In the debris trail of its recent decision to reverse a 50-year old marquee ruling on abortion “rights,” the highest court in the land issued another decision just days later on the increasingly blurred separation between church and state—in particular, public prayer. The former was met with cheers, jeers, protests, and, sadly, moral discord; the latter with very little reaction by comparison. Both decisions are tied inextricably to the 14th Amendment to our Constitution which guarantees American citizens certain “liberties,” such as freedom of religion, speech, and the press.The Supreme Court’s change of opinion about the 1973 Roe v. Wade ...