Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, August 06, 2006
Kentucky Schools Rediscovering Old Statute
According to Saturday's Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader, schools in Kentucky are rediscovering an old Kentucky statute (KRS 158.190) that provides "no book or other publication of a sectarian, infidel or immoral character, or that reflects on any religious denomination, shall be used or distributed in any common school." It also prohibits schools from teaching "sectarian, infidel, or immoral doctrine." Schools are adding the prohibitions to their official policy manuals. According to the paper's report, Kentucky courts have ruled that despite the reference to "sectarian" publications, the ban does not apply to the Christian and Hebrew scriptures. This presumably refers to the 1905 Kentucky Court of Appeals decision in Hackett v. Brooksville Graded School District, 120 Ky. 608 [LEXIS link] that rejected a claim that the King James translation of the Bible was a sectarian book.