Showing posts with label Christian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian. Show all posts

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Secy. Pompeo Speaks To Christian Conference

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke on Friday to the American Association of Christian Counselors meeting in Nashville, Tennessee.The full text of his remarks titled "Being a Christian Leader" are featured on the State Department's website, along with a video of his remarks. Pompeo said in part:
... I’m especially telling the truth about the dire condition of religious freedom around the world. America has a proud history of religious freedom, and we want jealously to guard it here.  But around the world, more than 80% of mankind lives in areas where religious freedom is suppressed or denied in its entirety.
The Chinese Communist Party ... is detaining and abusing more than one million Uighur Muslims in internment camps in the Xinjiang. ...
So Christian pastors today are being unlawfully arrested, beaten, detained inside the Islamic Republic of Iran.  We need to speak about this.
Christian areas in northern Iraq that I’ve had the privilege to visit have been ravaged by ISIS, part of a greater trend of Christian persecution all across the Middle East.
And so the truth – for the past two years we’ve spoken the truth.  We’ve hosted ministerials....  We’ve told the world about these shortfalls and the success of nations when individuals are given their basic human dignity to practice their conscience, their faith, or to choose no faith if they so choose all around the world.

Thursday, October 03, 2019

Lawsuit Claims Deputy Coerced Driver To Be Baptized

The Chattanooga Times Free Press reports on an unusual lawsuit filed this week by a woman against two Hamilton County (TN) sheriff's deputies in a Tennessee state trial court.  The lawsuit, asking for $11 million in damages, alleges that Deputy Daniel Wilkey initiated an unjustified traffic stop of plaintiff, and then conducted an intrusive pat down search of her for methamphetamine.  He discovered only a marijuana cigarette butt. Then, according to the paper:
After searching the woman's vehicle, he asked her if she had ever been "saved" and whether she believed in Jesus Christ, the lawsuit states. He told her that God was "talking to him during the vehicle search" and that he "felt the Lord wanted him to baptize [her]."
Wilkey then told her to go inside the home she was visiting and grab two towels for a baptism.... He said if she let him baptize her, he would issue her only a criminal citation for the possession of marijuana.....
When the woman returned outside, Wilkey told her to drive her own vehicle and follow him..... [T]hey eventually arrived at a boat ramp at Soddy Lake.... At that point, another deputy — Jacob Goforth — arrived.... Wilkey told the woman that Goforth was there because, "in order for a baptism to be valid, a witness must 'attest' to the ritual."
Wilkey then "stripped nearly naked".... He then led her into nearly waist-deep water, placed one hand on her back and the other on her breasts and completely submerged her under the water....

Wednesday, October 02, 2019

Christian Student Group Can Retain Selective Leadership Requirements

In Intervarsity Christian Fellowship USA v. University of Iowa, (SD IA, Sept. 27, 2019), an Iowa federal district court held that the University of Iowa and three of its administrators violated the free speech and free exercise rights of a Christian student organization when it revoked its registered student organization status. The University's action was taken because Intervarsity Christian Fellowship required its leaders to affirm the groups Christian statement of faith. The court said in part:
by granting the exceptions it has to the Human Rights Policy and refusing to make a similar exception for InterVarsity, the University has made a value judgment that its secular reasons for deviating from the Human Rights Policy are more important than InterVarsity’s religious reasons for the deviation it seeks. Because this reflects an impermissible “value judgment in favor of secular motivations,” ... the University’s decision to deregister InterVarsity is subject to strict scrutiny.
Becket issued a press release announcing the decision.

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Christian Student Group May Continue Suit Against University

In Intervarsity Christian Fellowship/ USA v. Board of Governors of Wayne State University, (ED MI, Sept. 20, 2019), a Michigan federal district court refused to dismiss a Christian student organization's free exercise, free speech and procedural due process claims against Wayne State University that refused to grant the group recognized student organization status. The University contended that the organization's requirements that its leaders profess the Christian faith violates the University's non-discrimination policy.  The court said in part:
[I]nsofar as religious organizations have a clear constitutional right to choose their own ministers without interference from the government, it is far from implausible that they may affirmatively assert a violation of such right in a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action. Similarly, InterVarsity’s claim based on its right to internal autonomy in religious affairs may state a claim. The court will not dismiss the claims offered (novel though they may be) in Counts 1 and 2.
Counts 3 and 4 allege Free Exercise violations based on targeting of InterVarsity’s religious beliefs and Wayne State applying its policy in a way that it is not generally applicable.... There are more than enough factual allegations to cross the basic threshold of a valid claim. 
Detroit Free Press reports on the decision.

Sunday, September 01, 2019

City's Special Events Ordinance Partly Upheld

In Shook v. City of Lincolnton, NC(WD NC, Aug.29, 2019). a North Carolina federal district court agreed with only part of a challenge by a group of Christian street preachers to a city's Special Event and Unnecessary Noise Ordinances. the court said in part:
[T]he Court will grant Plaintiff’s preliminary injunction [as to] the portion of the Special Events Ordinance prohibiting “[a]ny conduct deemed to be disruptive . . . to participants or attendees of the special event” and “[a]busive . . . language that disrupts a special event or festival.” However, the City may still enforce the ... [ban on] "language ... that abuses or threatens another person in a manner likely to cause a fight or brawl at a special event or festival,” “... conduct deemed to be ... dangerous to participants or attendees of the special event,” and “threatening language that disrupts a special event or festival.”
The court also upheld the city's Unnecessary Noise ban.

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Christian Group Settles Harassment Suit

Last week, a Minnesota state trial court entered a mediated settlement agreement in a case in which a lawyer had obtained a temporary restraining order against the Christian Action League of Minnesota.  As related by a press release from the Thomas More Society:
A local lawyer complained about postcards and emails the group sent to her because she advertises in City Pages. The correspondence informed advertisers that the metro Minneapolis-St. Paul alternative newspaper also promoted the adult sex trade and invited advertisers to reconsider supporting a media outlet that did so.
In R. Leigh Frost Law, Ltd. v. Christian Action League of Minnesota, (MN Dist. Ct., July 11, 2019), the court entered a mediated order dismissing the harassment restraining order, but requiring that for the next two years, Christian Action League may not contact petitioner by any means, including e-mail, social media, post cards, regular mail, phone or in person, nor may it encourage others to contact her or her employer.

Thursday, July 11, 2019

Settlement Reached In Discrimination Suit Against Michigan Chautauqua Village

Petoskey News-Review reports that a settlement has been reached in a lawsuit against the Michigan village of Bay View that was established in 1875 as part of the United Methodist Church's Chautauqua movement.  In 2017, a federal lawsuit was filed challenging provisions in the Bay View Association's rules that limited cottage ownership to practicing Christians, as well as the requirement that a majority of the Association board be Methodists.  (See prior posting.) Later the Justice Department joined the lawsuit.  In 2018, the provision limiting ownership to Christians was eliminated. (See prior posting.) However plaintiffs also objected to other provisions favoring Christians. 

In the settlement reached in May, but which must still be approved by the court, Bay View Association will retain its status as a religious organization, but will need to file for its tax exempt status separately rather than through the United Methodist Church. It will end the requirement that a majority of its board be Methodists.  The Association will also eliminate provisions in its bylaws that require members to "respect the principles of the United Methodist Church" and support Bay View's mission. Instead, the bylaws will be amended to read that members must "respect and preserve the history and values of the Association," which includes acting "in a manner consistent with Christian values." Finally, Bay View, through its insurers, will pay $75,000 in plaintiffs' legal fees.  The Justice Department will monitor compliance with the settlement for five years.

Thursday, July 04, 2019

2nd Circuit Gives Broad Reading To Allow Late Filing of Asylum Application

Normally an application for asylum must be filed within one year of an alien's arrival in the United States. However, an application filed later than that may be considered if the alien demonstrates changed circumstances that materially affect his or her eligibility for asylum.  In Yang v. Barr, (2d Cir., July 2, 2019), a woman born in China applied for asylum ten years after entering the United States on a tourist visa.  The application was filed less than a month after she converted to Christianity, and asserted two grounds for asylum-- fear of persecution because of her Christian religion and a forced abortion in China eight years before she entered the United States. In a 2-1 decision, the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals held that the change of circumstances-- her religious conversion-- means that an immigration judge may now consider both her bases for asylum, not just the one related to the conversion.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Suit By Purchasers of Former PTL Club Properties May Move Forward

MorningStar Fellowship Church v. York County South Carolina, (D SC, June 17, 2019), involves a dispute between a South Carolina county and a large Christian evangelical church that had purchased properties once owned by PTL Club's Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker.  Jim Bakker resigned in the wake of a sexual scandal and was ultimately convicted and imprisoned for fraud. (Background.)  Plaintiff, MorningStar Fellowship, claims that the county prevented it from completing development of an $11 million building, known as the Tower, because of religious animus against the former owners, the Bakkers.  The development agreement between the county and MorningStar Fellowship called for demolition of the Tower if performance and payment bonds were not obtained within 180 days of approval of the site plan for the development. MoruningStar Claims that the county concealed its approval of the site plan in order to create a default.

The court dismissed on statute of limitations grounds MorningStar's claim for damages flowing from violation of its free exercise, due process and equal protection rights. However the court allowed plaintiff to move ahead on claims under the South Carolina constitution and the South Carolina Religious Freedom Act. It also allowed plaintiff to amend its complaint to add substantial burden and discrimination claims under the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Settlement Reached In Student Group's Challenge To Denial of Registered Status

A Settlement Agreement (full text) has been reached in Ratio Christi at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs v. Sharkey, according to a press release today from ADF.  The  Christian group, Ratio Christi sued last year in a Colorado federal district court challenging the University of Colorado's denial to it of registered status. The University objected to the group's policies requiring its officers to personally hold Christian beliefs, and requiring prospective members to agree with and promote the organization's purposes. (See prior posting.)  Under the Settlement Agreement, the University will change its non-discrimination policy to provide:
All student clubs are permitted to require their leadership to promote the purposes of the club, to ascribe to sincerely held beliefs of the club, and/or to act in accordance with club standards.
However student clubs will not be permitted to limit membership on the basis of  "race, color, national origin, sex, pregnancy, age, disability, creed, political affiliation or philosophy, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, or veteran status." Ratio Christi will change its constitution to provide:
Students are not required to profess faith in, endorse, or adopt any religious beliefs to become members of the Chapter or participate in its activities. Any efforts to undermine or subvert the purposes enumerated in Article II will be addressed by the Chapter Officers in consultation with the Faculty Advisor and/or Chapter Director.
The University will also make a settlement payment to Ratio Christi of $20,574.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Transgender Student May Intervene In Suit Between Prof and University

In Meriwether v. Trustees of Shawnee State University, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78771 (SD OH, May 9, 2019), an Ohio federal district court allowed a transgender student and an advocacy organization representing LGBTQ students to intervene in a lawsuit brought by a faculty member against the university over the university's enforcement of its non-discrimination policy.  The university disciplined plaintiff, a philosophy professor, for violating its policy that requires faculty to refer to students using pronouns consistent with the student's self-asserted gender identity. Plaintiff sued claiming that:
He is a "professing evangelical Christian" and member of the Presbyterian Church of America with sincerely-held religious beliefs about gender, and he does not believe that an individual's gender can be changed after the moment of conception. Because of his sincerely-held religious beliefs, he objects to communicating what he believes to be "a University-mandated ideological message regarding gender identity" that he does not believe and which "contradicts (and would force him to violate) his sincerely held religious beliefs."
In allowing intervention by the petitioners. the court found that the University will not adequately represent petitioners' interests, saying in part:
Shawnee State argues only that the Non-discrimination Policy challenged by plaintiff is a neutral rule of general applicability that is part of its obligations under Title IX and Title VII, not that the policy protects the rights of Doe and other transgender students.... Doe, the transgender student who filed the discrimination complaint which led to plaintiff's written warning, and SAGA, which represents transgender students like Doe, have an interest in insuring that Shawnee State's policies are construed and applied so as to protect their rights as transgender students. 

Sunday, May 05, 2019

Court Refuses To Dismiss Suit To Allow Christian Flag Outside Boston City Hall

In Shurtleff v. City of Boston, (D MA, May 3, 2019), a Massachusetts federal district court refused to dismiss a suit brought to enjoin the City from denying permission to a religious organization to display a Christian flag on a flagpole outside City Hall for an event marking Constitution Day and Citizenship Day event. The flag pole flies the city's flag except when it is used by outside groups for a flag to mark a special event. The court held that there are factual issues to be determined on plaintiffs' free speech claims-- whether this involves "government speech," and whether the city has imposed a reasonable, viewpoint neutral regulation in a limited public forum. Also factual issues remain on plaintiffs' Establishment Clause and Equal Protection claims.

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Christian School Challenges Zoning Requirement

A suit was filed this week in a Florida federal district court challenging the denial of a zoning exception that would allow continued operation of a small Christian school that serves primarily children with learning disabilities and children from underprivileged homes. The complaint (full text) in Englewood Church of the Nazarene, Inc. v. Sarasota County, Florida, (MD FL, filed 3/25/2019), alleges violations of RLUIPA, the 1st and 14th Amendments and Florida's Religious Freedom Restoration Act. After the school had been operating in a church's building for more than three years, the county demanded that it seek a special exception to continue its operation and levied daily fines on the school. The school spent $10,000 to complete the application, only to have the special exception denied. ADF issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.

Friday, March 22, 2019

Non-Liturgical Protestant Navy Chaplains Refile In Long-Running Discrimination Litigation

Last year, a D.C. federal district court dismissed a long-running lawsuit brought by  non-liturgical Protestant Navy chaplains alleging discrimination against them by the Navy. (See prior posting.)  However the court severed certain claims with leave to file them in other jurisdictions.  Earlier this month those severed claims were included in a complaint filed in a Virginia federal district court.  The complaint (full text) in Lancaster v. Secretary of the Navy, (ED VA, filed 3/1/2019), summarized the allegations as follows:
This case addresses 27 Non-liturgical Navy Chaplains plaintiffs’ longstanding claims of retaliation and low fitness reports...; constructive discharge because of unlawful FOS [failures of selection]; and interference with their ministry, speaking, preaching and worship services based on denominational prejudice.
This retaliation resulted in plaintiffs’ FOS and either separation for FOS or constructive discharges. Senior Navy chaplains are the perpetrators and sources of these claims, primarily Roman Catholic and/or Liturgical Protestants, in positions of authority, influence and supervision representing and acting under the authority of the Navy and its CHC. The actions represent a pattern and practice of illegal retaliation and discrimination based on denominational hostility and prejudice.
WAVY News reports on the lawsuit.

Friday, March 08, 2019

A Few Iranian Christian Refugees Admitted To U.S.; Many Others Await Visas

NBC News reports that U.S. authorities have recently allowed about a dozen Armenian Christian refugees from Iran admission under the Lautenberg-Specter law that provides for visas for persecuted religious minorities from the former Soviet Union and Iran.  The refugees were admitted after a federal judge last July ordered the Department of Homeland Security to provide the reasons for denial of applications from 87 Iranian refugees waiting in Vienna for their visas to be processed. (See prior posting.) NBC reports in part:
Under Trump, the Lautenberg-Specter program has virtually ground to a halt for Iranians. The program includes what used to be a short processing stay in Vienna, but more than 70 Iranian applicants, mostly Christians, have been stuck in Austria for more than two years, their lawyers said. In the past, applicants would be granted U.S. visas after a period of few months in Austria, according to the lawyers and former U.S. officials.
Applicants in Ukraine and other former Soviet states have been admitted without major delays, humanitarian groups said....
 "The increased denial rate was not due to the president’s executive orders but to changes in vetting implemented in 2016," the [State Department] spokesperson said in an email, adding that new applications were still being accepted....
The number of Christian refugees admitted to the United States declined by about 36 percent in fiscal year 2018 compared to the previous year.... The drop is part of a broader decline in overall refugee admissions.

Saturday, February 23, 2019

Christian School May Use Oregon's Religious Exemption To Reject Jewish Faculty Applicant

In King v. Warner Pacific College, (OR App, Feb. 21, 2019), an Oregon state appellate court held that a Christian college's refusal to hire a Jewish applicant for a position as adjunct professor of psychology falls within the religious preference exemption to Oregon's non-discrimination law.  ORS 659A.006(4)provides:
It is not an unlawful employment practice for a bona fide ... religious institution, including ... a school... to prefer an employee, or an applicant for employment, of one religious sect or persuasion over another if:  (a) The religious sect or persuasion to which the employee or applicant belongs is the same as that of the ... institution; ... [and]  (c) The employment involved is closely connected with or related to the primary purposes of the ... institution....
The court held that the exemption allows the school to reject a non-Christian applicant and await a later hiring cycle to fill the position, or to assign the work to an existing Christian employee.  A majority of the judges also held that this particular faculty position met the requirement of being closely connected to the school's religious purpose.

Wednesday, January 09, 2019

Chicago Church Drops Defamation Suit

RNS reports that the Chicago-area megachurch Harvest Bible Chapel will drop a defamation lawsuit it had filed against a former teacher at the church's school and a former church member who have posted criticism of the church's founding pastor on their blog.  The move comes after a Cook County trial court refused to enjoin the online publicizing of documents that would be produced during discovery in the case.  In a statement posted on its website, the church said in part:
... [T]he court appears unwilling to protect our many friends, including those with whom we seek to reconcile. In good conscience we cannot knowingly subject innocent people, in many instances against their will, to a full subpoena process.
Surely the Lord could have caused the court to rule in our favor.... We receive these outcomes as God’s direction and have instructed our legal counsel to drop the suit entirely. With this decision, we can again focus our energies on continued growth in personal and organizational faults we have owned, enduring what is false, and striving to mitigate the damage such attacks bring to our church family and friends.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Chinese Police Detain Prominent Pastor and Some Members of Unregistered Church

The New York Times reported earlier this week that on Sunday Chinese police detained Wang Yi, one of China's most prominent Protestant pastors.  His Early Rain Covenant Church, with its over 500 members, is one of many churches that are not registered with the government. These independent Protestant churches that have not complied with the registration laws are one of the fastest growing religious movements in China, claiming some 30 million adherents. More than 100 members of Early Rain were also detained, though a number were released by Monday with some of those then being placed under house arrest.

Friday, December 07, 2018

Christian Activist Charged After Video Of Book Burning

KCRG TV9 News reports that an Orange City, Iowa Christian activist has been charged with misdemeanor 5th Degree Criminal Mischief after making a Facebook Live video of himself burning four children's books checked out of the Orange City Public Library.  The video, made on the first day of the city's gay pride festival, showed him burning books titled "Two Boys Kissing," "This day in June," "Morris Micklewhite and the tangerine dress," and "Families, families, families."

City Recreation Department Trip To Biblical Museums Cancelled After Objections

Christian Post reports that the Charleston, Illinois parks and recreation department has cancelled a planned town trip to southern Ohio and northern Kentucky that included visits to the Answers in Genesis Creation Museum and Ark Encounter. Freedom From Religion Foundation had complained to the city (full text of letter) that promotion of visits to these museums violates the Establishment Clause because it endorses the religious mission of museum founder Ken Ham.