Alexandria (LA) Town Talk and a press release from Louisiana College report on a decision handed down last week by a Louisiana trial court in a suit by four former faculty members against Louisiana College. The school is a Biblically-based Baptist college located in Pineville, Louisiana. The faculty members sued claiming loss of academic freedom, among other things. Apparently they objected to the administration's interference with their courses in Religion and Values, and in particular the administration's objections to their using as a text Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled. The suit was originally filed in 1995, but settled in 1997. However it was refiled in 2005 after, according to plaintiffs, the defendants started spreading rumors about them in churches around the state. Apparently at the core of the dispute is a theological disagreement over whether the Bible is the inerrant word of God. The court dismissed the case on Establishment Clause grounds, holding that deciding it would require the court to choose sides in a dispute over Baptist theology.
UPDATE: A copy of the full decision in Winbery v. Louisiana College, (LA Dist. Ct., March 28,2012) is now available. In the case, plaintiffs alleged both defamation and breach of agreement in violation of the College's by-laws and faculty handbook. While finding that the ministerial exception does not apply to prevent the court's exercising jurisdiction, the court held that both of the claims would require it to delve into disputes over Baptist theology in violation of the Establishment Clause. [Thanks to Rob Luther for the copy of the decision.]