Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Evangelist Charged For Preaching In Public Square On Halloween
Court Says LDS Membership Does Not Require Recusal In Case Against BYU
Suit Filed Over School's Treatment of Pro-Life Student Club
Pope Cancels Speech To Italian University After Protests By Scientists
... "La Sapienza" was once the pope's university, but today it is a secular university with that autonomy which, on the basis of its founding principles, has always been part of the nature of the university, which must always be exclusively bound to the authority of the truth. In its freedom from political and ecclesiastical authorities, the university finds its special role ....
In the face of an a-historical form of reason that seeks to construct itself in an exclusively a-historical rationality, the wisdom of humanity as such—the wisdom of the great religious traditions—should be viewed as a reality that cannot be cast with impunity into the trash bin of the history of ideas....
... [M]an’s journey can never be said to be over and the danger of falling into inhumanity is never just warded off as we can see in today’s history. The danger faced by the Western world ... is that mankind, given its great knowledge and power, might give up on the question of the truth.
DC High Schooler Disqualified From Track Meet Because of Muslim Dress
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Jewish Groups Decry Anti-Obama E-Mails; Obama Criticizes Award To Farrakhan
Meanwhile Sen. Obama posted on his website a statement taking issue with an award given to Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan by Trumpet Newsmagazine, a publication of Obama's Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. Obama's statement said: "I decry racism and anti-Semitism in every form and strongly condemn the anti-Semitic statements made by Minister Farrakhan. I assume that Trumpet Magazine made its own decision to honor Farrakhan based on his efforts to rehabilitate ex-offenders, but it is not a decision with which I agree." [Thanks to Melissa Rogers for the lead.]
UPDATE: TPM reported on Saturday that 7 Jewish U.S. Senators have issued an Open Letter similarly condemning the anti-Obama e-mails. [Thanks again to Melissa Rogers.]
School's Showing of Religious-Themed Inspirational Film Draws Protest
8th Circuit Upholds Compensatory, Rejects Punitive, Damages In Title VII Case
Legacy of Established Church Comes To An End In New Hampshire Town
Huckabee Says US Constitution Should Reflect "God's Standards"
I have opponents in this race who do not want to change the Constitution. But I believe it’s a lot easier to change the Constitution than it would be to change the word of the living god. And that’s what we need to do — is to amend the Constitution so it’s in God’s standards rather than try to change God’s standards so it lines up with some contemporary view of how we treat each other and how we treat the family.
Canadian Courthouse Excludes Sikh Witness Wearing Kirpan
7th Circuit Denies En Banc Review In Indiana Legislative Prayer Case
Trial Focuses On Amish Refusal To Use Lights and Triangle On Buggies
Survey Shows Support For Religion In the Public Arena
- 90% feel the law should support religious groups renting public property ... for meetings if non-religious groups are allowed to do so.
- 89% say it should be legal for a public school teacher to permit a “moment of silence” for prayer or contemplation for all students during class time.
- 88% believe it should be legal for public school teachers to wear religious symbols ... during class time.
- 87% say voluntary student-led prayers at public school events ... should be legal.
- 83% believe the display of a nativity scene on city property ... should be legal.
- 79% say it should be legal to display a copy of the Ten Commandments inside a court building.
Out of nine such scenarios presented to people in the study, only three do not show this level of unified thought: - 60% believe the display of a scene honoring Islam on city property, such as a city hall, during Ramadan ... should be legal (even though 83% thought a nativity display should be legal).
- 52% believe it should be legal for a religious club in a high school or university to determine for itself who can be in their membership, even if certain types of people are excluded.
- 33% say it should be legal for a landlord to refuse to rent an apartment to a homosexual couple.
Baptist Press yesterday discussed the poll results more extensively.
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Nevada Caucus Timing May Disenfranchise Observant Jews
When I called the political parties in Nevada to inquire as to whether or not there were measures being taken to help accommodate those observant Jews who wished to participate in the caucuses, I received mixed results. A young Jewish woman at the Nevada Democratic Party told me that they had tried to put caucus-sites near religious neighborhoods and synagogues so that people could walk; precinct captains would be educated about the need to write down information on behalf of observant Jews instead of asking them to sign-in and write themselves. A gentleman at the Nevada Republican Party told me that the party was not even aware of the problem, but promised to make an effort to educate precinct captains on the issue. Neither had an adequate answer as to why the caucuses had to take place on a Shabbat morning.The problem is more than theoretical in Nevada. The state, according to Just Engage, has a rapidly growing Jewish population estimated to total between 65,000 and 80,000.
Alberta Commission Begins Hearings On Publication of Muhammad Caricatures
Right Wing Austrian Politician Makes Scathing Anti-Muslim Remarks
White House Proclamation On Religious Freedom Day Issued From Saudi Arabia
In an era during which an unprecedented number of nations have embraced individual freedom, we have also witnessed the stubborn endurance of religious repression. Religious freedom belongs not to any one nation, but to the world, and my Administration continues to support freedom of worship at home and abroad.
Justice Ginsburg Reflects On Role of Her Jewish Heritage
New Dharma Stock Indexes Announced
Indigenous Group In Malaysia Sues Over Demolition of Church
Monday, January 14, 2008
Israel's Knesset Skeptical of Cabinet Decision On Religious Affairs Ministry
Another Opinion on Religion In the US Presidential Campaign
[I]n the better years of the previous century, candidates used religion mostly as an adjunct to the real meat of the political process, a tool to whip up support for policies. How times have changed. Think of it, perhaps, as a way to measure the powerful sense of unsettledness that has taken a firm hold on American society. Candidates increasingly keep their talk about religion separate from specific campaign issues. They promote faith as something important and valuable in and of itself in the election process. They invariably avow the deep roots of their religious faith and link it not with issues, but with certitude itself. Sometimes it seems that Democrats do this with even more grim regularity than Republicans....
So, when it comes to religion and politics, here's the most critical question: Should we turn the political arena into a stage to dramatize our quest for moral certainty?
USCIRF Says Bush Should Raise Religious Freedom Issues With Saudis
Recent Scholarly Articles of Interest
- Ashlie C. Warnick, Employment Discrimination by Religious Schools Participating in Voucher Programs, (January 9, 2008).
- Patricia Salkin & Amy Lavine, The Genesis of RLUIPA and Federalism: Evaluating the Creation of a Federal Statutory Right and its Impact on Local Government, (January 3, 2008).
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Huckabee Splitting Evangelical Political Support
Opposition Surfaces To Protection of Sacred Native American Site
Florida Chabad Excluded From Shopping Plaza Wins RLUIPA Claim
Many Georgia Schools Not Offering Courses In Bible As History and Literature
Islamic Charity Officials Convicted of Lying In 501(c)(3) Application
Loud Bible Reading On Bus Violates System's Rules
Saturday, January 12, 2008
School Attorney Nixes Biblical Verse On Graduation Announcements
New Documentary on Faith In Politics Opens Next Week
DC Circuit Holds RFRA Inapplicable To Non-Resident Aliens In Gitmo Case
Friday, January 11, 2008
Court Bars Deportation of Christian Facing Torture In Egypt
Appeal Filed By Muslim Police Officer Seeking To Wear Khimar
Watchdog Group Asks IRS To Investigate Funding of Texas Restoration Project
European Muslims Sign Charter Pledging Respect For Civil Law
Commons Passes Criminal Justice Bill; Debates Hate Speech and Blasphemy
Meanwhile, as previously reported, inserting a provision to repeal of Britain's blasphemy laws was postponed pending the government's consultation with the Church of England. While the Church of England is open to the idea of repeal (Guardian, Jan. 10), Britain's Evangelical Alliance is more skeptical, calling for broader consultations. Friday's Christian Today quotes Dr. Don Horrocks, Head of Public Affairs at the Evangelical Alliance: "When Parliament prioritises the abolition of legislation it is not a neutral act. It sends out a signal to society about what values it considers to be important. In this case the message suggests that there is no longer a place for respect for the sacred in society."
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Amaker v. Goord, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92824 (WD NY, Dec. 18, 2007), a New York federal district judge accepted a magistrate's report and recommendations in two related cases. In Attica prison, a correction officer had removed several Nation of Islam members from religious instruction and told them "to either change their religion or cut their hair" because "only Rastafarian[s] could wear dreadlock[s]." The magistrate recommended that defendants be enjoined from barring plaintiffs from NOI services and classes and from punishing plaintiffs for refusing to cut their hair or change their religious affiliation. The two decisions from the federal magistrate judge are Amaker v. Goord, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95373 (March 9, 2007) and Fluellen v. Goord, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95374 (March 12, 2007).
Ingram v. Craven, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1377 (D ID, Jan. 8, 2008) involves a damage claim by a former inmate objecting to a recommendation that he be denied parole because of his refusal to participate in a religious-based AA/NA substance abuse program. After finding some of the defendants had absolute immunity, an Idaho federal district judge ordered the claim against one remaining defendant to be taken to mediation.
Colorado County Settles RLUIPA Suit, Permits Church To Build
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Court Strikes Down Gideon Bible Distribution In Elementary School
Bush To Visit Christian Holy Sites During Mideast Trip
1st Circuit Sides With Army Doctor In Her Conscientious Objector Claim
Voter ID Oral Argument Includes Exchange On Religious Objectors
JUSTICE SCALIA: ... In this case you're claiming there's a problem for people who, for religious reasons, don't want to have their photograph taken. Do we know that if that's the reason that they assert, I can't get the photograph, the State will say you can't vote?The added burden on Amish, Mennonites and others in the state who have religious objections to being photographed for an ID card was discussed more fully in Petitioner's brief as well as in an amicus brief filed by the League of Women Voters. (See prior posting.)
MR. SMITH: I must be misunderstanding. We have every reason to think that they will let them vote. The only problem with that exemption, like the indigency exception, is that it's kind of gratuitively burdensome in that you have to go down to the county seat to vote every time; you can't vote in your polling place because you have to fill out this affidavit every time you vote.
Indiana Senate Moves To Non-Sectarian Opening Prayer
NJ Civil Rights Division Refuses To End Probe of Pavilion Barring Civil Unions
8th Circuit Denies En Banc Review of Decision on Faith-Based Prison Program
Compromise Reached On Repeal of British Blasphemy Laws
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Russia Reasserts Control Over Orthodox Cathedral In France
British Airways Employee Loses Suit Over Rules On Jewelry
Does School's Santa Hat Ban Amount To Religious Discrimination?
British Magistrate Reprimanded Over Conduct Regarding Niqab
Officer Sues Coast Guard To Avoid Immunization With Vaccine From Fetus' Cells
Kentucky County Tries New 10 Commandments Display
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
9th Circuit Rejects Convoluted RFRA and Free Exercise Challenges To Deportation
The court held first that no religious belief precluded petitioners from adopting a child, so their religious views did not create their ineligibility to have their removal order cancelled. Second, the court said, petitioners did not show that they were pressured to violate their beliefs. It said: "No sensible person would abandon his religious precepts to have a child in the hope that the child would be so very ill or learning disabled as to come within the small number of children as to whom 'exceptional and extremely unusual hardship' can be shown." Yesterday's San Francisco Examiner reported on the decision.
Church's Gay Rights Stance Leads To Denial of Insurance Coverage
NPR Program Focuses On Diplomacy and Religion in the 21st Century
Article Surveys Islam In U.S. Courts Last Year
New Poll Expores Pakistanis Views on Islam
There is strong public support for giving Islam a wider role in Pakistan. A large majority feels it is very important to live in a country that is governed according to Islamic principles. A majority says it would like to see Shari’a or Islamic law play a larger role in their country than it does today.A World Public Opinion release summarizes the report and links to the detailed data, questionnaire and description of methodology.
At the same time, there is little support for a shift towards extreme religious conservatism. Instead there is significant support for some reforms in the opposite direction. Only a small minority—even among those who want a greater role for Shari’a—wants to see the "Talibanization" of daily life increase. About two-thirds support a recent government plan to reform the madrassahs, including strong support among those favoring Shari’a. A plurality supports the Women’s Protection Act, which modifies existing law in the direction of greater women’s rights.
Appeal Filed In "Be Happy, Not Gay" T-Shirt Case
Monday, January 07, 2008
Cert. Denied In Massachusetts Church Closing Case
Huckabee Preaches At New Hampshire Church Ahead of Primary
Israel Will Re-Establish Religious Affairs Ministry
Ohio Governor Interviewed On His Faith And Its Impact
[PD:] Has your faith changed over the years?
[Strickland:] My understanding of religious faith and of personal responsibility I think has matured. I used to feel like I had all of the answers.... I read the Bible and I pray and I listen to advice that I get from people of faith. But, no, I'm not as presumptuous as I used to be when it comes to thinking that I understand fully and completely the precise will of God....
I think there is a danger of having God conform to our image, rather than trying to conform to his. And I think that can lead to arrogance and self- righteousness and a sense of superiority that, from my point of view, is the antithesis of what true faith leads to.
Afghan Islamic Council Decries Christian Proselytizing
Some Books and Book Reviews of Interest
Tom Perrotta's new novel The Abstinence Teacher, (St. Martin's Press, 2007), focusing in a new way on conservative Christian viewpoints, was reviewed last week by the London Telegraph.
Trial Held In Prisoner Suit Seeking Kosher Meals
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Property Owner Fights Zoners Over Planned Cross On Lake Michigan
Father Says State Constitution Voids Order That Son Attend Catholic School
VT Court Holds Statute of Limitations Had Not Run In Priest Abuse Case
Litigation Strains Virginia Episcopal Docese
New Russian Textbook Reflects Anti-Catholic Views
Times Explores Mormon Church and Religious Concerns About Romney
In theory, the evangelical political movement says that it is prepared to embrace Jews and even Muslims so long as they share the same common values of the religious right. In the case of a Mormon candidate, though, many evangelicals are not prepared to say that common values are enough. The reason seems to be the view among evangelicals that the substantive theological beliefs of Mormons are so radically different from their own as to constitute not a sect of Christianity but a Christian heresy....
If Mormonism were to keep Romney from the nomination, the Mormon Church hierarchy may through continuing revelation and guidance respond by shifting its theology and practices even further in the direction of mainstream Christianity and thereby minimizing its outlier status in the culture. Voices within the LDS fold have for some time sought to minimize the authority of some of Joseph Smith’s more creative and surprising theological messages, like the teaching that God and Jesus were once men....
Court Dismisses Challenge To Pastor's Use of Church Funds
Primary Ads Urge Voters To Probe Candidates On Church-State Issues
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Pennsylvania Insists On Licenses for Tranist Vehicles Serving Amish
Three Cases Involve Employee Requests For Religious Time Off
In Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority v. Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, (MA Sup. Jud. Ct., Jan. 4, 2008), the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court held that the MBTA had violated the state's prohibition on religious discrimination in employment when it refused to to hire a Seventh Day Adventist as a part-time bus driver because he needed Saturdays off to observe his Sabbath. The court held that the MBTA should have facilitated a voluntary swap of hours by employees. Because the MBTA did nothing to accommodate the applicant, the court said it did not need to decide whether requiring an employer to incur more than de minimis cost to accommodate an employee violates the establishment clause. Today's Boston Globe reported on the decision.
Finally, the Louisville Courier-Journal reports on a religious discrimination lawsuit by a Clarksville, Indiana man against a Value City retail store. The employee left his job after the store refused to assure him that he could always have Wednesday nights and Sundays off to attend church services.
Court Upholds Texas Mandatory Moment of Silence Law
Friday, January 04, 2008
Teaching of Evolution, Rejection of Creationism Pressed By US Advisory Groups
At the same time, according to Science Daily, a coalition of 17 scientific organizations is urging scientists to become more involved in promoting science education, including evolution. An article in the January 2008 FASEB Journal says that introducing creationism and intelligent design in the science classroom undermines the fundamentals of science education.Recent advances in science and medicine, along with an abundance of observations and experiments over the past 150 years, have reinforced evolution's role as the central organizing principle of modern biology....
Despite the overwhelming evidence supporting evolution, opponents have repeatedly tried to introduce nonscientific views into public school science classes through the teaching of various forms of creationism or intelligent design.... NAS and IOM strongly maintain that only scientifically based explanations and evidence for the diversity of life should be included in public school science courses. "Teaching creationist ideas in science class confuses students about what constitutes science and what does not," the committee stated."
As SCIENCE, EVOLUTION, AND CREATIONISM makes clear, the evidence for evolution can be fully compatible with religious faith. Science and religion are different ways of understanding the world. Needlessly placing them in opposition reduces the potential of each to contribute to a better future," the book says.
Evangelicals Crucial To Huckabee's Win In Iowa
Women Appointed For First Time To Singapore's Sharia Appeal Board
Suit Challenges Ban On Fortune Telling As Anti-Pagan
Malaysian Court Delays Funeral After Dispute On Conversion
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Free Exercise Claim As To DNA Testing Rejected On Procedural Grounds
Utah Governor Held 1996 Meetings On LDS Doctrine and Modern Government
Court Holds That "Choose Life" Is Not Religious Speech
It may very well be true that those who participate in the abortion debate on the pro-life side are members of religious organizations whose religious beliefs form the basis for their views. However, that does not transform the pro-life stance into one that is religious in nature, nor does it transform the phrase, "Choose Life" into religious speech. Nothing in constitutional jurisprudence supports the conclusion that political speech which is derived from one's ethical or religious beliefs or background transforms it into religious speech. Many religious persons and organizations may be opposed to capital punishment, or perhaps in favor of gun control. Those political issues are not therefore automatically transformed into religious issues simply by virtue of the religious beliefs of their supporters. The same is true for the abortion debate.