Court Upholds Texas Ten Commandments in Schools, Sparks Supreme Court Appeal

April 22, 2026
Court Upholds Texas Ten Commandments in Schools, Sparks Supreme Court Appeal
  • A U.S. appeals court in the Fifth Circuit ruled by a narrow 9-8 margin that Texas may require public schools to display Ten Commandments posters in classrooms, reversing a lower court ruling and potentially influencing similar laws in Arkansas and Louisiana.

  • The majority held the SB10 law does not violate the Establishment or Free Exercise Clauses, arguing it is not an endorsement of worship nor an imposition on religious practice.

  • Supporters frame the Ten Commandments as historical foundations of U.S. law rather than a religious endorsement, while opponents warn the display pressures students and families and breaches church-state separation.

  • Governors and state officials emphasize alignment with national history and tradition, while critics stress protecting the separation of church and state and parental rights in religious instruction.

  • The decision fits into a broader Republican push to increase religious content in schools, a stance critics describe as unconstitutional.

  • Plaintiffs expressed disappointment and said they will appeal to the Supreme Court to challenge the ruling.

  • Opponents, including the ACLU, argue the ruling undermines the First Amendment and parental rights by promoting a Protestant-leaning state display.

  • The plaintiffs include 15 Texas families supported by associations, planning to seek Supreme Court review to defend church-state separation and parental choice in religious education.

  • Challengers comprising multifaith and nonreligious families say the decision undermines constitutional protections and will pursue Supreme Court review.

  • In a dissent, Judge Ramirez suggested the panel may be at odds with established precedent from an earlier Supreme Court decision striking down a nearly identical law.

  • Judge Higginson warned the ruling advances government-led religious display in classrooms, potentially violating the Establishment Clause.

Summary based on 19 sources


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