Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Church of England Issues Guides To Prevent Bogus Marriages By Immigrants
Meanwhile the issue was complicated last month when the House of Lords issued a decision in R (on the application of Baiai and others) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, (House of Lords, July 30, 2008) holding that the licensing rules that led to automatic denial of Home Office approval for immigrants whose visas were about to expire or who were not legally in the country are invalid. The Law Lords held that these overbroad rules violate Section 12 of the European Convention on Human rights that protects the right to marry. That decision was covered by the July 30 London Daily Mail. (See prior related posting.)
Times Features Science Teacher's Methods on Evolution
Founder of Florida Citizens for Science, Campbell strongly backed changes in Florida's science standards adopted earlier this year that specifically mention evolution. (See prior posting.) Defending against charges that the new standards do not include alternative explanations for life's diversity, Campbell replied: "We also failed to include astrology, alchemy and the concept of the moon being made of green cheese. Because those aren't science, either."
Court Dismisses Minister's Suit Against Church Placement Agency
South Carolina High School Football Coaches Often Mix Religion With Coaching
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Kentucky County Tries To Delay Paying Attorneys Fees In 10 Commandments Case
Palm Beach Neighborhood Dislikes Jewish Synagogue Meeting In Private Home
Biden's Views On Religion and Church-State Issues Are Examined
Melissa Rogers has posted a number of excerpts from Biden statements on ther role of religion in public life. Other have pointed to an excerpt on YouTube of a 2007 Biden interview at the Commonwealth Club of California in which Biden discusses his views on separation of church and state. In it, Biden focuses on a quote from Jon Meacham's American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, And the Making of a Nation: "Religion shapes the life of the nation without strangling it."
Religiously-Grounded Substance Abuse Programs Eschew Government Funding
Meanwhile, Thursday's Forward reports on Beit T'Shuvah, the country's only Jewish residential program for drug and alcohol abuse. The Los Angeles program explicitly does not seek government funding because its treatment methodology is filled with religious content-- a 12-step program combined with Jewish spirituality. Residents study Torah each morning at 7 am, and are required to attend weekly Friday night and Saturday morning religious services
School District Cuts Off All Community Flyers To End Bias Against Religious Messages
Friday, August 22, 2008
Challenge To Pledge of Allegiance Partially Dismissed By NH Federal Court
Suing the U.S. Congress, the United States government, and three school districts, plaintiffs alleged some 16 bases on which recitation of the Pledge should be found unconstitutional or otherwise invalid. These included Establishment Clause and Free Exercise claims, as well as claims that the school district exposed children to emotional harm by requiring their presence in the classroom while the pledge is recited and a claim that the Pledge violates public policy by fostering national divisiveness. Several other parties intervened as defendants to support recitation of the Pledge.
In this decision, the court dismissed claims against the United States Congress. Relying on the "Speech or Debate" clause of the Constitution, it held that courts lack jurisdiction to direct Congress to enact or amend legislation. The court also dismissed the United States as a defendant, finding that plaintiffs lacked taxpayer standing. The United States however remains a party as an Intervenor, as do the state of new Hampshire, the Knights of Columbus and several New Hampshire school students and parents who intervened. (See prior related posting.)
3rd Circuit Rejects Free Exercise Challenge To PA Home-Schooling Regulation
The court also rejected plaintiffs' claim that a "hybrid right" calling for stricter scrutiny was involved. Rejecting the federal constitutional claims, the court remanded the state law claim to state court.Act 169 is a neutral law of general applicability. It neither targets religious practice nor selectively imposes burdens on religiously motivated conduct. Instead, it imposes the same requirements on parents who home-school for secular reasons as on parents who do so for religious reasons. Furthermore, nothing in the record suggests Commonwealth school officials discriminate against religiously motivated home education programs (e.g., denying approval of home education programs because they include faith-based curriculum materials).... The Commonwealth has a legitimate interest in ensuring children taught under home education programs are achieving minimum educational standards and are demonstrating sustained progress in their educational program.
In a concurring opinion, Chief Judge Scirica reached the merits of the state Religious Freedom Protection Act claim and found that: "Based upon the plain language of the RFPA, Parents have failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that they have been compelled or will likely be compelled to violate a specific tenet of their religious faith."
The Home School Legal Defense Association that represented the parents said it is reviewing the decision and considering an appeal. [Thanks to Alliance Alert for the lead.]
Virginia Episcopal Diocese Loses On Two More Issues In Property Disputes
In its second opinion (full text), the court rejected claims by ECUSA and the Diocese that Virginia's Division Statute violates the Contracts Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The court concluded that the Contracts Clause protects only those contractual rights that existed before the Division Statute was first enacted in 1867. It is not enough that a congregation was in existence prior to 1867; the protection of property rights the diocese or ECUSA had in a church's property extends only to specific parcels of property acquired before 1867. Any property acquired after that date would have been acquired subject to ownership provisions in the Division Statute. Since in 1867 under Virginia law denominational bodies or dioceses could not hold title to, or obtain enforceable contractual rights in, property, the Contracts Clause does not protect any rights of the diocese or ECUSA in church properties.
Yesterday's Washington Times reported on the decision.
TRO Issued To Stop Army Construction At Comanche Religious Site
Missouri Governor Implementing Faith-Based Disaster Relief Initiative
Christian Groups Enter China, Evading Ban on Foreign Missionaries
Cleric-Penitent Privilege Held Inapplicable Where Pastor Is Not A Spiritual Advisor
(1) defendant did not ask and Brown did not offer to keep the conversation confidential; (2) Brown reached out to defendant – not as a spiritual advisor – but to protect defendant's children; and (3) Brown specifically told defendant he could not counsel him or even baptize him because defendant needed professional help. Clearly, the conversations between defendant and Brown are not protected by the privilege.Yesterday's New Jersey Star-Ledger reported on the decision.
New IRS Publication on Taxation of Churches and Religious Institutions
Thursday, August 21, 2008
New Indonesian Law Permits Sharia-Compliant Government Bonds
Clergy-Penitent Privilege Held Inapplicable When 3rd Party Is Present
Generals Criticized For Endosring Spiritual Book
Louisana Governor Will Not Renew Anti-Discrimination Executive Order
Personnel Changes At Two Federal Religion Agencies
Meanwhile, The Roundtable reports that Jay Hein, director of the White House Office on Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, has resigned effective August 29 in order to care for his father who is suffering from cancer. Hein announced his resignation last week during his regular conference call with state liaisons to religious charities. The White House is seeking a replacement for Hein. [Thanks to Melissa Rogers for this lead.]
Democratic Convention Will Be Heavy On Faith-Based Events
City Sued Over Limits On Christian Protesters At Gay Pride Event
Nepal Supreme Court Rejects Traditional Treatment of Child Goddess
11th Circuit Hears Arguments In Sectarian Invocations Case
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
U.S. Olympic Coach Proselytizes His Archer-Athletes
McCain Urged Not To Use Religious Test For Veep Choice
Egyptian Proposal On Organ Donation Seen By Some As Religious Discrimination
New Jersey School Issue Vote Postponed Because of Holy Day Conflict
Free Exercise and Vagueness Defenses Raised In Charges Over Death of Child
Israel's Army Pursues Refunds From Officers Using False Rabbinic Ordinations
Settlement Reached In Christian High School Group's Equal Access Claim
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Is Religion An Element In the Georgia-Russia Conflict?
since Orthodox churches are organised nationally, each side naturally reflects in some way its own country’s political view of the crisis. But even in his protest letter to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, [Georgian Patriarch] Ilia’s only reference to religion was his lament that Orthodox were killing each other.
New "Blogalogue" Offers Church-State Debate Between Two Opposing Experts
Religious Cult Members Charged In Boy's Death
Informational Meeting On Hamptons Eruv Turns Contentious
Monday, August 18, 2008
CA High Court: Doctors Cannot Assert Free Exercise In Refusing IUI Treatment For Lesbian
In the case, two clinic physicians refused, on religious grounds, to perform intrauterine insemination for Guadalupe Benitez, an unmarried lesbian patient. The court held that under the 1st Amendment, no religious exemption is mandated because the Unruh Civil Rights Act is a neutral law of general application. The court said it need not decide whether the California constitution imposes greater protection for religious beliefs, because even under a strict scrutiny standard defendants' assertion fails. Since the Unruh Civil Rights Act requires merely "full and equal" access, the physicians could either refuse to perform the procedure for any clinical patients, or refer patients to other physicians employed by the clinic who do not have the same religious objections. The court said that defendants are still free at trial to prove that their religious objections related to the fact that Benitez was unmarried, rather than the fact she was a lesbian.
Justice Baxter concurred, but argued that the balance of competing interests might come out differently in the case of a physician in sole practice. He said: "At least where the patient could be referred with relative ease and convenience to another practice, I question whether the state’s interest in full and equal medical treatment would compel a physician in sole practice to provide a treatment to which he or she has sincere religious objections." The San Diego Union Tribune reports on the decision. (See prior related posting.)
US Group Refuses To Leave Chinese Airport After Bibles Seized
UPDATE: Unable to get the Chinese to relent, members of Vision Beyond Borders left the Kunming Airport on Monday after 26 hours. (AP).
UPDATE: When members of Vision Beyond Borders returned to the Kunming airport to leave China on Wednesday for Thailand, their 315 Bibles were returned to them and they were escorted to immigration. (China Post, Aug. 20).
Recent Scholarly Articles and Book of Interest
- Christopher C. Lund, The Congressional Chaplaincies (August 14, 2008).
- Benjamin M Leff, Sit Down and Count the Cost: A Framework for Constitutionally Enforcing the 501(C)(3) Campaign Intervention Ban, (August 12, 2008).
From SmartCILP:
- Conversation in Aid of a "Conspiracy" for Truth: A Candid Discussion About Jesuit Law Schools, Justice, and Engaging the Catholic Intellectual Tradition. Article by Gregory A. Kalscheur; responses by C. Michael Bryce, Thomas More Donnelly and student Spencer K. Nussbaum; reply by John M. Breen. 43 Gonzaga Law Review 559-669 (2007/08).
- Financial Innovations in the Muslim World. Articles by Bjorn Sorenson, Ali Adnan Ibrahim, Umar F. Moghul, Bashar H. Malkawi and Haitham A. Haloush. 23 American University International Law Review 647-805 (2008).
- Vols. 6 (2006-07 and Vol. 7 (2007-08)of the UCLA Journal of Near Eastern and Islamic Law [contents] have recently been published.
New Book:
- Religion & Law in America: An Encyclopedic Dictionary, (Grey House Publishing, Oct. 2008).
Paper Says 1953 Raid Was Precursor To FLDS Operation
Recent Prisoner Free Excercise Cases
In Logan v. Arkansas Department of Corrections, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61809 (ED AR, July 28, 2008), an Arkansas federal magistrate judge recommended dismissal of a challenge by a Wiccan prisoner to Arkansas hair length requirements for prisoners.
In Rankins v. Smith, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61411, (ED NC, Aug. 7, 2008), a North Carolina federal district court dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies a prisoner's claim that a prison officer retaliated against him for filing a complaint about medical treatment by failing to put his name on the Ramadan list and not allowing him to receive foods from the Eid-ul-Fitr feast.
Pugh v. Goord, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60998 (SD NY, Aug. 1, 2008), is a lengthy opinion involving challenges by Shi'te Muslim inmates to New York's policy that provides for a single Friday Jumah service for both Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims, instead of allowing a separate Shi'ite service. Shi'ite prisoners also allege other anti-Shi'ite elements in the prison's program to accommodate their religious needs, making it, they say, a Sunni, not a generic Muslim, program. While rejecting damage claims, the court permitted some of the plaintiffs to move ahead with injunctive claims under the free exercise clause, establishment clause, equal protection clause and RLUIPA.
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Scotland Agrees With Catholic Church On Content of Health Leaflets In Schools
Study Lists Countries That Bar Foreign Religious Workers
TN High Court Says Cult Leader May Be In Loco Parentis Under Child Neglect Law
County Fair Widens God and Country Day Discount
Pastor Sues Parent Group and Paper For Defamation
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Obama, McCain Quizzed on Faith and Values Issues
Meanwhile a letter to Barack Obama, initiated by Rabbi Michael Lerner and signed by 140 members of the clergy, urges Obama not to move to the political center. The full text of the letter, included in a Los Angeles Times article today, reads in part: "We are writing you ... not as your election strategists, but as people of faith whose primary allegiance is to be prophetic witnesses to the ethical vision articulated in the holy texts of our religion and the elaboration of those religious traditions over the course of the past two thousand years."
UPDATE: The full transcript of the Saddleback Forum is now available online.
Friday, August 15, 2008
5th Circuit Upholds Death Sentence Despite Jury's Use of Bible
Oliver argues that the jury violated his rights under the Sixth and Eighth Amendments by considering passages from the Bible during the sentencing phase of its deliberations. Although the jury improperly consulted the Bible, the state court found that the Bible did not influence the jury’s decision. As Oliver has not presented clear and convincing evidence to rebut this factual finding, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision to deny the writ.In concluding that the Texas state jury's use of the Bible was improper, though ultimately harmless error, the court said: "when a juror brings a Bible into the deliberations and points out to her fellow jurors specific passages that describe the very facts at issue in the case, the juror has crossed an important line." Today's Houston Chronicle reports on the decision. (See prior related posting.)
Malaysia Threatens To Suspend Catholic Paper For Political Editorial
Italian Suit Challenging Baptism Dropped
Tanzania Debates Creation of Kadhi Courts
Ohio Library's Meeting Room Rules Enjoined
Utah FLDS Members Will Be Able To Get Individual Title To Property
Congressional Candidate On "How Would Jesus Vote?"
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Contempt Petition Against Judge For Poster Dismissed
Christian Groups Seek Removal of Canadian Chief Justice
UPDATE: Canwest News Service reported on Saturday that at he annual Canadian Bar Association news conference, Chief Justice McLachlin addressed the Morgentaler controversy. She said that she chairs the Order of Canada Advisory Council only because the law requires her to do so, that her policy is to not promote any particular candidate, and to abstain from voting. She sees her role as merely assuring that the meeting runs properly and the voting process is fair--unless, as was not the case with Morgentaler, she needs to break a tie.
Potenital County Resident Has Standing To Challenge 10 Commandments Display
IL Appellate Court Majority Invalidates Ban On Heirs Intermarrying
Turkey's AKP Official Ignites New Concerns Over Secularism Principle
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Prison Inmates Who Have Declared Multiple Faiths Create Issues for Chaplains
Sheriff's Church Protection Program Questioned By County Commissioners
DC Land Exchange With Homeless Shelter Said To Violate Establishment Clause
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
8th Circuit Upholds Prison Grooming Rules In Split Decision
Does McCain Ad Link Obama With the Antichrist?
Cert. Petition Filed In Case Excluding Religious Material From Class Project
College Raises Church-State Issues By Program Offered Through A Church
Nigerian Prelate Blames Crime and AIDS on Ending of Religion In Schools
Monday, August 11, 2008
Good News Club Wins Preliminary Injunction On Facilities Fee
President Bush Raises Religious Freedom Issues In Beijing
Later in the day, Bush met with China's president, Hu Jintao. In remarks (full text), Bush told Hu: "As you know, our relationship is constructive and it's important and it's also very candid, and I thank you for that. And once again, I had a very uplifting experience by going to a church, and I want to thank you for arranging that, as well. It was a spirit-filled, good feeling. And as you know, I feel very strongly about religion, and I am so appreciative of the chance to go to church here in your society."
In a press briefing (full text) after Bush's meeting with Hu, Dennis Wilder, Senior Director for East Asian Affairs, said:
The President raised human rights and religious freedom. He told President Hu that this is an important aspect of the U.S.-China dialogue, and that the Chinese can expect that any future American President will also make it an important aspect of our dialogue. As the President has said, candor on these kinds of issues are part of a constructive and cooperative process between the United States and China.
The President noted that he had been to church; noted that believers will strengthen China; that he sincerely believes that China will be a better place if there is more freedom of religion. And President Hu seemed to indicate that the door is opening on religious freedom in China and that in the future there will be more room for religious believers.
Recent Articles and Books of Interest
- Larry Catá Backer, Theocratic Constitutionalism: An Introduction to a New Global Legal Ordering, Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, Vol. 16, No. 1, 2008.
- Josh Paul Davis & Joshua D. Rosenberg, The Immanent Structure of Free Speech Doctrine: Bong Hits, Jesus, and the Role of the Public Schools in Controlling Student Speech, (August 5, 2008).
- Christopher Scott Maravilla, The Diaspora Paradox: Integrating International Legal Norms into Domestic Law to Protect the Rights of Middle Eastern Diasporas (August 2, 2008).
- Malcolm Voyce, Buddhist 'Transgressions': The Violation of Rules by Buddhist Monks, Macquarie Law Working Paper No. 2008‐23 (June 17, 2008).
From SmartCILP:
- Diarmuid F. O'Scannlain, From Pierce to Smith: the Oregon Connection and Supreme Court Religion Jurisprudence, 86 Oregon Law Review 635-656 (2007).
- Jeffrey G. Sherman, Can Religious Influence Ever Be "Undue" Influence?, 73 Brooklyn Law Review 579-644 (2008).
- Daniel Moeckli, Human Rights and Non-Discrimination in the "War on Terror", (Oxford University Press, Jan. 24, 2008), (Table of contents and introduction from SSRN).
- Douglas Laycock, Anthony R. Picarello, Jr. & Robin Fretwell Wilson (eds.), Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty, (Rowman & Littlefield, August 28, 2008), reviewed in Becket Fund release.
3 USCIRF Commissioners Are Reappointed
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Gooden v. Crain, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59857 (ED TX, Aug. 6, 2008), a Texas federal district court rejected a RLUIPA challenge by a Muslim prisoner to Texas prison grooming standards that prevented him from wearing a beard. The court held that while the policy imposes a substantial burden on plaintiff's exercise of religion, the state had shown a compelling interest for the restriction and that the policy is narrowly tailored in light of administrative and budgetary concerns.
Rhoades v. Alameida, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59349 (ED CA, Aug. 4, 2008), involved objections by a Native American prisoner that certain of his religious artifacts were destroyed by prison officials. The court said that there were disputed issues of fact that prevented granting the magistrate's recommended summary judgment for defendants on this claim. However the court dismissed plaintiff's equal protection claim, finding that the items he wanted to keep did not have the same religious significance as a Bible or Koran that were allowed to other inmates.
Palermo v. Wright, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60014 (D NH, July 24, 2008), a New Hampshire federal magistrate judge allowed a prisoner to move ahead with 1st Amendment and RLUIPA claims that he was denied the religious diet and ritual items required by his Wicca religion.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
University of California's Rejection of Christian School Courses Upheld
On procedural and standing grounds, the court limited the as-applied challenge to rejection of literature, history, government and world religions courses offered by Calvary Chapel Christian School and one Biology course offered by another school. In rejecting plaintiffs' viewpoint discrimination challenge as to those courses, the court said: "Defendants necessarily facilitate some viewpoints over others in judging the excellence of those students applying to UC. Therefore, the decision to reject a course is constitutional as long as: (1) UC did not reject the course because of animus; and (2) UC had a rational basis for rejecting the course." The court also rejected free exercise, establishment clause and equal protection challenges.
The Californian on Friday reported on reactions from Robert Tyler, an attorney who represented Calvary Christian School in the case. Saying that they planned an appeal, Tyler remarked: "We're worried in the long term, Christian education is going to be continually watered down in order to satisfy the UC school system." University officials have approved 43 courses offered by Calvary Christian School, and test scores can be used as an alternative admissions criterion.
Air Force Chief of Chaplains Interviewed By AF Times
7th Circuit Invalidates City's Handbilling Restrictions
Judge Manion dissenting in part argued that the ordinance was a valid time, place and manner regulation and that "common sense" can be used to demonstrate the City’s substantial governmental interest in enacting the ordinance. On Friday, the Thomas More Society issued a release supporting the decision.
New York's Governor Supports Synagogue's Eruv Proposal
Maldives Ratifies New Constitution; Some Concerns Over Religious Freedom Remain
Protesters Force Closure of Malysian Lawyers' Conference
Saturday, August 09, 2008
Canadian Border Guards Keep Out Westboro Baptist Church Picketers
Work of Ohio's Faith-Based Office Is Praised
GOFBCI Director, Greg Landsman, says his agency insists that funded programs "be devoid of inherently religious activities." He says, "There can be religious symbols on the wall. But you can’t do anything religious during the time when public dollars are at play." Joyce Garver Keller, director of Ohio Jewish Communities, who is encouraging more Jewish groups to apply for faith-based funding, is trying to dispel the notion that the program is about "giving money to evangelical Christians to proselytize."
Volume of Calls To Prayer Becomes Controversial In Morocco
9th Circuit En Banc Rejects Tribes' RFRA Challenge To Snowbowl Expansion
The dissenting opinion was written by Judge Fletcher, who had authored the 3-judge panel's decision: Criticizing the majority's opinion at length, he wrote:RFRA’s stated purpose is to “restore the compelling interest test as set forth in Sherbert v. Verner ... and Wisconsin v. Yoder.... Under RFRA, a "substantial burden" is imposed only when individuals are forced to choose between following the tenets of their religion and receiving a governmental benefit (Sherbert) or coerced to act contrary to their religious beliefs by the threat of civil or criminal sanctions (Yoder)....
The only effect of the proposed upgrades is on the Plaintiffs’ subjective, emotional religious experience. That is, the presence of recycled wastewater ... will decrease the spiritual fulfillment they get from practicing their religion on the mountain. Nevertheless, under Supreme Court precedent, the diminishment of spiritual fulfillment—serious though it may be—is not a "substantial burden" on the free exercise of religion.
The majority characterizes the Indians’ religious belief and exercise as merely a "subjective spiritual experience." Though I would not choose precisely those words, they come close to describing what the majority thinks it is not describing — a genuine religious belief and exercise.... [R]eligious exercise invariably, and centrally, involves a "subjective spiritual experience."Today's Vail (CO) Daily reported on the decision. The Save the Peaks Coalition yesterday issued a statement strongly criticizing the decision. [Thanks to Robert H.Thomas for the lead.]