Bobby Bowden, BGEA Urge Supreme Court to Hear Case of Football Coach Suspended for Praying on Field

by Michael Gryboski, |
Coach Joe Kennedy filing his complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in December 2015 against Bremerton School District. | PHOTO: COURTESY LIBERTY INSTITUTE

Members of Congress, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, 12 attorneys general and famed college football coach Bobby Bowden have called on the United States Supreme Court to protect a high school coach's right to pray on the field after games.

Coach Joe Kennedy of Bremerton High School in Washington state was suspended in 2015 for kneeling in prayer after the end of football games.

This week, multiple amicus briefs were filed on behalf of Kennedy to the U.S. Supreme Court, asking the high court to take up the coach's case.

The amicus brief filed by 15 members of the Senate and the House argued that a decision from a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals against Kennedy "cannot be reconciled with this court's precedent."

"Kennedy's conduct does not implicate any valid Establishment Clause concerns," read the Congressmen's brief. "It is undisputed that Kennedy did not encourage or even invite players to join him in prayer, as the only students who participated were those who voluntarily joined Kennedy.

According to his amicus brief, Bowden felt an obligation to intervene because he believed "no coach should have to set down their faith when they pick up a whistle."

"To be sure, this is an issue that resonates deeply with coach Bowden; it brings together three subjects that are the cornerstones of his life: faith, football, and freedom," read the Bowden brief.

"In coach Bowden's view, the Circuit Court's opinion jeopardizes an observant coach's ability to impart these life lessons and otherwise strips them of their spiritual identity while in the presence of their student-athletes by categorically eliminating at the public schoolhouse gate their First Amendment rights to engage in any form of religious expression."

While coaching Bremerton High School's football team, Kennedy developed the practice of praying on the 50-yard line of the football field immediately after each game. Initially praying alone, members of the high school team later decided to join him on the field in prayer.

In September 2015, Bremerton School District Superintendent Aaron Leavell sent a letter to Kennedy telling him that the prayers violated the Establishment Clause.

Read more about Bobby Bowden, BGEA Urge Supreme Court to Hear Case of Football Coach Suspended for Praying on Field on The Christian Post.