Nope. |
Not necessarily. It's common practice in heavily and/or traditionally Catholic areas as well, including places like Massachusetts. |
You you okay if they pray to Allah ? |
Would I be ok with it for my own athiest kid? Yes, because I know he would just not participate. But other kids might feel pressured to, so that's the problem. |
Private school is different, plenty of private schools have prayer. There is a HUGE difference between what is allowed when parents choose for their children versus publicly-funded, government-run schools. |
It would be nice and could help our team do well. |
I grew up in a super Catholic town and no one EVER did this. The coaches were all Catholic and were all in the KoC and stuff, too. We felt bad for the Catholic kids, whose coaches made a show of doing this before games. (And their cheerleaders, with their calf-length skirts.) |
I mean Catholic SCHOOL kids that we used to play. |
Nope. I am Christian but I have friends who are not. Standing by silently still makes them feel uncomfortable and singles out their kids who are not participating. I doubt too many Christians would be ok with a rotation of a Catholic Priest, an Imam, a Rabbi, a Methodist, a Baptist, a Hindu and other religions during the season. Unless the religious prayer is going to rotate through all of the various religions in the area, then no because it marginalizes people who have different faiths. |
Absolutely not. |
PP you replied to. My point exactly. |
Only if it was a prayer to Jobu. |
+1 my atheist kid would stand back and not participate, but what about the kids who would feel pressure to do so to fit in with the team? And in such a diverse area where not everyone believes the same mythology feelings are bound to get hurt. |
NO
|
LOL NO |