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Yes, religious symbols can be appropriate in public settings if they reflect historical or cultural significance and do not promote a specific religion. The First Amendment protects both freedom of ...
Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor wrote that the memo “provides guidance to agencies on robustly protecting ...
Federal employees may start seeing and hearing more about religion in the workplace, following new guidance from the Trump ...
Federal workers will be allowed to discuss and promote their religion in the workplace as well as challenge the “correctness” ...
Religious expression isn’t just allowed in federal offices, it’s encouraged, according to a new memo issued to the heads of ...
Faith: Religious symbols give us connection to our beliefs By Judy Knotts Updated March 5, 2025 9:18 a.m.
March 29, 2019 Presenter: Melissa Kelley In times of personal and communal challenge and struggle, how might we draw more fully on our faith lives to become ever more resilient? This presentation ...
The guidance protects employees and supervisors seeking to recruit fellow federal workers to their religion. The Clinton ...
In last week’s Christian Century, Niebuhr No. 2, H. Richard, analyzes the nature of his own faith and how it has changed. Deification of the Scriptures.