FIRST AMENDMENT Anti-religion group threatens to ‘warn’ Auburn University after 200 kids baptized on campus: ‘Absolute joke’ The Freedom From Religion Foundation says it was 'inappropriate and unconstitutional' for Auburn employees like head coach Hugh Freeze to have participated Kyle Morris By Kyle Morris , Brianna Herlihy Fox News Published September 24, 2023 4:00am EDT
Roughly 200 college students baptized in one night following Auburn campus worship program More than 200 students at Auburn University were baptized in a single evening this week after a campus worship program that was reportedly attended by hundreds. (Kenzie Gay/Michael Floyd)
An anti-religion group attempting to throw cold water on an Alabama university after the school’s football coach was filmed assisting with the baptism of a student has a "twisted interpretation of the First Amendment," a legal expert says.
On Friday, the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) sent a letter to Auburn University President Christopher Roberts warning that more than 200 student baptisms, one of which was assisted by Auburn Tigers head football coach Hugh Freeze, somehow violated the Constitution’s Establishment Clause.
"These ongoing and repeated constitutional violations at the University create a coercive environment that excludes those students who don’t subscribe to the Christian views being pushed onto players by their coaches," it states.
But Tyson Langhofer, senior counsel and director of the Center for Academic Freedom with Alliance Defending Freedom, is calling FFRF’s letter a "twisted interpretation of the First Amendment."
AUBURN STUDENTS RUSH INTO LAKE FOR IMPROMPTU BAPTISMS AS FOOTBALL COACH LENDS A HAND AT MASSIVE WORSHIP EVENT
Auburn University mass baptism The baptisms took place Tuesday night at a lake at Auburn's Red Barn venue, about half a mile from Neville Arena, site of a "Unite Auburn" worship event that drew a massive crowd. (Mateo Arenas)
"Freedom From Religion Foundation’s twisted interpretation of the First Amendment has the potential to crush both students’ and their coaches’ essential right to live out their faith," Langhofer told Fox News Digital in a statement.
Alliance Defending Freedom is one of the most successful Supreme Court litigation firms, winning numerous cases dealing with First Amendment and religious freedoms.
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"Public universities are supposed to be the marketplace of ideas and have an obligation to protect and promote free speech and free exercise of religion," Langhofer stated.
"Auburn University is a public university, not a religious one," FFRF stated in its letter. "It is inappropriate and unconstitutional for University employees to use their University position to organize, promote, or participate in a religious worship event. Nor can Auburn’s coaches proselytize or participate in religious activities with students or hire a chaplain to do so."
wide shot of mass baptisms at Auburn, close-up of same in inset A massive crowd gathers for the baptisms. (Michael Floyd)
Langhofer, however, says FFRF’s letter itself is "unconstitutional."
"As the Supreme Court recently reaffirmed in the Coach Kennedy case, religious coaches and students have the right to engage in religious activities on campus in their private capacity. FFRF’s desire to silence religious students sends a clear message: ‘You are not welcome here.’ That’s unconstitutional," he added.
The baptisms took place Tuesday night in a lake at Auburn's Red Barn venue, which is located about a half mile from Auburn University's Neville Arena, where a "Unite Auburn" worship event drew a massive crowd.
The "Unite Auburn" event featured performances by Christian worship band Passion and included speakers such as Jennie Allen, a Christian author, and Rev. Jonathan Pokluda, lead pastor of Harris Creek Baptist Church in Waco, Texas.
"What was so great about these baptisms is that it wasn’t a planned religious event. It was just a whole bunch of college students moved by their desire to follow Jesus."
— Auburn University student Mateo Arenas Following the event, one individual reportedly wanted to be baptized, but a tub was not available for use. Seeking a solution, students began gathering at the lake.
Photographs and video footage from the event showed hundreds of college students lining the banks of the lake as students waded into the water to be baptized one by one over a two-hour period.
"It was one of the most beautiful things I had ever gotten to witness because there was such a genuine joy and sense of peace in the air. I would look back toward campus and constantly see mobs of flashlights from more students that were running to come to join the crowd," Kenzie Gay, a senior at Auburn, told Fox.
Hundreds of students gathered lakeside at night for baptisms Auburn University students gathered by a lake for baptisms. (Mateo Arenas)
"Everyone was just in awe of what God was doing that night," added Gay, who previously represented the school as Miss Auburn University.
"What was so great about these baptisms is that it wasn’t a planned religious event. It was just a whole bunch of college students moved by their desire to follow Jesus," Auburn student Mateo Arenas told Fox.
"It took me about 45 minutes to get to where the baptisms were held due to the amount of traffic of people who wanted to go witness the event themselves. Once there, it was quite a sight to see, people dedicating their lives to Jesus without fear, just a whole lot of love."
Auburn University confirmed to Fox News Digital it had received a letter and is evaluating it but had no further comment.
Christian Huff, a Christian podcaster married to Sadie Robertson of the Duck Dynasty family, posted on Instagram in reaction to the FFRF letter, saying, "A head football coach baptizing a player after an event and you’re gonna ‘warn the university’… absolute joke."
War Eagle
You can't demonstrate Christian behaviors in front of those that don't follow but we can push our degenerate tendency and if you complain we will call it hate speech.
Why do people bend to these fools?
Cope harder, retards! You already lost!
LoL
Fuck Mikey Weinstein.
https://www.militaryreligiousfreedom.org/about/michael-l-mikey-weinstein/
He went to USAFA and repaid them by suing them over and over again because he didn't like that the cadet chapel assigns space by how many people of each religion attend school. So if 70% are Protestant ten they get the fancy upstairs, the Catholics get the downstairs because our group is smaller, then the Jewish then the Muslims. He turned everything into some bullshit antisemitism argument and made his whole legal career from being a bitch
Then, after saying how much he loathed USAFA, he sends his children there. What the absolute f**k...if you honestly think the place is antisemitic why would you send your kids there?
Cadets can't even place a written prayer on their corkboard next to their beds, but they are expected to risk their lives for the Constitution while being deprived of their First Amendment rights
F**k the Freedom from Religion foundation. They're a huge scam.
Right Side Broadcasting is in Auburn,Alabama. Keep that in mind--they want to shut it down.
Doesn't the freedom to assemble trump everything?
They are just mad because GOD has already WON! 🙏
Col. 2:15 New International Version And having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross.
Being baptized in the name of Jesus Christ is the one thing they despise. If it was a satanic group doing something similar in the name of the devil this group would say that it's freedom of expression and speech and you can't do anything about it.
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2023/09/23/losing-faith-religious-identification-among-democrats-crashes-20-points-in-20-years/ Losing Faith: Religious Identification Among Democrats Crashes 20 Points in 20 Years
Communists do not cotton to religious faith. We should ban Communism in the US again.
I don’t trust people who seek to interfere in people’s right to freely worship. If the group got permission to use a facility that is also open to others to reserve the same facility on a different date then there should be no issue. The communists convoluted the separations of Freedom of religion thinking that religion should only be practiced in your abode with the curtains closed. What snowflakes atheists are. By the same token religious zealots aren’t free to impede a non-believer’s rights, a simple no thank-you should suffice. I still question the the Islamic text as it appears to be anathema to the US Constitution, specifically Sharia Law should be banned in the US. You want to live under Sharia, go live in a Muslim nation. Communism should also be banned again.