| United States. Supreme Court - 1962 - 884 páginas
...inconsistent both with the purposes of the Establishment Clause and with the Establishment Clause itself. It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...such a way as to prohibit state laws respecting an ments to be used in the Mother Tongue within the Church of England, agreeable to the Word of God and... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1963 - 336 páginas
...inconsistent with both the purposes of the Establishment Clause and with the Establishment Clause itself. It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong. The history of man is inseparable from the history of religion. And perhaps it is not too much... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1964 - 200 páginas
...inconsistent with both the purposes of the Establishment Clause and with the Establishment Clause itself. It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong. The history of man is inseparable from the history of religion. And perhaps it is not too much... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Education and Labor - 1964 - 648 páginas
...inconsistent with both the purposes of the Establishment Clause and with the Establishment Clause itself. It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong. The history of man is inseparable from the history of religion. And perhaps it is not too much... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1964 - 2004 páginas
...inconsistent with both the purposes of the Establishment Clause and with the Establishment Clause itself. It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong. The history of man is inseparable from the history of religion. And perhaps it is not too much... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1964 - 860 páginas
...religion and religious persecution go hand in hand. Denying that this application of the Constitution to prohibit state laws respecting an establishment of religious services in public schools indicated a hostility to religion or toward prayer, Mr. Justice Black, noting that the history of man... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1965 - 1388 páginas
...the role of religion in the Nation's life and history. Neither does it indicate an animosity toward religion. "It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong." (370 US at 434.) The largely gratuitous dissenting opinion of Justice Douglas, which went far... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1966 - 920 páginas
...rejected the proposition that this required separation of church and state exhibited a hostility to religion : "It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong. . . . [The authors of the Bill of Rights] knew that the First Amendment, which tried to put... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Education - 1964 - 1402 páginas
...inconsistent with both the purposes of the Establishment Clause and with the Establishment Clause itself. It has been argued that to apply the Constitution...or toward prayer. Nothing, of course, could be more wrong. The history of man is inseparable from the history of religion. And perhaps it is not too much... | |
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