GRUNDY COUNTY, Tenn. – Tyranny of the minority — that’s the takeaway from a school district’s decision to ban visits from “Bible Man” after a single person complained.

“Bible Man,” that is, once Horace Turner, Sr., and now Horace Turner, Jr., has been visiting students at Grundy County Schools for some forty years.

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But one atheist mother didn’t like her son being a part of the optional “songs and Baby Jesus displays,” and she wanted the visits stopped.

“We don’t want people to be mad, we just want people to make sure there’s an alternative something for the kids to do,” the anonymous mother told NBC 3, not elaborating on exactly what the “alternative” should be.

“At first he did not know that he didn’t have to go,” she said. “As he got older, it bothered him that he had to sit through this because it’s not his religion.”

The Freedom From Religion Foundation sent a threatening letter to Grundy County Schools, saying the presentations – which were reportedly optional – were “pernicious” and Turner was “allowed to prey on a captive audience” that was “young and vulnerable,” according to the Christian Examiner.

The anti-Christian group celebrated when the school district met its demands.

“Allowing anyone access to public school students to proselytize, and including the events in the school’s calendar, is illegal District endorsement of the speaker’s religious message, in this case a Christian message,” wrote FFRF Staff Attorney Rebecca Markert in a news release.

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“I believe the perception was that we’re trying to get rid of him, and that was not the perception we wanted to present,” Dr. Willie Childers, interim Director of Schools, tells the news station.

Meanwhile, other school districts aren’t just rolling over and giving into the atheists’ demands.

Bible Man has visited schools in Jackson County, Alabama, as well.

When the anti-Christian group threatened school leaders there in a similar manner in 2012, parents rose up and fought back.

“We know it’s going to be a fight,” superintendent Kenneth Harding said. “But our constituents are pretty adamant about what they want for their children. Hopefully we can meet the law and keep the man, too.”