishing anyone for disagreeing.
What about the Free Exercise Clause?
The plaintiffs brought up Mahmoud v. Taylor, the SCOTUS case that involved parents who wanted to opt their children out of being exposed to books with gay stuff. The plaintiffs likely felt that Mahmoud’s foundation of “parents should direct the religious upbringing of their own children” applied here, but the District Court gets around that, mostly by misrepresenting Mahmoud.
The case rested on the idea that being exposed to books with gay characters would disrupt the educational instruction of parents (the decision also rested on misrepresentation of those books as well). But the district court sees something far more sinister. “Those materials were deployed by teachers with lesson plans designed to subvert children’s religiously grounded views on marriage and gender.”
But nobody is making the students recite, believe, or “affirm their divine origin” (a phrase that I think assumes a fact not in evidence), the court believes the plaintiffs didn’t prove that the law “substantially burdens their right to religious exercise.”
There’s lots more (Duncan uses a footnote to take issue with Biery’s “creative” opinion). I’m going to just pick a few moments.
In a concurrence, Oldham argues that maybe the plaintiffs don’t even have standing because this is textbook “offended observer” stuff:
From top to bottom, the idea is that the plaintiffs (1) worry that they will one day see a poster; (2) worry that they might find that poster offensive; so (3) they invoke federal jurisdiction for protection from potential, hypothetical future offenses.
This is, I guess, totally different from being offended that somebody might some day ask you to make a cake for a gay wedding.
The dissent pushes back on some of the legal arguments. Kennedy did not throw out Stone or the Lemon test, and it was plenty clear that it “observed” the “heightened concerns with protecting freedom of conscience from subtle coercive pressure in the elementary and secondary public schools.” The case established a concern about exactly the kind of coercion that SB 10 represents. Put a poster of commandments in front of impressionable children (with the directive that the poster be visible from any place in the room) and you have coercion. And it is true that SCOTUS went out of its way (and far from reality) to argue that the praying coach was praying privately and personally and not exerting any coercion on his players, suggesting it would have been coercive otherwise.
Oh, there are pages and pages of legal argle bargle here, papering over a decision that joins some Texas leaders in saying, “We want to promote our brand of Christianity to be the dominant religion in this state.” And as always, I will argue that this kind of stuff is bad for everyone, that religion is not improved when the state tries to edit sacred texts and commandeer and control expressions of faith.
In that spirit, let’s wrap this up with the opening of Judge Leslie Southwick’s separate dissent.
What is not part of my dissent is a rejection of the importance of searching for faith. Religion, though, is a matter of the mind and the heart. Faith cannot flourish when it is forced. A poem voices my concern and, I humbly offer, that of the First Amendment:
The livid lightnings flashed in the clouds;
The leaden thunders crashed.A worshipper raised his arm.
“Hearken! hearken! The voice of God!”
“Not so,” said a man.
“The voice of God whispers in the heart
So softly
That the soul pauses,
Making no noise,
And strives for these melodies,
Distant, sighing, like faintest breath,
And all the being is still to hear.”
Stephen Crane, The Black Riders and Other Lines, Lines xxxix (1895), reprinted in The Collected Poems of Stephen Crane 41, 41 (Wilson Follett ed., 1930). Like any effective poetry, these lines can give different meaning to different readers at different times. In this opinion, they capture for me that government promotion of religion in every classroom is simulated lightning and thunder, compulsorily seen and heard.

Note that 10 Commandments people are the same people whose brand of Christianity includes the phrase “go into the world and make disciples of all nations,” a phrase that is valued more in those sectarian groups than all that love your neighbor and your enemy stuff. Modern Christian nationalism runs on the principle that getting people to say they love Jesus in front of other people is the overriding principle of the religion.
Understand that, and you will understand why authoritarian philosophy melds so well with this tradition. Trust national leaders like you trust religious leaders. The only question is whether this tendency is more pernicious to the religion or the body politic.
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I’m reminded of when Stephen Colbert had his Comedy Central show, The Colbert Report, and asked a congressman who was attempting to legislate posting the Ten Commandments to actually name them. The congressman could not. At the time (circa 2006), many elected representatives were not aware that Colbert was doing a parody of a “conservative” cable news show personality (e.g., Bill O’Reilly).
Regardless of the attempts to “legally” justify posting the Ten Commandments, this has more to do with ego and religious arrogance than it does with actually loving one’s neighbor.
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It takes some truly upside down logic to come to the Christian Nationalist conclusions listed in this post. Instead of focusing on the rights of the majority, the emphasis is to appease and justify actions that cater to a distinct minority. Here’s my own version of this distortion. “Images of Donald Trump make me nauseous so no images of Trump, electronic or otherwise, must be sent to my home or the sender will be fined $100,000 for each infraction.” If I had a billion dollars or so, I might be able the get this one to gain some traction. This is the type of so-called logic being used by the right to make the abnormal appear normal.
Ken Paxton is not someone that should be lecturing anyone about right, wrong, or religion since he had to pay more than $200,000 in restitution in 2024 for a securities fraud case. It is amazing how many of these disgraced people on the right keep falling upward.
With regard to religion, Trump took part in a Christian National Biblical ‘readathon’ last night. He was selected to read the following: “Trump read from II Chronicles 7:11-22, including the passage, “If My people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.” This passage is purportedly the source that justifies Christian Nationalist beliefs.https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/trump-bible-christian-nationalism
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Ken Paxton, now running for the Republican nomination for Senate, has a long list of awful things to his name. He was impeached by the Republican House for various charges. His deep pocketed pals made strategic gifts and the Republican Senate did not convict him. His staff complained about criminal acts benefiting a donor. The list is long.
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WHOSE TEN COMMANDMENTS?
The Catholic Ten Commandments and the Protestant Ten Commandments are different. S0 — WHOSE VERSION OF THE TEN COMMANDMENTS WILL BE POSTED IN EVERY CLASSROOM?
Will there be a long battle in the courts to determine whose version of the Ten Commandments is posted in schools and other public places, because if the Protestant-only version is posted and/or taught in schools, Catholic children in public schools and Catholics could be made targets of taunting and derision.
The official Catholic Ten Commandments are found on pages 496 and 497 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, not in the Bible.
Compared commandment-by-commandment, the Protestant and Catholic Ten Commandments are nearly identical; the most significant difference is with the Second Commandment:
THE SECOND COMMANDMENT DIFFERENCES:
Protestant Version: “You shall not make unto you any graven images.”
Catholic Version: “You shall not take the name of the Lord God in vain.”
The Catholic Church holds that since the First Commandment says “You shall have no other gods but me,” there is no reason to repeat that in the Second Commandment.
The Second Commandment is the only point of the significant difference between the Protestant and the Catholic Ten Commandments — but that sole point is highly volatile and has triggered bloody warfare between Catholics and Protestants for centuries.
But here’s how the conflict arises: The Hebrew word translated as “graven images” in the Old Testament is “pesel”.
There is also another Hebrew word for “graven images”; it is “matzevah”.
In the Old Testament Ten Commandments, it is the word “pesel” that is used in the Second Commandment, but “pesel” only refers to statues that are SPECIFICALLY carved as idols to be worshipped. Those are not the kind of statues found in Catholic churches — the statues in Catholic churches are “matzevah”.
The Hebrew word “matzevah” refers to statues that are carved as MEMORIALS for holy people and loved ones and are NOT TO BE WORSHIPPED. The “matzevah” statues in Catholic churches only commemorate Mary and the saints, and are not statues that are worshipped.
Catholics don’t pray to Mary and the saints as someone would pray to God.
Catholics ask Mary and the saints TO PRAY FOR THEM to God, in the same way that Christians of all denominations ask loved ones to pray to God for them. For example, in the “Hail, Mary” prayer, Catholics say: “Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray FOR us now and at the hour of our death.” Catholics are asking Mary to pray for them to God, and it is God Who will do the rest.
Over the centuries of conflict, and even today, Protestants have accused Catholics of worshipping statues of Mary and the saints, and Protestants have not only viewed Catholics as idolaters, but have made war on Catholics for that mistaken reason.
The long and bloody Hundred Years War that ravaged all of Europe was largely because Protestants accused Catholics of being idol worshippers. Will America experience such religious warfare over whose version of the Ten Commandments is posted and discussed in public schools?
Earlier this year, SENATOR TED CRUZ, acting on behalf of Trump in Trump’s dispute with Pope Leo, posted a message to Republicans
So, what will happen in public schools if only the Protestant Ten Commandments are posted in the classrooms and Protestant children begin accusing Catholic children of not honoring the Protestant Second Commandment and of being idol worshippers?
There will be conflict in the classrooms, in the school yards, between neighbors and co-workers, and there will be long and costly court battles. If it comes to that, the U.S. Supreme Court, knowing the true meaning of the word “pesel” in the Protestant Ten Commandments, will rule in favor of the Catholic plaintiffs, setting off protests from Protestants and further dividing American versus American.
And there won’t just be conflicts between Protestant and Catholic children in the schools because there are public school children of other religions which don’t use the same Ten Commandments that either Protestants or Catholics use.
The ruling to allow posting the Ten Commandments in classrooms is fraught with dangers for America of the kind that our Founding Fathers intended to avoid by writing The Establishment Clause into our Constitution.
The U.S. Supreme Court will now have to decide. Seven of the nine Justices on the Court are Catholic.
Oh, and then there’s the upcoming issue of requiring Bible study in public school classrooms: The Protestant and Catholic Bibles are also quite different. Whose Bible will be taught?
The Hundred Years War between Protestants and Catholics in Europe never settled these issues. How long will the political war in America go on over the issues? And could it become more than just a political war?
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There is no doubt that the version of the Ten Commandments in every Texas classroom will be the version approved by Protestant Evangelicals.
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And, of course, there are slightly different versions of the Commandments in Exodus and Deuteronomy.
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Lawmakers underestimate the creativity of teachers, some of whom are already acting. One is reported to have also posted similar religious imperatives of non-Christian religions. There are other possibilities. The law says “clearly visible,” which doesn’t mean “prominently visible.” The law says there can be nothing added to the text of the minimal 16×12″ posting. But, it doesn’t specify font size. Neither does it exclude an adjacent posting listing examples of breaking the commandments using examples of prominent politicians including, perhaps exclusively, those of the commander in chief.
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and let’s not forget the seven deadly sins. Trump could serve as the Poster Boy for any one of them.
Sloth
Greed
Wrath
Pride
Lust
Gluttony
Envy
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So, there is a Republican somewhere in Texas who can read?
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AFAIK the law does not require a specific version of the Ten Commandments be posted. I would be inclined to post it in the original Hebrew, either from Exodus 20:1-17 or Deuteronomy 5:6-21. And I would do so without the Masoretic vowel markings. That might make students very curious & could lead to an interesting intellectual exploration. For what it is worth, how the “commandments” are broken up do not exactly match what people learn from the King James Bible. Further, the Hebrew does not say “thou shalt Not” but rather simply “No” – the Hebrew word is “Lo”.
And if the argument is supposed to be it is a source of law, eg, Moses depicted on frieze of Supreme Court building, then maybe the law should also be requiring posting of the Code of Hammurabi, the words of the likes of Menes from Egypt, the person from China we call Confucius, Slon and Lycurgus and Craco from ancient Greece.
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What a great idea!
Post the Ten Commandments in the original Hebrew!!
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Love this idea!
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Good idea, but the law does specify precisely the wording. See https://legiscan.com/TX/text/SB10/id/3111101
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