Christian Florist Settles Legal Battle With Same-Sex Couple

Christian Florist Settles Legal Battle With Same-Sex Couple

A florist in Washington state who was in an eight-year legal battle that reached the US Supreme Court will retire after settling with the same-sex couple whose wedding job she refused. Read This Issue More Newsletters Barronelle Stutzman of Richland, Washington, announced the settlement Thursday, saying she has paid $5,000…

Biden Shot-or-Test Mandate Collides with Faith-Based Objections

Biden Shot-or-Test Mandate Collides with Faith-Based Objections

Visitors sit on pews in the Great Upper Church at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception on the campus of Catholic University in Washington, D.C. Religious employers assert ‘church autonomy’ in lawsuits OSHA mandate said to force institutions to violate beliefs Christian schools, churches, and seminaries…

Prayers for ‘Where the Church Suffers the Most’ in Europe

Prayers for ‘Where the Church Suffers the Most’ in Europe

An icon of Christ damaged by shellfire at St. Ignatius (Bryanchaninov) Church in Donetsk, Ukraine, in 2017. To mark the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church [this month], the European Evangelical Alliance (EEA) calls upon evangelicals to unite in praying for the area of Europe where the church…

Parental educational rights and religious liberty: Yoder case revisited

Parental educational rights and religious liberty: Yoder case revisited

Throughout the country, parents are concerned that some public schoolboards, administrators, and associations hold them in disdain and fear their input when they raise legitimate questions about the direction of their local schools. Just short of 50 years ago (1972), the U.S. Supreme Court handed down a decision that protects…

Parental Educational Rights and Religious Liberty: The Yoder Case Revisited

Parental Educational Rights and Religious Liberty: The Yoder Case Revisited

Throughout the country, parents are concerned that some public schoolboards, administrators, and associations hold them in disdain and fear their input when they raise legitimate questions about the direction of their local schools. Just short of 50 years ago (1972), the U.S. Supreme Court handed down a decision that protects…

Texas’s new social media law is likely to face an uphill battle in federal court

Texas’s new social media law is likely to face an uphill battle in federal court

In early September, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed into law House Bill 20, a new social media law targeting what Gov. Abbott called “a dangerous movement by social media companies to silence conservative viewpoints and ideas.” In late September, NetChoice and the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA) sued Texas…

Why the Supreme Court is debating ‘state secrets’ and government surveillance

Why the Supreme Court is debating ‘state secrets’ and government surveillance

American law offers strong protections to the country’s national security organizations. But it also aims to shield citizens from being wrongly surveilled. On Monday, the Supreme Court considered a case in which the first of those policy goals seems to threaten the second, weighing whether the government’s interest in protecting…

Did the Biden Administration Retreat on Religious Liberty to Spite Trump? | Opinion

Did the Biden Administration Retreat on Religious Liberty to Spite Trump? | Opinion

A Supreme Court friend-of-the-court brief filed recently by freshly sworn-in Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar may prove that President Joe Biden ‘s administration is determined to reverse every last policy decision of the predecessor Trump administration, even on issues of religious liberty. The Court will hear on December 8 a case…

Tom Waddell: Charitable Choice Act turns back clock on civil rights

Tom Waddell: Charitable Choice Act turns back clock on civil rights

Faith-based social services are funded by the federal government through your taxes, even though that can lead to discrimination and a lack of those very services. The 1999 Charitable Choice Act allowed federal taxes to fund faith-based social services. Still, it limited these services to “Temporary Assistance for Needy Families…

Supreme Court: Narrow escape and looming implications

It was a narrow escape, but the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday gave LGBT legal activists a significant sigh of relief in a case involving transgender access to equality in health care. The court also appeared to take some heed of the fact that a Texas abortion ban under scrutiny…

Religion Notes: Oct. 14, 2021

Religion Notes: Oct. 14, 2021

Sun rays fall through the clouds over the banking district in Frankfurt, Germany, Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2018. (AP Photo/Michael Probst) AP AP Upcoming church events Agawam – An enormous Fall Tag Sale will be held Sat., Oct. 16 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Agawam Congregational Church. Some Halloween…

Vaccine Mandates: Accommodating Disability and Religious Belief Exemptions

Vaccine Mandates: Accommodating Disability and Religious Belief Exemptions

As the COVID-19 public health emergency continues, vaccine mandates have been imposed in both public and private workplaces. These mandates include federal, state, and local requirements for certain employees to become fully vaccinated or risk termination from employment. This blog discusses the process for handling and accommodating employee requests for…

FIRST 5: 4 key First Amendment cases to watch this Supreme Court term

FIRST 5: 4 key First Amendment cases to watch this Supreme Court term

David Hudson. Photo courtesy Freedom Forum The Supreme Court’s October 2021 term, which officially began on the first Monday of the month, promises to be an eventful one for those concerned about the First Amendment and its freedoms. The court will hear cases involving: ●A man on death row asserting…