A North Carolina resolution that garnered national scrutiny for its assertion that the state and localities could establish a religion met a swift end Thursday.
The Rowan County Defense of Religion Act of 2013, filed Tuesday, argued the state does not have to recognize federal court decisions that regulate the establishment of religion.
But N.C. Speaker of the House Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg, confirmed Thursday the bill will not advance.
The proposal drew skepticism from religious and government leaders.
“It would be funny if it wasn’t so daggum sad and scary,” said Pastor Mitchell Simpson of University Baptist Church, who initially thought the proposal was an April Fool’s joke.
Mitchell said Baptists believe the formal structures of religion do not belong in government.
The Defense of Religion Act lacked deep reflection, he said.
The resolution stemmed from a lawsuit filed by the N.C. American Civil Liberties Union against the Rowan County Board of Commissioners in March for its Christian prayers, said Mike Meno, spokesman for the N.C. ACLU.
A 2011 ruling by the Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reaffirmed N.C. law that prohibits prayers specific to one religion in government meetings, he said.