Public high school football players get baptized on school field, sparking First Amendment debate



Florida public high school football players got baptized on a school field last month, which has sparked a First Amendment debate on freedom of religion and the separation of church and state.

Brevard Public Schools said the baptisms took place July 18 after an off-season football conditioning session at Astronaut High School in Titusville, Florida Today reported. Titusville is just under an hour east of Orlando and a few miles west of the John F. Kennedy Space Center.

'I could not be more proud that 25 young adults gave their lives to Christ and the kingdom grows! ... The community is overwhelmingly rejoicing with these young adults! God will use it for good!'

Video of one of the baptisms shows a player sitting in a metal tank filled with water. A man tells the player he's going to baptize him "in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit." The man then dips the player's head backward into the water, and pulls his head back up again as he tells the player, "Risen in new life." The crowd around the tank then applauds.

The caption of the Instagram post containing the video indicated that 25 players were baptized. The post drew a number of comments as well; one commenter asked, "Why is religion making its way into schools? This isn’t a religion school ... Hmm. I don’t like this." Another commenter declared, "That is awesome. Praise God!"

Brevard Public Schools didn't know about the baptisms until Monday, Florida Today reported, citing district spokesperson Janet Murnaghan.

"The event was not a school sponsored activity," Murnaghan said. "It’s our understanding that it was student driven."

The post's caption also said Brevard School Board chair Megan Wright's church performed the baptisms, and that 25 players took the plunge.

Florida Today said Wright didn't respond to its request for comment but noted that she said on her personal Facebook page that while she had "no part" in the baptisms, the moment was a happy one.

Megan WrightImage source: Brevard (Fla.) School Board website

"I could not be more proud that 25 young adults gave their lives to Christ and the kingdom grows!" Wright wrote, according the paper. "... The community is overwhelmingly rejoicing with these young adults! God will use it for good!"

Florida Today said Astronaut High Athletic Director Matthew Ahlstedt declined to comment.

More from Florida Today:

Students, teachers and other employees at a school can engage in private religious expression within the school, according to the U.S. Department of Education. However, public school employees can't lead activities like prayers or devotionals, and they can't try to persuade students to participate in, or not participate in, religious activities, according to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Students, on the other hand, can engage in religious activities with their peers and try to convince other students to join them.

Florida law generally aligns with federal law, saying that students may organize religious activities. School personnel can participate in religious activities on school grounds, as long as these activities are initiated by students before or after the school day, if the activities are voluntary and if they don't conflict with school personnels' responsibilities.School districts are also required to give religious groups the same access to their facilities that they would give to secular groups without discrimination based on the group's religion.

Anything else?

July's baptisms were far from the first time such an event took place:

  • When two student-athletes were baptized on a Tennessee public high school football field in August 2019, a "concerned area resident" got in touch with the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which in turn fired off a letter demanding the district "stop promoting and endorsing religion to students."
  • A few months prior, the FFRF objected after a video depicted "several football players" being baptized on Alabama public school property.
  • The FFRF prevailed in September 2015 when a Georgia school district acknowledged that an event during which more than a dozen football players were baptized on public school property violated official policy.

(H/T: OutKick)

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Newest NATO Member Escalates Prosecution Of Christians To Supreme Court

The case could reach the European Court of Human Rights, where its outcome would affect the world.

Wanted: A Single Republican Who Will Actually Fight For Religious Freedom

Have we reached a time in American politics where even conservative leaders feel comfortable attacking Christianity? Apparently.

State Department details horrific persecution of Christians in North Korea, including the life imprisonment of an infant over a Bible



Christians may be subject to increasing statist pressure, hatred, and persecution in the United States, but farther afield, the situation is far more dire.

The U.S. State Department has released its annual International Religious Freedom Report, detailing the persecution of the faithful overseas.

Among the brutalities and barbarism exacted on Christians across the globe, some of the worst indignities have been perpetuated by the communist regime in North Korea.

The State Department's 2022 IRF report corroborates the claims made by the non-denominational charitable organization Open Doors, which ranks North Korea as No. 1 in the world for its persecution of Christians and stresses that the communist nation is committed to the "highest levels of persecution ever seen."

"North Korea remains a brutally hostile place for Christians to live. If discovered by the authorities, believers are either sent to labour camps as political prisoners where the conditions are atrocious, or killed on the spot – and their families will share their fate as well," stated Open Doors. "Christians have absolutely no freedom. It is almost impossible for believers to gather or meet to worship."

The State Department noted that North Korean officials currently have roughly 70,000 citizens in prison for being Christian — out of a Christian population of between 200,000 and 400,000, according to a United Nations estimate.

Victims are rounded up for possessing religious items, sharing religious beliefs, and/or for participating in religious practice.

An Open Doors 2023 report noted that North Korea's new "Anti-reactionary thought law" makes it clear that "being a Christian and/or possessing a Bible is a serious crime and will be severely punished."

The regime does not just punish the lone individual found with a Bible in his possession, but three generations of that person's immediate family.

The State Department detailed one case in 2009 where an entire family, including a 2-year-old child, were given life sentences in political prison camps "based on their religious practices and possession of a Bible."

Life imprisonment is a relatively lighter sentence given how those possessing Bibles have been punished in the past.

The report indicates that in one case, the communists captured a Korean Workers' Party member who had a Bible, then executed him at Hyesan Airfield before an audience of 3,000 people.

The North Korean Religious Freedom Database, which tracks the various victims of the communist regime's clampdown on Christians, notes that a mother in her thirties was similarly gunned down at Hyesan Airfield for having possessed a Bible. Since her husband was similarly detained, their two children became homeless and died.

North Koreans are slaughtered for simply looking at a Bible.

One male victim in his 40s was executed in 2008 after it was revealed he had read the Bible while in the Chongori concentration camp.

In 1,411 similar cases where victims were punished for their faith, 126 were butchered; 94 disappeared; 79 were maimed; 53 were forcibly relocated; 826 were detained; 147 were immobilized; and 86 were persecuted with other methods of punishment.

Despite the unimaginable cruelty inflicted upon them, the report referenced remarkable instances of Christians' fortitude.

One witness indicated that "guards beat a Christian man who had been praying to the brink of death, leaving him bleeding on the ground. The man, however, continued to pray daily, even as guards beat him with a club and kicked him with their boots on."

Whereas the FBI appears to presently regard only particular Christian sect as ideologically dangerous, the State Department indicated that the North Korean regime regards Christians altogether as the "most dangerous political class of people."

North Korean Christians looking to escape communist persecution are best off defecting to South Korea, as they have little hope of finding refuge in the neighboring country of China.

China, North Korea's powerful neighbor and close ally, similarly persecutes its Christian population, going so far as to hunt Chinese Christians internationally.

Extra to the routine harassment, torture, detentions, church demolitions, forced disappearances, and executions Christians are subjected to inside China's borders, the State Department IFR report noted the Chinese communist regime has taken additional measures in recent years to censor Christian messaging; treat religious material on the internet "on par with pornography, drug dealing and citing rebellion"; raid, shut down, and fine religious schools; and restrict the circulation of Bibles.

Open Doors rates Christian persecution in China as "very high."

Pew Research reported in 2020 that Christians were the most harassed group in the world, with harassment defined as attacks ranging from "verbal abuse to physical violence and killings," motivated by the victims' religiosity. This was found to be the case in 145 out of 198 countries.

The persecution of Christians has been steadily increasing for well over a decade.

As of January 2023, 360 million Christians reportedly lived in nations with high levels of persecution or discrimination.

Christianity Today reported that over 5,600 Christians were killed for their faith last year. Over 2,100 churches were attacked or closed, with over 71 torched in Canada alone. More than 124,000 Christians were reportedly forced from their homes because of their faith, and another 15,000 became refugees.

According to Open Doors, the ten worst countries with the highest levels of Christian persecution are: 1) North Korea; 2) Somalia; 3) Yemen; 4) Eritrea; 5) Libya; 6) Nigeria; 7) Pakistan; 8) Iran; 9) Afghanistan; and 10) Sudan.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Hyoung Chang/Getty Images

Supreme Court’s cowardice allows Colorado to keep persecuting Christians

The Supreme Court allowed this unconstitutional and anti-freedom regime to proliferate while pretending to check it.

As Christians Face Death Sentences, Nigerian Court Can And Should Overturn Its Dangerous Blasphemy Law

Nigeria has before it a crucial opportunity to step out as an international leader by abolishing once and for all its Sharia blasphemy law.

California district judge appointed by Obama rules that forcing churches to pay for abortions is unconstitutional



Three California churches have scored a major victory for religious freedom after a district judge ruled that compelling churches to pay for abortions as part of their medical insurance plans is unconstitutional.

The chief judge of California's Eastern District, Kimberly J. Mueller, appointed by former President Barack Obama, ruled on August 24 that the California Department of Managed Health Care could not force churches to pay for abortions against their will.

Mueller wrote that Mary Watanabe, the director of the DMHC, "has not shown '[she] lacks other means of achieving [her] desired goal without imposing a substantial burden on the exercise of religion by'" the plaintiff churches: Foothill Church, Calvary Chapel Chino Hills, and Shepherd of the Hills Church.

"The Director's denial of the Churches' request for exceptions to accommodate their religious beliefs, based solely on the fact that those requests did not originate with a plan, was not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling interest," Mueller added.

This decision is the culmination of an eight-year struggle between the state and various religious organizations regarding abortion coverage. Planned Parenthood, the largest abortion provider in America, lobbied aggressively to prevent California from granting religious institutions an abortion exemption in their health care policies. Alliance Defending Freedom, the group providing legal counsel to the plaintiff churches, unearthed emails between Planned Parenthood officials and the DMHC indicating that as early as February 2014, Planned Parenthood began investigating why religious universities in California were not required to sponsor abortion as part of their offered health care plans.

At the time, Brianna Pittman, the former legislative associate for Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, inquired of the DMHC "whether there is a regulatory/ administrative fix" for the abortion exemptions which had been granted to "Catholic Universities."

This discussion about an "administrative fix" for the abortion exemption then spread from religious universities to churches themselves. Since the DMHC had determined that "abortion is a basic health care service," it argued that churches could not "discriminate against women by limiting or excluding coverage for terminations of pregnancies."

However, Judge Mueller disagreed, siding with the plaintiffs, who argued that forcing them to cover abortion services violated their First Amendment rights to the free exercise of religion. Mueller dismissed another claim from the plaintiffs, which argued that their 14th Amendment rights to equal protection had also been violated.

ADF senior counsel Jeremiah Galus couldn't be happier with the ruling.

"For years, California has unconstitutionally targeted faith-based organizations," Galus said, "so we’re pleased the court has found this mandate unconstitutional and will allow the churches we represent to operate freely according to their religious beliefs."

"Elective abortions are not part of 'basic health care,'" Galus continued. "They have no business being forced into the medical coverage provided by churches that do not wish to support terminating lives due to very real, sincere, and well-known faith convictions."

H/T: The Washington Free Beacon