Greece v. Galloway

The constitutionality of prayer as a component of government meetings, and whether prayers must remain nonsectarian under the nonestablishment clause of the First Amendment.

ReligiousLiberty.TV
March 3, 2026
0 min read
Cite This Case
Greece v. Galloway (U.S. 2013).
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Greece v. Galloway (U.S. Supreme Court, 2013). https://religiousliberty.tv/case-library/greece-v-galloway/
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⚠ No official reporter citation found for this case. Citation quality will improve once a reporter citation (e.g. 573 U.S. 682) is added to the case record.

Greece v. Galloway [U.S. Supreme Court, 2013] — The constitutionality of prayer as a component of government meetings, and whether prayers must remain nonsectarian under the nonestablishment clause of the First Amendment. Source: ReligiousLiberty.TV (https://religiousliberty.tv/case-library/greece-v-galloway/, accessed April 14, 2026).
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⚠ No official reporter citation found for this case. Citation quality will improve once a reporter citation (e.g. 573 U.S. 682) is added to the case record.

Year: 2013 Court: U.S. Supreme Court Outcome: Pending
Holding: The constitutionality of prayer as a component of government meetings, and whether prayers must remain nonsectarian under the nonestablishment clause of the First Amendment.
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Greece v. Galloway is a Church & State case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2013. The court held that the constitutionality of prayer as a component of government meetings, and whether prayers must remain nonsectarian under the nonestablishment clause of the First Amendment. The case resulted in a Pending outcome.