NEWS PROVIDED BY Thomas More Society LOS ANGELES, Aug. 5, 2020 / Christian Newswire / — The Thomas More Society announces that nationally renowned attorneys Jenna Ellis and Charles LiMandri will represent Pastor John MacArthur and Grace Community Church in Los Angeles, California, as Special Counsel. Grace Community Church, its…
‘Predictable’: Supreme Court transgender decision leads to religious liberty legal battle
A transgender man last week filed a lawsuit against a Catholic-run hospital in Maryland, citing in his complaint June’s landmark Supreme Court decision on transgender rights , fulfilling conservative fears that the ruling would usher in a legal war. The suit, filed on behalf of Jesse Hammons by the American…
Why Is Proving Race Discrimination A Lot Harder Than Proving Religious Discrimination?
Over at The Washington Post, Radley Balko has been continually updating a piece where he offers evidence that the “criminal justice system is racist.” Here are just a few of the examples Balko provides: A 2010 report by the Equal Justice Initiative documented cases in which courts upheld prosecutors’ dismissal…
D.C. Superior Court system in dire need of reform
Dangerous precedents are being set in a case before the Washington, D.C. Superior Court. Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons July 20 (UPI) — Across the United States, a groundswell of alarm is rising among people of faith as judges increasingly disregard their First Amendment rights. Legal challenges to religious expression…
U.S. Supreme Court Backs Broad Interpretation of the “Ministerial Exception,” Shielding Religious Employers From Employment Discrimination Claims
[co-author: Jami Moelis*] On July 8, 2020, the Supreme Court gave religious employers wide leeway to hire and fire employees whose duties include religious instruction without having to worry about employment discrimination suits. In a 7-to-2 decision, the Supreme Court ruled in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru that…
Religious Institutions Update: July 2020
[co-author: Nathaniel Bernstein] Key Cases Courts Reach Mixed Conclusions on Challenges to COVID-19 Assembly Restrictions Nathan A. Adams IV Several recent cases concern challenges to executive orders relating to COVID-19 limiting the ability of churches to assemble and imposing other limitations. Beginning with appellate decisions, these cases are summarized in…
Why Supreme Court liberals joined conservatives on religion, by Noah Feldman
The Supreme Court has decided, 7-2, that teachers in Catholic elementary schools are not covered by employment discrimination law. This is a highly important expansion of religious exemptions from government regulation. The Supreme Court had already given religious institutions an exemption for so-called “ministerial” employees. It has now gone substantially…
Why Supreme Court Liberals Joined Conservatives on Religion
(Bloomberg Opinion) — The Supreme Court has decided, 7-2, that teachers in Catholic elementary schools are not covered by employment discrimination law. This is a highly important expansion of religious exemptions from government regulation. The Supreme Court had already given religious institutions an exemption for so-called “ministerial” employees. It has…
Religious liberty scores a win at the Supreme Court
Tom Alexander holds a cross as he prays prior to rulings outside the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, July 8, 2020. The Supreme Court is siding with two Catholic schools in a ruling that underscores that certain employees of religious schools, hospitals and social service centers can’t…
U.S. Supreme Court Shields Religious Employers From Anti-Discrimination Laws
On Wednesday, July 8, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a much-anticipated ruling deciding that teachers at religious schools could not claim protections under anti-discrimination laws. The central issue in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru concerned the scope of the “ministerial exception”—a legal doctrine grounded in the First Amendment…
ACLJ Files Lawsuit Challenging California Ban on Singing in Church
RIVERSIDE COUNTY, Calif., July 15, 2020 /PRNewswire/ — The American Center for Law & Justice (ACLJ) has teamed up with Tyler & Bursch, The National Center for Law and Policy (NCLP) and Advocates for Faith & Freedom to file a lawsuit challenging the state of California’s ban on singing and…
Religious liberty scores a win at the Supreme Court
In a year beset by disappointing decisions from the Supreme Court, a trio of religious liberty cases decided this term provides constitutionalists with some hope. Let’s review: Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania The Little Sisters of the Poor is an order of female Catholics that has been serving…
TWO VIEWS: Religious liberty scores a win at the Supreme Court
Hide caption Erin Hawley (InsideSources.com) InsideSources.com With its trifecta of religious liberty decisions this term, the Supreme Court may finally be poised to give equal weight to religious liberty. It’s about time. In a year beset by disappointing decisions from the Supreme Court, a trio of religious liberty cases decided…
Religious liberty scores a win in three cases at the Supreme Court, says Erin Hawley
In a year beset by disappointing decisions from the Supreme Court, a trio of religious liberty cases decided this term provides constitutionalists with some hope. Let’s review: Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania The Little Sisters of the Poor need no introduction. This order of female Catholics has been…
Defending the Freedom of the Church
Although they have generated controversy in some progressive precincts, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decisions last week in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru and Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania were quite straightforward. Both cases were decided 7-2 on the same day, with the five conservative members of…
Court rules COVID church restrictions legal
Copyright © 2020 Albuquerque Journal Legacy Church, 7201 Central NW, sued the state and Health Secretary Kathy Kunkel in April over a ban on large gatherings. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Albuquerque Journal) The state has the right to ban large gatherings in houses of worship during a public health crisis, such as the…
U.S. Supreme Court Broadens Ministerial Exemption to Employment Discrimination Claims
By a vote of 7-2, the U.S. Supreme Court held on July 8, 2020, that the “ministerial exception” under the religion clauses of the First Amendment forecloses employment-discrimination claims against religious schools by teachers with religious duties. Prior to the court’s decision in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru…
US Supreme Court lifts ban on state aid to religious schools
(RNS photo by Aaron Schrank) The Supreme Court elated religious free exercise advocates and alarmed secular groups with its June 30 ruling on public funding for religious education, a decision whose long-term effect on the separation of church and state remains to be seen. In Espinoza v. Montana Department of…
Supreme Court religious liberty wins could signal landmark conservative victory in gay adoption case
The Supreme Court’s opinions this year in a series of religious liberty cases indicate it may deliver a landmark victory for social conservatives in 2021, according to legal experts. The case in question, Fulton v. City of Philadelphia , pits two explosive causes against each other: gay rights and faith-based…
Letters to the Editor: Discrimination is ungodly — yet religious freedom protects it?
The Supreme Court ruled that St. James Catholic School in Torrance cannot be sued for discrimination after it dismissed a teacher who needed to go on medical leave. To the editor: Society should not have the right to impose its values upon religious groups and institutions in the internal conduct…
Counterpoint: Religious Liberty Scores a Win at the Supreme Court
Three religious freedom cases provide constitutionalists with some hope. In a year beset by disappointing decisions from the Supreme Court, a trio of religious liberty cases decided this term provides constitutionalists with some hope. Let’s review: Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania The Little Sisters of the Poor need…
Why Supreme Court liberals joined conservatives on religion, by Noah Feldman
The Supreme Court has decided, 7-2, that teachers in Catholic elementary schools are not covered by employment discrimination law. This is a highly important expansion of religious exemptions from government regulation. The Supreme Court had already given religious institutions an exemption for so-called “ministerial” employees. It has now gone substantially…
Commentary: Why Supreme Court liberals joined conservatives on religion
The Supreme Court has decided, 7-2, that teachers in Catholic elementary schools are not covered by employment discrimination law. This is a highly important expansion of religious exemptions from government regulation. The Supreme Court had already given religious institutions an exemption for so-called “ministerial” employees. It has now gone substantially…
Battle for recognition of Muslim marriages heads to Supreme Court of Appeal
The state says objections received from Muslim groups, some of whom accused legislators of attempting to interpret the Qur’an, made it difficult to enact laws recognising Muslim marriages. Picture: www.wallpaperflare.com Objections that the State received from Muslim groups, some of whom accused legislators of attempting to interpret the Qur’an, made…
Has 35 Years Of Deterioration Of Establishment Clause Protection Finally Given The Theocrats Their Victory?
In a 5-4 decision in Espinoza v. Montana , the U.S. Supreme Court held that Montana could not exclude religious schools from a government subsidy program for private education. The Court’s reasoning in Espinoza is that denying government aid to religious schools because of their “religious character” violates the First…