
Interfaith Alliance, a leading advocate for healthy boundaries between religion and government, is disappointed by yesterday's ruling by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in Rev. Roake v. Brumley that allowed Louisiana to enforce its law requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom from Kindergarten to college. Interfaith Alliance was one of 20 religious organizations that co-signed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case.
In response to the ruling, Interfaith Alliance’s president and CEO Rev. Paul Brandeis Raushenbush shared the following comment:
“Louisiana’s law requiring Ten Commandments displays in classrooms is an obvious violation of the First Amendment and a gut punch to every American who believes in religious freedom.
Right-wing Louisiana lawmakers and Fifth Circuit Court judges should crack open the Constitution. It leaves no room for religious indoctrination or coercion in public schools. Our founders believed that students should be free to learn without government-imposed religion. As a pastor who believes deeply in America’s commitment to religious freedom, I am deeply concerned about this ruling and the ongoing Christian nationalist push to break down critical boundaries between government and religion. As a parent with children in public school, I object to the government attempting to impose one religious text on my children.
Interfaith Alliance will keep fighting to keep religious instruction where it should be: with religious institutions and families. Whether or not you hold the Ten Commandments to be sacred scripture–and I do–we should all agree that the government co-opting it and robbing it of its religious significance is demeaning.”
Faith leaders across the country are leading the pushback on this egregious attack on religious freedom, in places such as Alabama, Texas, Missouri and Kentucky. Rev. Raushenbush and representatives from Interfaith Alliance’s 20 state and local affiliates are available for interview to discuss the impact of this decision.
CONTACT: Ben DePasquale, [email protected], 717-779-4660

Interfaith Alliance is a leading advocate for multi-faith democracy and healthy boundaries between religion and government. It was among the founding organizations of a national sign-on letter, joined by more than 1,800 nonprofit organizations, voicing opposition to the proposed settlement agreement in National Religious Broadcasters v. Bessent, a case in which the Trump administration and a coalition of religious broadcasters sought to create an effective exemption to the Johnson Amendment, the 70-year-old law that bars 501(c)(3) organizations, including houses of worship, from endorsing or opposing political candidates. Had the settlement been approved, religious leaders would have been able to make partisan endorsements from the pulpit without risking their tax-exempt status. Today, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas dismissed the case, finding it lacked jurisdiction.

Interfaith Alliance is a leading advocate for multi-faith democracy and healthy boundaries between religion and government. It joined a friend-of-the-court brief from religious organizations in Chiles v. Salazar, in support of Colorado’s right to protect LGBTQ+ youth from harmful, discredited “conversion therapy” practices.

Interfaith Alliance, a leading advocate for religious freedom and multi-faith democracy. will host the National Interfaith Town Hall: Building Momentum from No Kings on Tuesday, March 31, 2026, from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. ET.