NEWYou can at present heed to Fob News manufactures!

Kids across the nation are ready to bring their Bibles to school Thursday -- but is it legal to bring a Bible to public school? Is there a scenario where it's not legal?

Lawyers on both sides of the argue are weighing in ahead of "Bring Your Bible to Schoolhouse Mean solar day," sponsored by Focus on the Family, which reports that more than 650,000 students participated in the upshot terminal year.

MILLENNIALS CREATE BIBLE FOR THE INSTAGRAM GENERATION

"Well, of course, information technology is," says Jeremy Dys, special counsel for litigation and communications for Showtime Liberty Institute, a legal organization dedicated to protecting religious liberty. "Students are not just allowed to bring their Bible to school. They're certainly allowed to read it during free time, in betwixt classes, and even reference the Bible within their assignments and class discussions."

And while the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) typically clashes with the First Liberty Plant on Showtime Amendment problems, the two agree hither.

"The constitutional boundaries are elementary," Elizabeth Cavel, associate counsel for FFRF, told Fox News. "Students, of grade, accept the right to bring their Bible to school on this or whatsoever other day."

THESE Popular COMPANIES HAVE BIBLE VERSES ON THEIR PRODUCTS

Merely Cavel adds a warning: "Public school teachers and administrators may not promote or encourage students to participate in religious events on this or any other day."

Dys says that "about the only matter that students can't do is monopolize the classroom fourth dimension with reading the Bible" -- but but considering bringing a Bible is legal doesn't mean schoolhouse administrators are aware.

Giovanni Rubeo, for example, was 12 years former when a teacher humiliated him in front of the form for reading his Bible during free reading fourth dimension by scolding him for not reading a book from an approved list. Every bit it happened, the teacher got it wrong and the Bible was actually on the list in the first place.

Another incident involved Mackenzie Fraiser of Nevada, who was told twice that she couldn't reference the Bible in classroom assignments. Two days after First Liberty got involved, the school apologized and the 6th-grader was allowed to share her inspirational quote from the Bible -- John 3:16.

DREW BREES GETS Support FROM MEMBERS OF CONGRESS OVER 'United nations-AMERICAN' ATTACKS OF BIBLE VIDEO

"Neither students nor teachers should be afraid of the Bible inside public schools," Dys said. "At the very least, it's a volume of literature and history, and it's the best-selling book of all-time."

Focus on the Family unit posted a memo put together by Alliance Defending Freedom on the "Commencement Amendment rights of students to promote and participate in Bring Your Bible to School Twenty-four hour period" for students to be able to bring with them to know their rights.

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees shared one of his favorite Bible verses as he encourages kids to bring their Bibles to school Oct. 3 as a way to live out their Christian faith.

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees shared one of his favorite Bible verses equally he encourages kids to bring their Bibles to school Oct. 3 equally a manner to alive out their Christian faith. (Focus on the Family)

"My concern is that there is such misinformation about the freedom of religion and the separation of church and land that students voluntarily absent themselves from the procedure ... and then when they're told they can't exercise something like that, they think it'south illegal," Dys said.

While New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees didn't face whatsoever legal trouble, he received backfire just for recording a promotional video for the event.

CLICK Hither FOR THE ALL-NEW FOXBUSINESS.COM

"I recall it tells you what school kids are upwardly against if a Super Bowl-winning quarterback gets excoriated for encouraging kids to bring their Bible to schoolhouse," Dys said. "Similar Drew Brees, these kids have goose egg to fear. They should not be ashamed of their organized religion or of bringing their Bible to school just because an angry mob doesn't like the book."