Though I'm sure it will be litigated, the tax break in the Kentucky situation strikes me as Cons utionally permissible because it is a benefit that exists without regard to the religious component of the park. It's not a particularly close analogy, but jurisprudentially, its akin to a Christmas display that includes Santa Claus and reindeer along with a creche -- it acknowledges religion without endorsing it. It's religion neutral.
I think that if the State were to deny the incentive to the park just because it is religiously-themed, it would be taking a position of hostility toward religion, which is not at all what the First Amendment requires (no matter how officials and lower courts have butchered the application of those principles in the vast majority of cases).

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