The district court held unconstitutional and enjoined the enforcement of the Harrisonburg, Virginia, release-time program whereby public school students are released during school hours for religious instruction by the Rockingham Council of Week-Day Religious Education (WRE). We think that controlling Supreme Court authority requires the opposite result. We reverse and direct dismissal of the complaint.
I.
WRE is a nonprofit organization supported by the Virginia Council of Churches. It has been providing religious instruction in Harrisonburg since 1923. For forty years, the teaching took place in school classrooms. Since 1963, WRE classes have been held in trailers parked on streets adjacent to the schools or in nearby churches.
The challenged' program operates in three elementary schools. WRE obtains the schools’ enrollment lists and mails cards to the parents asking if they consent to their children’s participation in the program. The children deposit the cards at school; WRE collects them and informs the school which children should be released. Public school officials do not encourage the children to attend WRE classes. WRE officials do not enter the schools to solicit students.
Twenty-seven classes of children receive approximately one hour of WRE instruction a week. The public school principals and WRE officials work together to coordinate their schedules. Each WRE class is drawn from a regular school class; children who do not participate remain in the classroom but the teacher does not provide formal instruction for this small minority of the class.
Although it concluded that the program was invalid, the district court admitted that the Harrisonburg release-time program is “not readily distinguishable” from the New York City program which the Supreme Court held constitutional in
Zorach v. Clauson,
II.
The Supreme Court’s two release-time decisions to which we must look are
Illinois ex rel. McCollum v. Board of Education,
In McCollum, the religious instructors took over the public school classrooms; nonparticipating students went elsewhere in the building. The school approved of the religious instructors and participated in recording the attendance of students in the religious instruction classes. This scheme was held unconstitutional.
In Zorach, the school system simply released students during the school day upon written request of their parents. These students attended religious classes off the school premises. The schools received reports of the children’s attendance at these classes.
The majority opinion by Mr. Justice Douglas in
Zorach
offered three possible distinctions between this program and the one invalidated in
McCollum.
The
Zorach
program involved [1] “neither religious instruction in public school classrooms [2] nor the expenditure of public funds.”
In the instant case, the accommodations of the school program to religious training were generous and thorough-going, but the public school classrooms, where the students were compelled by state law to be, were not turned over to religious instruction. Therefore, the case is indistinguishable from and controlled by Zorach. Under it, the Harrisonburg release-time program must be constitutional.
III.
If we were to decide this case solely by direct application of the tripartite test recently restated in
Meek v. Pittenger,
The purpose of the Harrisonburg release-time program, like the Zorach program, is secular — the schools aim only to accommodate the wishes of the students’ parents. Nor does the Harrisonburg program involve more entanglement between the school administration and the religious authorities than was present in the Zorach program.
With respect to the effect of the program’s advancing or inhibiting religion, the district court found that the necessary effect of the cooperation between the public school officials and the WRE is to “create an impression of an indorsement of the program and in so doing obscure any distinction between the religious and secular classes and teachers.” Moreover, the program is directed toward elementary school children, and they are more likely to be susceptible to this “impression of indorsement.” Therefore, the district court reasoned, the principal or primary effect of the cooperation which it enjoined is to advance WRE’s program. Under the second part of the modern test, it concluded, the program is unconstitutional.
Although the district court’s reasoning is persuasive,
8
its opinion was filed before
Meek
was decided. In
Meek
the Court expressly cited
Zorach
as viable authority.
The necessary effect of the release-time program in
Zorach
must have been
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much the same as the effect which the district court discerned in the instant case. Since
Zoraeh
is still good law, it must be that this effect is indirect or incidental rather than principal or primary. As the Court has recently reasserted, with a citation to
Zoraeh,
“not all . programs that provide indirect or incidental benefit to a religious institution are prohibited by the Constitution.”
Meek v. Pittenger,
We take this language to mean that the primary effect of the public school’s release-time program in
Zoraeh
must be seen as simply the innocuous diminishing of the number of children in school at a certain time of day. According to this view, public school cooperation with the religious authorities in
Zoraeh
and the instant case is a largely passive and administratively wise response to a plenitude of parental assertions of the right to “direct the upbringing and education of children under their control.”
Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
IV.
The judgment of the district court must be reversed and it should dismiss the complaint.
Reversed.
Notes
. The test was most recently stated in
Meek v. Pittenger,
. See,
e.g., Epperson v. Arkansas,
. This part of the test was developed and applied in
Abington School District v. Schempp,
. The “entanglement” concept was developed in
Walz v. Tax Commission,
. In
Meek v. Pittenger,
In Committee For Public Education & Religious Liberty v. Nyquist,
. This point is made in Note, “The ‘Released Time’ Cases Revisited: A Study of Group Decisionmaking by the Supreme Court,” 83 Yale L.J. 1212, 1230 (1974). The expenditure of public funds in McCollum consisted of little more than the loan of the school classrooms to the religious instructors.
The “force of the public school” was used to promote the religious instructions also primarily because the classrooms were turned over to the religious instructors. Since the students were compelled by law to attend school, they were therefore compelled at least to be in
*124
school when the religious instructors arrived. They could leave the classroom, but to some extent the law encouraged their participation in the religious education. Concurring in
Abington School District v. Schempp,
. In Zorach, Justices Black, Frankfurter and Jackson dissented and filed separate opinions. All took the position that McCollum was indistinguishable. The opinion of Justice Jackson eloquently and persuasively argued that the state exercised compulsion to further sectarian religious education, notwithstanding that actual instruction did not take place in the classrooms of public schools, but his views were rejected.
. See n. 7.
