Jefferson simply quotes the First Amendment then uses a metaphor, the "wall", to separate the government from interfering with religious practice. Notice that the First Amendment puts Restrictions only on the Government, not the People! The Warren Court re-interpreted the First Amendment thus putting the restrictions on the People! Today the government can stop you from Praying in school, reading the Bible in school, showing the Ten Commandments in school, or have religious displays at Christmas. This is quite different from the wall Jefferson envisioned, protecting the people from government interference with Religious practice.[/qute] no the government can't stop you from praying in school or reading the Bible. The government can't have it as mandatory reading, class or school lead prayer, or posting symbols endorsed by the school because that would be the government ( schools are government owned) endorsing a religion. The school kids aren't reading any other religious text, and the School libraries still carry Bibles, Q'ran's, Bodhidharma's, Etc. Social studies Classes, Philosophy courses, History courses can still talk about the Bible and its relavence, just not endorse it. When I was in high school ( 2 years ago, we had a Bible lit class and a philosophy class that went into Christianity)
[quote="Lewis W":qjtkunge]When Thomas Jefferson wrote his letter to the Danbury Baptist Association he never intended the words "Separation of Church and State" to be taken out of context and used as a substitute for the First Amendment, but for all practical purposes is what the courts have done.