A Georgia school district is being accused of punishing a Christian student ministry because its pastor dared to question a local tax hike, as reported [1] by Just The News.
The lawsuit paints a troubling picture of political and religious retaliation, with officials allegedly cutting ties not for educational reasons, but because they did not like the pastor’s opinions or his interpretation of scripture.
The Sweet Onion Christian Learning Center, founded by the Rev. Gady Youmans, provided released-time Bible instruction to Vidalia High School students for 11 years until the district abruptly ended the partnership.
According to Youmans and the suit filed by the Alliance Defending Freedom, the real motive was his Facebook criticism of the school board’s plan to raise property taxes, a move he believed would fund bloated administrative spending rather than classrooms.
Superintendent Sandy Reid allegedly told Youmans explicitly that his social media posts about the tax issue were unacceptable and that the district was severing ties with him as a result.
When pressed, Reid reportedly shifted her explanation, citing vague “community concerns” about Youmans’ Biblical teaching style.
Yet records show she had already informed the school board of supposed parental complaints months earlier, flagging his public criticism of the district as a problem.
The minutes from that session reveal that Reid complained about recurring concerns that Youmans had expressed, “negative comments about the district and staff on social media.”
She also noted that some parents perceived his teaching as overly guided by a “particular interpretation of the Bible,” which Youmans insists refers to a single isolated incident from years before, unrelated to the current program.
The lawsuit alleges a laundry list of constitutional violations. Among them are First Amendment retaliation, viewpoint discrimination, violation of the free exercise of religion, due process violations, and a breach of Georgia’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
In simple terms, Youmans contends that a government entity punished him for expressing his opinion on a tax issue and for his faith-based educational program.
ADF legal counsel Mercer Martin summarized the issue plainly: the district cannot penalize someone for criticizing the government or sharing an opinion on taxes.
Yet that is allegedly what Vidalia City Schools did. Neither Reid nor any board members have responded publicly to these serious allegations.
Sweet Onion Christian Learning Center is a modest ministry compared to national groups like LifeWise Academy, which operates in thousands of schools across dozens of states.
But the issue touches on the same core principle—religious organizations must be treated equally to secular ones and not silenced for their beliefs.
In fact, only weeks earlier, a federal judge appointed by President Biden ruled against a Washington state school district for viewpoint discrimination against a similar ministry.
Youmans’ supposed offense was a pair of Facebook posts with fewer than 60 views combined. The first shared frustrations he heard from “teacher friends” about needless administrative hires.
The second included a pay chart showing top district salaries. When a commenter echoed his frustration, Youmans replied that some of his students had said, “We have to teach ourselves in several classes.”
That, apparently, set the district ablaze with indignation.
Reid later emailed Youmans, claiming the district was “moving in a different direction.”
When they met two weeks later, she told him the plan was to replace Sweet Onion’s free Bible-based instruction with dual-enrollment courses through a Christian university that would charge students tuition.
Her justification, according to the lawsuit, wobbled between offended staff, parental concerns, and a general sense that his Facebook commentary had embarrassed the district.
By this time, according to Reid, she had already formed a committee to look for alternatives months before the decision was even formally announced.
The board allegedly provided no notice, no due process, and no opportunity for Youmans or his ministry to address the concerns before they were kicked off campus.
The timing and her shifting explanations are now central to ADF’s case. The ministry insists it was tossed out not because of educational concerns, but because its founder dared to speak freely about local government spending.
The double standard is all too familiar. Youmans says no one who publicly supported the tax hike faced any form of punishment.
The results have been devastating. Sweet Onion’s private funding has already been threatened, and Youmans, a husband and father of five, says the entire ordeal has humiliated his family and damaged their reputation in the community.
The lawsuit asks for injunctive relief to restore the ministry’s access to students and to erase any record of the district’s retaliatory action.
Youmans is not seeking compensatory or punitive damages. His chief request is for fairness, the ability to serve students as before, and the right to express opinions without fear of government retaliation.
In a climate where public institutions often bend to political correctness, his story is yet another reminder that “tolerance” rarely extends to Bible-believing Christians who speak against the establishment line.
If the allegations hold true, this is less about taxes and more about silencing dissent and tossing faith out the door whenever it challenges the system.
Conservatives may see this case as part of a larger battle playing out in schools across the nation, where bureaucracy trumps liberty and religious voices are told to be quiet or be gone.