Lead Opinion
This case tests the constitutionality of a display of the Ten Commandments on public property. The display in question is a framed text of the King James version of the Ten Commandments, one of nine historical texts and symbols that comprise a “Foundations of American Law and Government Display” in the County Administration Building in Elkhart County, Indiana. Authorized by resolution of the Elkhart County Board of Commissioners, the exhibit includes a selection of significant historical documents and symbols that, according to the resolution, “positively contribute to the educational foundation and moral character of the citizens of [Elk-hart] county.” Evaluating the display under the three-part test of Lemon v. Kurtzman,
We reverse. The display satisfies the Lemon test and is therefore constitutional under the First Amendment. The County’s stated purposes — to educate its citizens in the history of American law and politics and provide moral uplift — -are secular, and we see no good reason to doubt the County’s sincerity. Nor is the primary effect of the display to advance religion. The inclusion of the Ten Commandments in a multifaceted historical exhibit of texts and images that have influenced or symbolized American law and government cannot reasonably be understood as an endorsement of religion.
I. Background
The pertinent facts are undisputed. Two individuals approached government officials in Elkhart County, Indiana, and offered to donate a set of documents for display. The set included the Preamble to the Indiana Constitution, the national motto, the national anthem, an image of Lady Justice, the Declaration of Independence, the Mayflower Compact, the Bill of Rights to the United States Constitution, the Magna Carta, and the Ten Commandments. County Commissioner Martin McCloskey asked the county attorney to draft a resolution authorizing a display of the documents, along with the flags of the United States and Indiana. This was done, and on March 17, 2003, the County
The resolution sets forth the County’s view that the documents included in the display are historically significant and educationally valuable to the citizens of Elk-hart County. In particular, it states as a general matter that “a sense of historical context, civic duty, and responsibility, and the general application and understanding of the law of this land, are all desirable components of the education of the citizens of this county.” The resolution goes on to say that the documents included in the display “positively contribute to the educational foundation and moral character of the citizens of this county.”
Acknowledging that “there may be other symbols, documents, speeches, letters, and writings that are equally important as those mentioned,” the resolution states the Commission’s opinion that the documents and symbols in the display, “taken as a whole, are valuable examples of documents and symbols that may instill qualities desirable of the citizens of this county, and have had particular historical significance to the development of this country.” The Commissioners resolved to “support these historical documents and symbols, and also support the public display of the above documents and symbols.” The resolution specifies that the display will be erected on the walls of the County Administration Building “and at such other public facilities of Elkhart County Government as shall from time to time hereafter be designated by the Commissioners.”
The very day the resolution passed the display was erected on a wall on the first floor of the County Administration Building, near the entrance to the County Commissioners’ offices. The display consists of ten individually framed images and documents — the nine historical documents and a separately framed explanation of the display — flanked by the flags of Indiana and the United States. The identically sized frames hang at eye level and are placed approximately two inches from one another, forming a bunched grouping in two rows. The explanation is placed at the far right-hand end of the display. Each of the historical texts and symbols is identically sized and matted inside a frame measuring approximately 11 x 14 inches. Given the varying lengths of the historical texts, the typeface of the documents is not identical, but from the photographs included in the record, they appear nearly the same.
The separately framed explanation sets forth a one- or two-paragraph exposition of the historical significance of each text and symbol. These explanations are generally narratives of the origin and purpose of the historical text or symbol in question, along with a brief comment on the text’s significance in American history. For instance, the explanation refers to the Mayflower Compact as “the first written constitution in the New World” and quotes its author, William Bradford, describing why the settlers of Plymouth, Massachusetts, created the Compact. The Declaration of Independence is rated “perhaps the single most important document in American History ... the ‘frame’ into which the Framers placed the Constitution,” the fundamental premise of which is that “[government is not a giver of rights, but a protector of God-given rights.” The Magna Carta is described as the origin of the concept of the rule of law and is related forward to the American war of independence: “[T]he American patriots ... waged war against England to preserve liberties originating in 13th century England.”
The explanation provides the little-known fact that the national motto, “In God We Trust,” was derived from a line in the Star-Spangled Banner. Another section of the explanation vividly describes how Francis Scott Key wrote the poem
In comparison with the other texts, the description of the Ten Commandments is relatively short and contains no information about its origins. Instead, the explanation focuses on the historical significance of the Ten Commandments:
The Ten Commandments have profoundly influenced the formation of Western legal thought and the formation of our country. That influence is clearly seen in the Declaration of Independence, which declared that “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” The Ten Commandments provide the moral background of the Declaration of Independence and the foundation of our legal tradition.
The display presents the Ten Commandments (.Exodus 20:3-17) in the Bang James version:
Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water underneath the earth: Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the LORD thy God am a jealous God, visiting, the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me.
Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain: for the LORD will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain.
Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.
Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee. Thou shalt not kill.
Thou shalt not commit adultery.
Thou shalt not steal.
Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.
Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house, thou shalt not covet thy neighb-our’s wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidsérvant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour’s.
William Books filed this lawsuit against the County under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, together with a separate motion for preliminary injunction. He asked ' the district court to order the County to remove the Ten Commandments from the display, asserting that their inclusion violated the First Amendment’s ban on government establishment of religion. At the parties’ request, the court consolidated the preliminary injunction motion with the merits of the case and then ruled on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment.
The district court held that the County’s display of the Ten Commandments failed the first, or “purpose,” prong of the Lemon test, and therefore violated the First Amendment. According to the court, the County had two purposes for including the Ten Commandments in the larger display:
II. Discussion
A. Standing
The County offers a brief argument on the issue of standing, asserting that Books’ alleged injury- — direct and unwelcome contact with a religious object that deeply bothers him — is trivial and therefore not legally cognizable. The County argues that Books’ injury is entirely psychological, and that such injuries, without more, do not confer standing.
The County’s argument is foreclosed by our decision in Books v. City of Elkhart,
We noted that in Establishment Clause cases a plaintiff can allege injury in fact from a government display of a religious object by alleging that he has undertaken a “special burden” or has altered his behavior to avoid the object that gives him offense. Id. at 299 (citing, inter alia, Freedom from Religion Found., Inc. v. City of Marshfield,
Books and his fellow plaintiff in our earlier Books case alleged that they were forced to come into direct and unwelcome contact with the City of Elkhart’s outdoor Ten Commandments monument when they entered the municipal building to conduct business or attend public meetings and when they visited the adjacent public library. Id. at 297. We held this sufficient
B. First Amendment
Under the familiar three-part test set forth in Lemon, government action does not violate the First Amendment’s ban on the establishment of religion if it has a secular purpose, if its principal or primary effect is one that neither advances nor inhibits religion, and if it does not foster an excessive government entanglement with religion. Lemon,
Lemon days may be numbered; we are aware that the Supreme Court’s resolution of two Ten Commandments cases accepted for review this Term may undo our work here. See Van Orden v. Perry,
Nevertheless, we have before us a fully briefed and argued case that is ripe for decision. Despite persistent criticism from several of the Justices,
1. Secular Purpose
The first step in the Lemon analysis requires us to determine whether Elkhart County’s inclusion of the Ten Commandments in the “Foundations” display has a secular purpose. The “purpose” inquiry of the Lemon test “asks whether the government’s actual purpose is to endorse or disapprove of religion.” Edwards v. Aguillard,
The Supreme Court has held that government action lacks a valid secular purpose under Lemon only when there is “no question that the statute or activity was motivated wholly by religious considerations.” Lynch,
The Ten Commandments are “undeniably a sacred text in the Jewish and Christian faiths.” Stone v. Graham,
The Elkhart County Board of Commissioners formally identified by resolution two purposes behind the “Foundations” exhibit: to “contribute to the educational foundation and moral character of the citizens of this county.” The explanation posted with the exhibit tells viewers that “[t]he Foundations of American Law and Government display contains documents that played a significant role in the foundation of our system of law and government.” As to the Commandments in particular, the explanation states that “[t]he Ten Commandments have profoundly influenced the formation of Western legal thought and the formation of our country.” Considered in the' context of the “Foundations” display as a whole, these statements reflect an effort by the County to erect a display within the limits of the permissible purposes articulated by the Supreme Court in Stone and this court in the first Books case.
The district court gave two reasons why it believed the display failed the purpose prong of Lemon. First, the court concluded that any attempt to contribute to the moral character of the citizenry through a display of a religious text such as the Ten Commandments was necessarily an effort to impose a religious code of conduct, impermissible under Books and OBannon. Second, the court rejected the educational purpose behind the display because it viewed the historical connection between the Ten Commandments and the other documents in the exhibit as too weak. We do not read Books and OBannon so broadly, and we disagree that the First Amendment requires a precise and provable historical link between the Ten Commandments and the secular texts and symbols included in the “Foundations” exhibit.
As a general matter, the district court circumscribed its focus and considered the Ten Commandments in isolation from the other documents in the “Foundations” display. ■ The court interpreted the County’s “moral uplift” purpose as applying to the Ten Commandments individually, rather than to the display as a whole, and concluded that to impute moral value to the Ten Commandments is to communicate a religious message. The Supreme Court has cautioned against so narrow an analysis: “[To] focus exclusively on the religious component of any activity would inevitably lead to its invalidation under the Establishment Clause.” Lynch,
The district court concluded that Books and OBannon left it no choice but to reject the County’s “moral character” purpose. Books and OBannon concerned the constitutionality of public displays of singular stone monuments depicting the Ten Commandments, not the inclusion of the
We emphasized in Books that “religious symbols should not be considered in the abstract; instead, courts must ask Vhether the particular display at issue, considered in its overall context, could be said to advance religion.’” Books,
The same cannot be said of the “Foundations” exhibit at issue here. The resolution authorizing the display says, in reference to all the included documents: “[TJhese above named documents and symbols positively contribute to the educational foundation and moral character of the citizens of this county.” Unlike in Books and OBannon, where the government highlighted the religious character of the monuments, here Elkhart County has explicitly emphasized the holistic character of its display.
Considered in this context, the reference to moral character in the Commission’s resolution does not necessarily imply a purpose to advance religion. Elkhart County has not suggested that morality is impossible without adherence to a particular religious text, or that adherence to a specific religious text inspires a superior morality. These would, no doubt, be religious messages. Rather, the County’s resolution says that instilling “a sense of historical context, civic duty, and responsibility” in the citizenry is a desirable goal, and that the documents in the display “taken as a whole” are “valuable examples of documents and symbols that may instill” these qualities. This sort of broad association of the Ten Commandments with generally accepted moral norms does not doom this display under the purpose prong of Lemon.
As for the County’s “educational foundation” purpose, the district court found the historical content of the explanation insufficient to sustain any bona fide secular educational purpose. The district court is correct that the explanation describes the historical connection between the Ten Commandments and the rest of the display in only the most general and conclusory terms: it states that the Ten Commandments have “profoundly influenced the formation of Western legal thought and the formation of our country” and provide the “moral background of the Declaration of Independence and the foundation of our
The purpose prong of the Lemon test does not require us to evaluate the quality or sufficiency of the historical analysis embodied in the County’s display. While the content of a religious display might in some instances force a conclusion that the government’s asserted secular purpose is merely a sham, that is not the case here. This display is a collection of texts and images from English and American history. The County does not claim that they are the only or the most important sources of American law and politics, merely that they are among the most important. That a religious text has been included in a display of documents that have influenced American history and government does not take the display outside the realm of the secular: “It is true that religion has been closely identified with our history and government:” Abington,
We said in the first Books case that it is well within the bounds of constitutional plausibility "to assert, as the County does here, that the Ten Commandments have played an important role in the development of American society and civic order. Books,
■ Were this display erected on the wall of a public museum, we would hardly think it appropriate to second-guess the museum’s purposes by questioning the quality of the exhibit’s historical content or substituting our own historical analysis for that of the curator. Placement in a museum might signal more clearly the exhibitor’s educational purpose, as education is one of the primary functions of museums, but it is also entirely reasonable to accept that representative governments might credibly propose that their citizens learn something about their history, law, and culture inside the very buildings which house their government.
We do not hold that this display passes the purpose prong of the Lemon test merely because the Ten Commandments, a religious text, has been placed in a setting that includes secular texts. We noted in O’Bannon that “[t]he display of secular texts along with the Ten Commandments does not automatically lead to a finding that the purpose in erecting the monument is primarily secular.” O’Bannon,
2. Secular Effect
The second inquiry of the Lemon methodology asks whether the challenged government action has the principal or primary effect of advancing or inhibiting religion. Lynch,
The “courts have a special responsibility to ensure that a government-sponsored display does not have the purpose or effect of endorsing a religion.” Books,
This does not mean, however, that to constitutionally display a religious item on public property the government must ensure that it offends no one. That would be asking the impossible. That some person or group might be uncomfortable with the presence of the Ten Commandments in this display is not enough to require their removal. “[T]he endorsement inquiry is not about the perceptions of particular individuals or saving isolated nonadherents from the discomfort of viewing symbols of faith to which they do not subscribe.” See Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette,
“Thus, ‘we do not ask whether there is any person who could find an endorsement of religion, whether some people may be offended by the display, or whether some reasonable person might think [the State] endorses religion.’ ” Id. at 780,
Elkhart County’s display is located inside the County’s main administration building. It could hardly be closer to the seat of government, and we have previously indicated that religious displays on or near the seat of government must receive special scrutiny because that location is “so plainly under government ownership and control that every display on its property is marked implicitly with government approval.” Books,
The Commission’s approval of the “Foundations” display as a whole, however, does not amount to an endorsement of the religious message contained in one of the nine historical documents included in the exhibit. This display differs in significant respects from the monuments we found constitutionally impermissible in Books and O’Bannon. In those cases, as here, we examined the form and content of the displays as well as their location at the seat of government. We concluded that the large stone monuments displayed so prominently on the grounds of the city municipal building (Books) and Indiana State Capitol (O’Bannon) had the primary effect of endorsing religion. See Books,
The particular factors we viewed as problematic in those cases are not present in the “Foundations” display. Here, the text of the Ten Commandments is displayed in a simple rectangular frame identical to the other documents and symbols in the exhibit, not on a tablet-shaped monument whose “very format,” we previously held, “conveyed a religious message.” O’Bannon,
By virtue of the texts that aré included and the content of the accompanying explanation, this display tells viewers that the American founders were inspired by a religious tradition that includes the Ten Commandments and that those values influenced the development of our law and government. A public acknowledgment by the government that the founders were religious people whose faith influenced the creation of this nation, its laws, and its institutions of government is far different from saying that the government itself endorses their religion. Only the latter message is prohibited by the Establishment Clause.
The Establishment Clause is not violated when government teaches about the historical role of religion. In a pluralistic society, reasonable people can usually tell the difference between preaching religion and teaching about the role of religion in our history. We are satisfied that Elkhart County is trying to . teach, not preach, something about the Ten Commandments. The theme of the “Foundations” display is historical, emphasizing the origins of the American legal order; the historical thesis that underlies the display is that belief in God and the existence of inherent, God-given rights has played an important role in the genesis of basic concepts in American law and government.
III. Conclusion
In the first Books ease we said that the Ten Commandments “no doubt ha[ve] played a role in the secular development of our society and can no doubt be presented by the government as playing such a role in our civic order.” Books,
ReveRsed And RemaNded
Notes
. Books has not argued that the display excessively entangles government with religion, the third inquiry under Lemon v. Kurtzman,
. In ACLU of Ky. v. McCreary County,
. See, e.g., Lee v. Weisman,
. Our colleague suggests that we are not obliged to follow Lemon's approach because it has been applied inconsistently and a majority of the Justices have disavowed it (though not at the same time). We disagree, and contrast this suggestion with our colleague's relatively recent view of Lemon’s continued force. See United States v. Booker,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
My colleagues ask and answer the question whether inclusion of the Ten Commandments in a display at Elkhart’s County Administration Building endorses religion and thus transgresses the establishment clause of the first amendment, applied to state and local governments by the fourteenth amendment. I have serious doubts about the nature of the question, even on the supposition that the establishment clause affects states in the same way as the national government. See Elk Grove Unified School District v. Newdow,
“Establishment” entails coercion: either mandatory religious observance or mandatory support (via taxes) for clergy on the public payroll. See Philip Hamburger, Separation of Church and State 89-107 (2002); Leonard W. Levy, The Establishment Clause: Religion and the First Amendment (1986); Michael W. McConnell, Establishment and Disestablishment at the Founding, Part I: Establishment of Religion, 44 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. 2105 (2003); Michael W. McConnell, Coercion: The Lost Element of Establishment, 27 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. 933 (1986). See also American Jewish Congress v. Chicago,
Words do not coerce. See Rust v. Sullivan,
What the display may do is give offense, either to persons outside the religious tradition that includes the Book of Exodus or to those who believe that religion and government should be hermetically separated. Yet Themis may offend Christians (and all icons offend Muslims), the military’s ads offend religious pacifists, and the message in Rust supports one religious perspective on human life while deprecating others. See also Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey,
Just last Term the Court made that point in Newdow when holding that a father’s dismay at knowing that public schools call on his daughter to recite “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance does not support litigation. Only the daughter — the person potentially coerced — or a custodial parent acting as her next Mend could obtain judicial review. See also Crowley v. McKinney,
Like other appellate courts, we have held that changing one’s daily route to avoid coming across a religious display, or staying out of a park, is enough of a concrete effect to establish injury in fact.
Several decisions of this circuit have reduced Valley Forge to a hollow shell, holding for example that it is enough to “allege standing” without establishing injury in fact, see Harris v. Zion,
Instead of following Books I we should overrule it as inconsistent with Valley Forge, a decision that Books I did not mention. Although Newdow devotes most of its attention to a prudential question about the effect of a child-custody decree, it starts with an assumption shared by all of the Justices: that Newdow’s disgust at knowing that pupils recite the phrase “under God” was not enough to support constitutional litigation. “The command to guard jealously and exercise rarely our power to make constitutional pronouncements requires strictest adherence when matters of great national significance are at stake.” 542 U.S. at -,
Decisions such as Books I drain the case-or-controversy requirement of meaning. Valley Forge requires us to separate injured from ideological plaintiffs; Books I fails to do this. We should set things to rights rather than repeat the mistake. Therefore, unlike my colleagues, who resolve this appeal on the merits, I would vacate the district court’s judgment and remand with instructions to dismiss the complaint for want of standing.
