LAS VEGAS, Nev. – There will be no talk about God at at least one Las Vegas charter school.

Mackenzie Frazier, a 6th grader at Somerset Academy, created a PowerPoint presentation for an “All About Me” project.

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She included John 3:16 because she is “proud of her Christian faith.”

But that was too much for school administrators, who said her beliefs violated the so-called separation of church and state.

“Can you please explain if this is true? Perhaps, she misunderstood you? Since I am certain you understand that this clearly infringes on my daughters/your students right to freedom of speech, I want to make sure we understand your instructions,” Mackenzie’s father, Tim Frasier, a Christian pastor, wrote to the school administration on April 29, according to the Review Journal.

Two days later he received a response from Assistant Principal Jenyan Martinez, who wrote:

When Mackenzie created the project with the expectation she would present the Biblical saying to the class, the matter became one of having a captive audience that would be subject to her religious beliefs. Had the assignment been designed to simply hand in for a grade, this would not have been an issue. Therefore, considering the circumstances of the assignment, Miss Jardine appropriately followed school law expectations by asking Mackenzie to choose an alternate quote for the presentation.

The school claims because it receives taxpayer funding, they’re just following rules handed down from Washington.

“We consider the civil liberties of our students to be of utmost importance. As such, we strive to comply in every way with the directives set forth by the U.S. Department of Education with regard to religious expression in public schools,” Colin Bringhurst of the charter school management company Academica Nevada said in a statement.

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Fox 25 reports the Fraziers are looking for an apology from school administrators for violating their daughter’s constitutional rights.

The Liberty Institute is defending Mackenzie and wants her to be allowed to resubmit the assignment reflecting her true self, not one censored by the overzealous school administrators.

“That’s illegal. That’s unconstitutional, and Somerset Academy needs to apologize,” Jeremy Dys, senior counsel for the group, said Wednesday.

Liberty has given the school 10 days to respond but so far, they’ve ignored the family’s concerns.