Indiana State Senator Wants To Require 'In God We Trust' Posters In Classrooms

GOP state Sen. Dennis Kruse's bill specifies the minimum dimensions of the poster he hopes to mandate in Indiana schools.
Indiana state Sen. Dennis Kruse (R) has reportedly introduced a total of six creationism-related bills since 2000.
Indiana state Sen. Dennis Kruse (R) has reportedly introduced a total of six creationism-related bills since 2000.
Darron Cummings/ASSOCIATED PRESS

An Indiana state senator is pushing a bill that advances Christian beliefs in the state’s public and charter schools.

Republican state Sen. Dennis Kruse’s bill, introduced last Thursday, seeks to place a poster reading “In God We Trust” in every public and charter school classroom in Indiana.

The bill, titled “Education Matters,” specifies that the phrase should appear on a “durable poster or framed picture” that is at least 11 by 17 inches, and that the display could potentially be purchased with school funds.

The bill would also allow public schools to teach creationism and offer a survey course on world religions. Curriculum for the survey course must be “neutral, objective and balanced” and not “promote acceptance of any particular religion,” according to the legislation, but it only lists the Bible as a specific text to be studied.

The phrase "In God We Trust," seen on a U.S. dollar bill, became the national motto in 1956.
The phrase "In God We Trust," seen on a U.S. dollar bill, became the national motto in 1956.
Thomas Trutschel via Getty Images

Kruse, who represents portions of Allen and DeKalb counties, has a long history of proposing legislation that supports Christian beliefs. In 2013, he pushed a bill that would have required Indiana schools to begin each day by reciting the Lord’s Prayer, a foundational Christian prayer.

Kruse has introduced a total of six creationism-related bills since 2000, CBS-affiliate WSBT reports. His previous five attempts failed.

This year, Alaska, Kentucky, Missouri and South Carolina have already introduced “In God We Trust” bills that would allow the phrase to be placed on public buildings and vehicles, The Guardian reports.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a national advocacy organization, claims that the slew of bills is part of a larger campaign by Christian nationalist groups to enshrine America’s Judeo-Christian heritage in law.

The phrase “In God We Trust” started appearing on U.S. coins during the Civil War, a period of heightened religious sentiment in the country. It re-emerged during the Cold War as a religious response to the atheism espoused by communist countries. The phrase became America’s national motto in 1956 and started appearing on paper money one year later.

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