DANIELSVILLE, Ga. — Atheist groups – the Freedom From Religion Foundation and the American Humanist Association – are demanding that a new monument at Madison County High School in Danielsville, Georgia be removed.

According to Madison Journal Today, the two-ton privately donated monument was placed on Madison High’s campus between the new field house and the football field last month.

Engraved into the monument is the school logo and two bible versus, Romans 8:31: “If God be for us who can be against us?” and Philippians 4:13: “I can do all things through Christ which strengthens me.”

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The schools’ football players have started a new tradition of touching the monument as they head out to the field to play on Friday nights, but, according to 11 Alive, The Freedom from Religion Foundation and American Humanist Association say the structure is “unconstitutional” and must go.

In letters to the school district, the groups are demanding that the monument be removed, or at the very least, the religious references be removed from it.

My Fox Atlanta reports that, after speaking with many parents and students at Friday’s football game, there is a lot of support for the monument.

The news report also says the school board is scheduled to meet on the second Tuesday of next month and many residents plan to be there to voice their opinions.

While several news sources report the school district is investigating options available to it “including, but not limited to, removal of the monument or modifying the monument in some manner”, the Freedom from Religion Foundation (FFRF) is already reporting that the structure will be removed or modified.

Oddly enough, FFRF is also the only one reporting that the Madison resident who complained about the monument is “affiliated with the athletic program.”

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With its vicious hate for all things God and dogged determination to rid the world of Him, FFRF has been very busy as of late.

The organization has filed complaints this year against numerous K-12 schools and universities across the country, including Seminole High in Central Florida because teammates prayed for an injured football player on the field.

FFRF is even going after a senior center in Eagle Nest, New Mexico to try to stop the residents there from blessing their food at mealtime.

Earlier this month, Arkansas State University caved to pressure from the organization by removing cross decals from their football players’ helmets, even though the decals were intended to honor a former player and an equipment manager who passed away this year.

The American Humanist Association (AHA) is no less deplorable. According to an 11 Alive news report, AHA recently ascended on football coaches at Chestatee High School in Hall County, Georgia for leading and participating in prayers with players.

AHA, whose motto is Good Without God, is the same organization that believes that public school educators have, not only a right, but a duty to teach values to students — as long as those values have nothing to do with God, of course.

One might argue that both the Freedom From Religion Foundation and the American Humanist Association are hypocritical in their efforts. After all, if they truly are about the separation of church and state and the right of people, if they wish, to be ‘free from religion’ in public spaces, why have each of them promoted other “religions”?

For example, as evidenced by an EAGnews report last week, rather than to continue fighting Orange County Schools on its decision to allow a local church to distribute religious material to students, FFRF has opted to side with a satanic organization who wants to distribute material to students as well.

As far as AHA goes, the organization was birthed from and still references, as part of its own history, the Humanist Manifesto, a 1933 document establishing humanism as a “religion.” Today, however, the organization claims that humanism is merely a philosophy that is secular in nature. How convenient.