WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court will rule on Wednesday if a giant cross that serves as a war memorial is, as secularist critics contend, an unconstitutional state religious endorsement.
The case of the cross has become a rallying cry for religious conservatives and secularist progressives alike, in an intensifying culture war that has been sharpened by President Donald Trump’s appointment of two new justices giving the top court a conservative majority.
Judges of the court will have to rule on whether the cross violates the First Amendment of the US Constitution, which states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting free exercise thereof.”
While the clause leaves no doubt that the state cannot finance a religious institution, there are several gray areas surrounding it: not least the fact that every dollar bill has “In God We Trust” written on it.
At the heart of the case is a 40-foot (12-meter) tall cross erected in 1925 in Bladensburg, Maryland — near the nation’s capital Washington — to honor the memory of 49 local soldiers killed in World War I.
Because it is built on public land, the Washington-based American Humanist Association (AHA), a plaintiff in the case, holds that the monument violates the First Amendment’s forbidding the state from favoring one religion over another.
“The fight for separation of church and state is far from over,” the AHA said on its website, which adds that $100,000 of public funding has been used to maintain the cross.
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