the narrow question is whether there is a secular purpose for pawtuckets display of the crèche. the display…

the narrow question is whether there is a secular purpose for pawtuckets display of the crèche. the display is sponsored by the city to celebrate the holiday and to depict the origins of that holiday. these are legitimate secular purposes. - chief justice warren burger, opinion of the court, lynch v. donnelly 1984 according to the reading, what were the citys secular purposes for displaying the crèche? check all that apply. to promote the christian religion to celebrate the holiday to encourage the celebration of christmas to show how the holiday started to act as a place for prayer

the narrow question is whether there is a secular purpose for pawtuckets display of the crèche. the display is sponsored by the city to celebrate the holiday and to depict the origins of that holiday. these are legitimate secular purposes. - chief justice warren burger, opinion of the court, lynch v. donnelly 1984 according to the reading, what were the citys secular purposes for displaying the crèche? check all that apply. to promote the christian religion to celebrate the holiday to encourage the celebration of christmas to show how the holiday started to act as a place for prayer

Answer

Brief Explanations:

The text clearly states that the display is sponsored by the city to celebrate the Holiday (which implies celebrating Christmas as it's a common holiday with a crèche display context) and to depict the origins of that Holiday. Promoting a religion (Christianity in this case as crèche is related to Christian nativity) and acting as a prayer place are religious - not secular - purposes.

Answer:

to celebrate the holiday, to encourage the celebration of Christmas, to show how the holiday started