Oklahoma Supreme Court pauses Ryan Walters' attempt to buy Bibles, Bible-infused curriculum
The Oklahoma Supreme Court has halted so-called 'request for proposals' for Bibles and Bible curriculum for Oklahoma classrooms, but has left open the question about the constitutionality of state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters' Bible-teaching mandate for state schools.
The order, signed by Chief Justice Dustin Rowe, was issued Monday. In the past two weeks, there have been a flurry of filings in the lawsuit, which was originally filed Oct. 17.
The lawsuit asked the court to halt Walters' mandate, issued in June, and bar Walters and the Oklahoma State Department of Education from spending $3 million in state money on Bibles. The agency is attempting a second 'request for proposals' seeking bidders to provide Bibles for classrooms. The original request was written in such a way that very few versions of the Bible — namely one endorsed by President Donald Trump — appear to meet all the standards specified.
The state Office of Management and Enterprise Services, a defendant in the lawsuit, had asked the court to order it to stop working on processing two request for proposals, or RFPs, from the Oklahoma State Department of Education — one for the Bibles, a second for Bible-infused curriculum for elementary classrooms — until the court issues a final decision. The agency had told the plaintiffs it was legally obligated to proceed with processing the RFPs until a court directive ordering it to do otherwise is issued.
Rowe's decision said a ruling on the plaintiff's request to enjoin Walters from 'taking any other action to implement or enforce the Bible Education Mandate is deferred to the decisional stage.'
Walters' desire was to spend $3 million in money from the fiscal year that ended in June for Bibles — the current RFP — and $3 million from the current fiscal year for more Bibles. The Oklahoma Senate's education budget subcommittee didn't include the $3 million Walters requested for the current fiscal year in its recommendation for this year's state Education Department budget.
This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Oklahoma Supreme Court pauses Ryan Walters' attempt to buy Bibles
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Texas set to mandate Ten Commandments in classrooms as ACLU vows to sue
Texas is set to become the largest state in the nation to mandate that every public school classroom display a copy of the Ten Commandments, with advocates fearing a further erosion of church and state and the legislation's sponsor making clear that's a separation she doesn't believe in. While Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has not yet signed the measure, which comes as red states are increasingly seeking to inject Christianity into public education, he told lawmakers in early May to 'get this bill to my desk. I'll make it law.' Under the legislation, beginning September 1, every school in Texas will be required to display a 16 inch by 20 inch poster of the Ten Commandments. While they won't be required to buy them with district funds, they will be required to display them if donated. The legislation also effectively creates an official state version of the Ten Commandments, because only one specific iteration meets the new statute: a King James Bible-derived list of 'Thou shalt nots' that is used by many Baptists and evangelicals but not by a majority of Catholics, Jews, protestants or Eastern Orthodox Christians. Critics argue the bill is a clear violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits the federal government from creating a state religion. The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas on Wednesday announced it would sue. 'S.B. 10 is blatantly unconstitutional. We will be working with Texas public school families to prepare a lawsuit to stop this violation of students' and parents' First Amendment rights,' the ACLU wrote, calling the measure 'religiously coercive.' Supporters of the bill, meanwhile, appeal to a letter from Thomas Jefferson which seems to leave open the possibility of state regulation of religion, though so far, courts haven't agreed: A similar bill in Louisiana was blocked in November after being ruled unconstitutional by a federal judge. The Texas bill is one of a broad array of public policy proposals pushed by an alliance of groups that seek a broader role for evangelical Christianity in public life. A prior state measure, passed in 2021, required schools to display 'in God we Trust' placards in every classroom. Neighboring Arkansas passed its own Ten Commandments bill in April. In a nod to the legal risks, amendments to the Texas measure require the state attorney general, currently Republican Ken Paxton, to defend at state expense any school district sued over compliance. This week, the Texas legislature also passed a bill permitting prayer in public schools and stripping language that forbids teachers from 'encouraging' students to participate. That measure also obligates the office of the state attorney general to help schools set up a prayer program, and — like the Ten Commandments bill — to defend any legal challenges to it at public expense. During debates over passage, bill sponsor state Rep. Candy Noble insisted that it was not a religious measure but meant to instruct students about the historical importance she says the Ten Commandments hold in American democracy. 'This bill is about honoring our historical educational and judicial heritage with the discipline of the Ten Commandments,' Noble said in a Sunday exchange with Rep. James Talarico (D), a self-described evangelical who opposed the bill. Over the past two months, Talarico and Noble's verbal duels over the bill have served as an intra-evangelical debate over the role of Christianity in public life. 'We established that our founding fathers wanted a separation of church and state,' Talarico began in one April committee hearing, before Noble cut him off. 'I did not establish that,' she said. 'I absolutely did not establish that. That's a historical fact that I disagree with.' In his opposition to the bill, Talarico repeatedly argued that displaying the Ten Commandments was itself a religious violation: a contradiction of St. Paul's dictum in Romans that all the commandments could be 'summed up in this sentence, 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' He argued it was not neighborly to signal to Jews, Muslims, Hindus or members of other Christian denominations that they didn't belong. That's a read Noble emphatically pushed back on. If these people were Americans, she said, 'maybe it would make them curious about what made our forefathers tick. Maybe it will help them wonder 'How can I treat others better? Maybe it will help them ask their parents questions on 'Why should I be under your authority?' 'Maybe we can take that tack with it instead of the negative tack that you're taking with it,' she added. In debates over the bill, Noble repeatedly argued that 'our classrooms are crying out for moral guidance,' though she went back and forth on whether teachers would be required to interpret the Ten Commandments for students. In a viral moment from the debate, Talarico pressed her on why representatives were working over the weekend — the Jewish and Christian Sabbaths — in violation of the Fourth Commandment. 'Is that ironic or what?' Noble asked, before explaining the importance of God's decision to take a day of rest, and contending that Talarico's own opposition to the bill had pushed debate to the weekend. 'Do you think that members of the legislature should focus more on trying to follow the Ten Commandments rather than telling others to follow them?' Talarico asked. 'It is incumbent on all of us to follow God's law,' Noble said. 'And I think that we would be better off if we did.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


The Hill
5 hours ago
- The Hill
Texas set to mandate Ten Commandments in classrooms as ACLU vows to sue
Texas is set to become the largest state in the nation to mandate that every public school classroom display a copy of the Ten Commandments, with advocates fearing a further erosion of church and state and the legislation's sponsor making clear that's a separation she doesn't believe in. While Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has not yet signed the measure, which comes as red states are increasingly seeking to inject Christianity into public education, he told lawmakers in early May to 'get this bill to my desk. I'll make it law.' Under the legislation, beginning September 1, every school in Texas will be required to display a 16 inch by 20 inch poster of the Ten Commandments. While they won't be required to buy them with district funds, they will be required to display them if donated. The legislation also effectively creates an official state version of the Ten Commandments, because only one specific iteration meets the new statute: a King James Bible-derived list of 'Thou shalt nots' that is used by many Baptists and evangelicals but not by a majority of Catholics, Jews, protestants or Eastern Orthodox Christians. Critics argue the bill is a clear violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits the federal government from creating a state religion. The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas on Wednesday announced it would sue. 'S.B. 10 is blatantly unconstitutional. We will be working with Texas public school families to prepare a lawsuit to stop this violation of students' and parents' First Amendment rights,' the ACLU wrote, calling the measure 'religiously coercive.' Supporters of the bill, meanwhile, appeal to a letter from Thomas Jefferson which seems to leave open the possibility of state regulation of religion, though so far, courts haven't agreed: A similar bill in Louisiana was blocked in November after being ruled unconstitutional by a federal judge. The Texas bill is one of a broad array of public policy proposals pushed by an alliance of groups that seek a broader role for evangelical Christianity in public life. A prior state measure, passed in 2021, required schools to display 'in God we Trust' placards in every classroom. Neighboring Arkansas passed its own Ten Commandments bill in April. In a nod to the legal risks, amendments to the Texas measure require the state attorney general, currently Republican Ken Paxton, to defend at state expense any school district sued over compliance. This week, the Texas legislature also passed a bill permitting prayer in public schools and stripping language that forbids teachers from 'encouraging' students to participate. That measure also obligates the office of the state attorney general to help schools set up a prayer program, and — like the Ten Commandments bill — to defend any legal challenges to it at public expense. During debates over passage, bill sponsor state Rep. Candy Noble insisted that it was not a religious measure but meant to instruct students about the historical importance she says the Ten Commandments hold in American democracy. 'This bill is about honoring our historical educational and judicial heritage with the discipline of the Ten Commandments,' Noble said in a Sunday exchange with Rep. James Talarico (D), a self-described evangelical who opposed the bill. Over the past two months, Talarico and Noble's verbal duels over the bill have served as an intra-evangelical debate over the role of Christianity in public life. 'We established that our founding fathers wanted a separation of church and state,' Talarico began in one April committee hearing, before Noble cut him off. 'I did not establish that,' she said. 'I absolutely did not establish that. That's a historical fact that I disagree with.' In his opposition to the bill, Talarico repeatedly argued that displaying the Ten Commandments was itself a religious violation: a contradiction of St. Paul's dictum in Romans that all the commandments could be 'summed up in this sentence, 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' He argued it was not neighborly to signal to Jews, Muslims, Hindus or members of other Christian denominations that they didn't belong. That's a read Noble emphatically pushed back on. If these people were Americans, she said, 'maybe it would make them curious about what made our forefathers tick. Maybe it will help them wonder 'How can I treat others better? Maybe it will help them ask their parents questions on 'Why should I be under your authority?' 'Maybe we can take that tack with it instead of the negative tack that you're taking with it,' she added. In debates over the bill, Noble repeatedly argued that 'our classrooms are crying out for moral guidance,' though she went back and forth on whether teachers would be required to interpret the Ten Commandments for students. In a viral moment from the debate, Talarico pressed her on why representatives were working over the weekend — the Jewish and Christian Sabbaths — in violation of the Fourth Commandment. 'Is that ironic or what?' Noble asked, before explaining the importance of God's decision to take a day of rest, and contending that Talarico's own opposition to the bill had pushed debate to the weekend. 'Do you think that members of the legislature should focus more on trying to follow the Ten Commandments rather than telling others to follow them?' Talarico asked. 'It is incumbent on all of us to follow God's law,' Noble said. 'And I think that we would be better off if we did.'
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Walters and Fittler return on cards as Meninga set to be 'removed' as Kangaroos coach
Kevin Walters, Cameron Smith and Brad Fittler are reportedly the front-runners to become the next Kangaroos coach if the Australian Rugby League commission insists Mal Meninga steps down to take the Perth Bears job. Meninga is believed to have won the race to become the Bears' inaugural coach, and will be unveiled in coming weeks. But it will likely mean he'll have to step down as coach of Australia with immediate effect, because NRL officials are keen for him to start work on building the Bears' roster straight away. Leading journalist Michael Chammas reported this week that Meninga will be 'removed' as Kangaroos coach and won't be able to lead the Aussie team in the Ashes series against England later this year. It would be a hammer blow for Meninga considering the hype around the revamped Ashes series, which he featured in as a player. "The NRL does not want Meninga to coach Australia at the end-of-season Ashes series in England, instead wanting him to focus on building the Bears' roster for their 2027 debut," Chammas wrote. The Bears are allowed to start negotiating with and signing players from November 1 this year. If Meninga is still Kangaroos coach, he'll be in England on that date watching Australia play the second Test. The third and final Test of the series will take place a week later, sparking concerns over whether Meninga will be able to give both roles his full attention. Chammas reported that "three names currently in the mix" to become the new coach are Walters, Smith and Fittler. Walters and Fittler were previously State of Origin combatants, going head-to-head as coach of Queensland and NSW respectively. Walters, who was sacked by the Broncos last year, was interviewed about the Perth Bears job earlier this month. Fittler was NSW coach for six years, winning three series and losing three before stepping down in 2024. He returned to coaching with the Prime Minister's XIII team late last year for their game against PNG. 'I wouldn't consider it unless I was formally asked,' Fittler told the Sydney Morning Herald about coaching the Kangaroos. 'I don't know if Mal has the job or that he can't do both.' As for Smith, the Melbourne Storm and Queensland Maroons legend has no head-coaching experience. However he previously served as an assistant to Billy Slater with the Queensland team. Meninga's pending appointment as the Bears' coach means he's beaten fellow candidates Walters, Sam Burgess and Brad Arthur for the job. Arthur was believed to be the initial front-runner, and NRL officials considered using Meninga and Burgess in a tandem role. But Burgess reportedly withdrew from the running, paving the way for Meninga to get the job solo. There's suggestions Meninga will need a top-notch assistant coach with plenty of experience with NRL teams considering he last coached week-in-week out at club level in 2001. RELATED: Blow for Billy Slater with Queensland player banned from Origin Did NSW get away with illegal play on match-sealing try in Game 1? Discussing the situation on Thursday, the 64-year-old said there hadn't been any decisions made on whether he'd have to relinquish the Kangaroos job immediately. 'It's speculation,' he told the . 'I haven't had any conversations about this (quitting Australia), and to be honest I don't want to make any comments. It will be addressed if and only if the decision (to coach Perth) becomes a reality. The reality for me is that I'm the current Aussie coach.'