CANBERRA, Australia -- Australia's highest court said this week that the government exceeded its constitutional powers by paying for chaplains to run programs in public schools. The attorney general plans to try to keep the work going.
The ruling is a victory for Ron Williams, whose 6-year-old son came home from Darling Heights State School singing gospel songs in 2010.
Mr. Williams sued over the program at the school in Toowoomba in Queensland state.
Six of seven high court judges agreed that the government exceeded its powers by paying Scripture Union Queensland to provide a school chaplain.
About 2,700 schools around Australia have similar programs. Attorney General Nicola Roxon said she is examining the ruling's implications.
She said she would examine ways to legally continue the program, such as changing the law or paying states to provide the services instead of paying the providers directly.
The voluntary programs include support and guidance about ethics, values, relationships, spirituality, and religious issues. It costs the government more than $71 million a year.
The programs were introduced in 2007, when the conservative Liberal Party led the government.
The center-left Labor Party government in power had planned to expand it.
Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Trinity 3 - "A truly Christian work is it that
we descend and get mixed up in the mire of the sinner as deeply as he
sticks there himself, taking his sin upon ourselves and floundering out of
it with him, not acting otherwise than as if his sin were our own. We
should rebuke and deal with him in earnest; yet we are not to despise but
sincerely to love him. If you are proud toward the sinner and despise him,
you are utterly damned."
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*Calov*
*Caladium*
Luther's Sermons - Luke 15:1-10.
Third Sunday after Trinity
7. *A truly Christian work is it that we descend and get mixed up i...
39 minutes ago
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