source:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga officials banned
public prayer before football games after receiving a complaint. Now
some Knoxville student fear the same kind of ban will be put in place at
Neyland Stadium.
The prayer complaint sent to school officials in Chattanooga came from the
Freedom From Religion Foundation. The organization says a local person complained in May about prayer at games.
Freedom From Religion Foundation officials say it is rare to get
complaints about universities, but that is not keeping students on
Knoxville’s campus from speaking out on the issue.
The school’s chancellor, Roger Brown, announced this week that the
university will now issue a moment of silence rather than a spoken
prayer before each game. The decision comes after the FFRF complaint and
after the university’s Secular Student Alliance (SSA), an atheist
student group, protested the previous prayer practices.
“We believe this allows all in attendance to reflect and address
their individual beliefs in their own ways,” Brown said, according to
The Chattanooga Free Press reports. “Events such as football games should provide opportunities to bring all members of our community together.”
Naturally, the atheist student group is praising the new-found ban.
“In order to have separation of church and state, public schools do
not need to be having prayers at these public events,” SSA member
Elisabeth Spratt proclaimed.
But Christian students aren’t happy with the prayer change. TJ Earl, a
Baptist Collegiate Ministry intern, for one, made his discontent known.
Aside from claiming that he’s disappointed, he expressed anger over the
ban.
“Not shocked at all,”
he said. ”Disappointed, and kind of puts a little bit of rage inside me, to be honest. I don‘t think it’s appropriate.”