Alabama Putting God Back In Schools With Ten Commandments, ‘In God We Trust’ Displays

World Events and the Bible

WEB Notes: Go Bama! To those in the school system, I would highly encourage you to install these displays at your schools. Just a simple reminder of God in our daily life goes a long way, especially when we are surrounded by a world that walks contrary to His Ways.

Alabama public schools are hoping to bring God back into their schools by displaying the US motto “In God We Trust” on school buildings.  

In February, the Alabama legislature approved a new law allowing such displays on public property, and now is giving schools the right to exhibit the motto as well.

The national motto, approved by Congress in 1956, is already displayed in 17 public venues in Alabama, and the Blount County school board plans to be the first to implement the motto in its schools.

Officials say the legislation is not a mandate, like what was approved by Tennessee lawmakers this spring requiring the motto to be on display inside all public schools.

Source: CBN

World Events and the Bible

6 thoughts on “Alabama Putting God Back In Schools With Ten Commandments, ‘In God We Trust’ Displays

  1. Since the 10 Commandments are from a book a fiction and there is no god. I see a real problem, plus there is a separation of church and state

    1. The problem is that there is not supposed to be any government schools. The first schools in this country were churches and the churches were private.
      The wealth that is being stolen from us would allow us to decide our own children’s education as individuals. Those who want their children to have a Christian education would simply establish a church and hire a teacher of their belief, and they have every right to do so, but they would rather play this back and forth game. They want schools that we are forced to pay for. Corporations, meaning all the employees are government agents, hence the government decides the education, not the parents. But the churches joined with the government and so the government can dictate the children’s education.
      In the real world, I have no problem with the 10 Commandments or In God We Trust displayed anywhere. If my Bill of Rights are intact, no one can force me to believe as they believe, and I have no desire to interfere with what they choose to believe. There would be no common law case.
      It is when the people, led by the churches, joined with the government that was always supposed to be separate and apart, that these questions even came into being. It is one of our own making. In the common law, the Christians are free to believe and teach their children, but then again in the real world, I cannot be taxed, hence have my property seized to accommodate another’s belief.
      Our country is filthy rich. If we had the wealth that is being stolen from us, we could each educate our children as we see fit, within the peace of our own minds and bodies. And if there is ever a push to make any American national think or believe one way or another, the common law, through its procedures, would crush it. It is called true freedom.

  2. They managed to change the intent of the 5th Commandment by misinterpreting one word.

    “Thou shalt not MURDER” is how it SHOULD read… not “Thou shalt not kill”

    Undoubtedly the stinking jews were behind it.

Join the Conversation

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


*