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What is the Church of Satanology? Here's its beef with Florida schools
What is the Church of Satanology? Here's its beef with Florida schools

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

What is the Church of Satanology? Here's its beef with Florida schools

'Satan Loves the First Amendment. Broward Schools Didn't.' Those are the first words you'll read – in all capital letters – if you visit the Satanology website. You might be asking yourself, what is Satanology? It's a church founded by a former Palm Bay resident and activist, Chaz Stevens, who's out to 'expose religious favoritism in America's schools.' The Church of Satanology and Perpetual Soiree sent an email to Brevard's school board and superintendent this week, requesting banners for the religion to be placed in five schools. 'What happens when an atheist dares to hang a "Satan Loves the First Amendment" banner on a public school fence?' the Satanology website says. 'If you're Chaz Stevens, all hell breaks loose — and that's the point.' Here's what we know about The Church of Satanology and Perpetual Soiree and why it's got beef with Florida schools. By definition, Satanology is the study of the person of Satan, usually as he is depicted through the lens of the Christian Bible. 'Satanology is the study of the person and work of Satan. It's strange that Satan is not understood very well by believers today,' Evidence Unseen, a Christian website, says. 'Christian teachers fluctuate between various extremes: either denying Satan or obsessing over him.' The Church of Satanology, run by the Ministry of Chaz the Bropostle, is a more political, constitution-based effort than it is an actual religion. 'Welcome to Satanology — our sharp-toothed campaign to expose viewpoint discrimination in public schools, where Christian churches get banners but the Church of Satanology and Perpetual Soirée' gets the boot,' The Church of Satanology website says. More on Satanology and Florida schools: Founder of Church of Satanology requests banners be hung at 5 Brevard high schools 'In 2023, Chaz challenged Broward County Schools after spotting banners from Calvary Chapel slapped on public property.' Stevens then requested equal space for his banner that said 'Satan loves the First Amendment.' 'The result? The church banners came down, the lawyers came out, and the school board flipped policy overnight,' the Satanology website says. 'But Chaz isn't stopping. This isn't about goat heads and pitchforks — it's about LGBTQ+ kids, secular freedom, and the equal treatment of all beliefs in public spaces.' A quote from Stevens on the Satanology website says, 'I don't believe in Satan. I believe in fairness.' The website also calls Satanology 'First Amendment judo,' saying, 'We're using their own rules to make them flinch — and it's working.' Stevens, a Florida Tech graduate who now lives in Boca Raton, sent a letter to Brevard's school board and superintendent on May 19. He requested his Satanology banners be put up at five Brevard County schools, including Palm Bay Magnet High School, which he said already has a religious banner up on campus. 'Brevard Public Schools did not confirm if such a banner exists,' FLORIDA TODAY reported on May 19. 'Stevens told Florida Today the banner hangs on the school's fence and advertises a church.' Here are the five schools where Stevens requested banners be put up: Viera High School Melbourne High School Heritage High School Palm Bay Magnet High School Rockledge High School. Almost all of the state statutes dealing with religious expression in public schools work to create a nondiscriminatory environment for students and employees of public schools in Florida. But one section of the state law that governs religious freedom mentions schools giving equal opportunity to religious and secular groups that choose to use school resources or want to advertise their meetings. And Stevens' church isn't using school resources or advertising meetings, just asking to put up a banner. Here's what that section of the state statute says: 'A school district shall give a religious group access to the same school facilities for assembling as given to secular groups without discrimination based on the religious content of the group's expression. A group that meets for prayer or other religious speech may advertise or announce its meetings in the same manner and to the same extent that a secular group may advertise or announce its meetings.' This article originally appeared on Florida Today: Church of Satanology, Florida schools face-off. What we know

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