Religious freedom fight grows in Massachusetts community over statues honoring police and firefighters

A Massachusetts community is split on allowing two towering bronze statues of Catholic saints outside its new public safety building.

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Joe Davis, senior counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, said Quincy, Massachusetts’ plan to erect statues of Saint Michael the Archangel and Saint Florian reflects a centuries-old artistic and cultural tradition of honoring courage and sacrifice, not a violation of the Constitution’s separation of church and state.

“This case is about a city trying to beautify a public space and honor those who put their lives on the line every day,” Davis said. “These are figures that are important to firefighters and police officers around the world. The purpose of these statues is to inspire and encourage the people who work there.”

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The statues, each roughly 10 feet tall and costing a combined $850,000, were commissioned by Mayor Thomas P. Koch in 2023 and are slated to be installed on the façade of Quincy’s new Public Safety Building, a $150 million facility that will house the city’s police and fire departments.

The project has ignited months of heated debate across the south of Boston, with critics arguing that using taxpayer money to display Catholic imagery on government property violates both the Massachusetts Constitution and the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause.

In May 2025, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Massachusetts, joined by the Freedom From Religion Foundation and Americans United for Separation of Church and State, filed a lawsuit on behalf of 15 residents from a variety of faith traditions.

The plaintiffs argue that the statues send an “exclusionary message” that suggests that non-Catholic residents “are second-class citizens who should not feel safe or equally respected” by their own government.

READ THE LAWSUIT – APP USERS, CLICK HERE

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The ACLU had earlier warned city officials in a Feb. 24 letter that the plan “plainly violates” the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.

“Placing larger-than-life statues of Catholic saints in front of a public building unequivocally advances one religion to the exclusion of all others,” the letter stated, noting that the imagery of Saint Michael standing on a demon’s neck was “particularly abhorrent” and “reminiscent of brutal force.”

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Davis rejected those claims, insisting that the city’s intent is consistent with long-standing American traditions of civic art that carry religious associations.

“If we say that a symbol cannot be displayed in public just because it has religious associations for some, that’s going to require us to take down quite a bit of public imagery across this country,” Davis said. “At the U.S. Supreme Court, there’s a statue of Moses holding the Ten Commandments. It has religious meaning, yes, but it also symbolizes law and justice. The same is true here.”

Davis compared Quincy’s statues to the Bladensburg Peace Cross, a World War I memorial in Maryland that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld in 2019 as constitutional.

“That cross honored the war dead. Quincy wants to honor firefighters and police officers,” he said.

The Becket Fund, which specializes in defending religious expression in public life, plans to appeal the injunction that has temporarily halted installation of the statues. Davis said the team hopes the case will clarify whether public symbols with religious origins can exist in civic spaces when used for secular or historical purposes.

“It could either go to the intermediate Massachusetts appeals court or straight to the Supreme Judicial Court, which is the high court of Massachusetts,” Davis said. “And that court is going to be asked to address an important question and to set an important precedent, which is whether public symbols can be scrubbed from the public square just because they have religious associations to some people. I don’t think that’s right. It would set a very dangerous precedent.”

Koch has maintained that the statues were chosen to “honor and protect” first responders, noting that many police officers and firefighters carry medals or prayer cards bearing the same saints’ images. The works are being sculpted in Italy by artist Sergey Eylanbekov, who also created public monuments of John Adams and John Hancock for the city.

Critics say the mayor commissioned the project without public notice or City Council approval. According to the lawsuit reviewed by Fox News Digital, the first payments to the artist were made in 2023, but most city officials and residents did not learn of the plan until February 2025, when a local newspaper published renderings of the building showing the two saints flanking its entrance.

A petition opposing the statues gathered more than 1,600 signatures, and an interfaith coalition of 19 clergy members from Catholic, Jewish, Unitarian and Protestant congregations issued a public statement warning that the display “sends a message that there are insiders and outsiders in this community.”

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The lawsuit contends that the statues fail all four parts of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s test for determining religious neutrality. Although the federal high court abandoned that test in 2022, Massachusetts courts continue to apply it under the state constitution.

Davis, however, said courts have long recognized that government displays can have mixed religious and secular meanings.

“It’s very troubling to say that because some people might view something as religious, it therefore has to be taken down. And in fact, that would give a really imbalanced and inaccurate presentation of our history and culture if the religious aspects had to be sort of scrubbed out,” he said.

The case could soon land before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, where justices will weigh whether public art that incorporates religious imagery violates the state’s strict constitutional separation of church and state.

READ THE INJUNCTION – APP USERS, CLICK HERE

For now, the statues remain in storage overseas, awaiting shipment to Quincy later this year. City officials have said they will “stay quiet on the affixing front” while the legal battle plays out.

“Quincy is doing what cities have done for centuries,” Davis said. “Using art to honor the people who protect and serve. That’s not a religious act. It’s an act of gratitude.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to the ACLU of Massachusetts and the city of Quincy for comment. 

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