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Home > 2004 > June (Web-only)Christianity Today, June (Web-only), 2004  |   |  
Los Angeles Takes Out the Cross
The Thomas More Law Center says that by removing a cross from the Los Angeles County seal, the government is conveying a message that is anti-Christian and violating the Constitution.



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After being threatened with a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union, on June 1 the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors proposed removing a small cross from the county seal in a 3-2 vote. The seal points to a number of formative influences on the county, including Catholic missions and agriculture. On June 4, the Thomas More Law Center Ann Arbor, Michigan, representing a county employee, filed a suit in federal district court in Los Angeles accusing the county and the supervisors of sending a "government-sponsored message of hostility towards Christians." Supervisors confirmed their decision on June 8. Robert Muise, an associate counsel with the law center, discussed the case with CT Associate News Editor Stan Guthrie.

Where do things stand legally?

We, on behalf of a county employee, have filed a lawsuit against the county alleging that the county seal, as it stands now, which was adopted in 1957, does not convey a religious message. In fact, it just conveys the importance that Christianity and other factors had in influencing the culture and the history of the state of California and the county of Los Angeles.

However, the county, by singling out the cross and targeting Christianity for removal, really is revising history. They are now conveying a message that is anti-Christian, and this anti-Christian message in fact does violate the Establishment Clause [of the Constitution]. The Establishment Clause ["Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"] requires the government to be neutral. But now by singling out Christianity for removal from the symbol, and really removal from the history and founding of the county, they are conveying a message to Christians that they're second-class citizens. Their actions now have taken them over the threshold of constitutionality [and] convey an anti-Christian message.

Why is this case important?

I think what it demonstrates is that Christians aren't going to roll over and play dead when the ACLU rattles the saber. There are two sides to this issue. The ACLU is up in arms because there's this tiny cross appearing on this symbol. You'd have to strain your eyesight to see where this cross is, actually. The goddess Pomona is the central figure of this particular symbol, but obviously the ACLU doesn't have any problem with that. They're targeting Christianity. And they go around throughout the country [and] threaten municipalities with lawsuits if they don't bend to their will.

This lawsuit will show that the municipal leaders—the supervisors, the government officials—were bending to the will of the ACLU, [but] that there were people out there who aren't just going to roll over. When they're taking that cross off … they're telling Christians that "you had no place, no role in the history," which is revisionist. And they're telling them that they're second-class citizens, that their influence can't be represented in a symbol that demonstrates the historical and cultural significance of the county.

There have been many cases where the ACLU or other groups have sued to have a cross or some other religious symbol removed from a city crest. How is this case different?

In fact, we made public statements that we would have represented [Los Angeles] county in defense of their symbol. We defended the [public display of the] Ten Commandments in Utah just recently, and we succeeded against attacks of anti-Christian groups that wanted to remove those. So we would stand on the side of the municipalities … But when you have municipalities who are cooperating with the ACLU and are caving in to them, now they're opening themselves up for Christians to file lawsuits. So I think this will establish an important precedent that … Christians … are not going to just let the ACLU bully people around and that there may, perhaps, be consequences.





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