Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, October 01, 2005
Osaka Court Goes Other Way; PM's Shrine Visit Unconstitutional
New Publications
Friday, September 30, 2005
Schools Face Various Church-State Issues This Year
In Raleigh, North Carolina, an activist Christian group has complained that an elementary school unconstitutionally promotes "New Age" beliefs through its stress-reduction class. Elementary school students were asked to do breathing exercises, chant and use their "life forces". The Sacramento Bee reports on the dispute. The organization promoting the classes, Rites of Passage Youth Empowerment Foundation, says it is not involved in religion; it merely enhances students' learning practices.
In Anna, Illinois, a local pastor is collecting signatures to urge the city's junior high school to put back up a painting of The Last Supper and two portraits of Jesus that the school took down earlier this school year. The Southern yesterday reported that the pictures were removed after Americans United For Separation of Church and State threatened to sue. Now the Alliance Defense fund threatens to sue if the school does not return the pictures to its hallway.
And in Kirkland, Washington, Lake Washington High School has its plate full of church-state issues. The Stranger reports that Antioch Bible Church, a conservative anti-gay congregation, rents the school's gym every Sunday to use for religious services. The school district's sex education program is supplemented by an abstinence presentation from a group called SHARE—an affiliate of the religiously based group Life Choices. The SHARE lecture is taught by volunteers, some of whom are recruited from Antioch Bible Church. Then last June, students in the pre-school program that is affiliated with the high school all received a copy of "10 commandments" at their graduation-- not the traditional ones, but still ones that were religious. They instructed parents to "please take me to church regularly" and to realize their kids are "a special gift from God."
Bush Urged To Overrule FAA On Cemetery Seizure
The Becket Fund which represents the cemetery and the church that operates it issued a release yesterday on the controversy. The Illinois legislature has already enacted the O'Hare Modernization Act, excluding the cemetery from state law that protects other cemeteries from seizure.FAA stands poised to grant final approval and federal funds to an airport plan that would dig up the graves at St. Johannes, despite the availability of feasible options that would address flight delays at O’Hare and save the cemetery. Most upsetting, the FAA is about to do this despite its concession that the desecration of St. Johannes would substantially burden the religious exercise of the Church and those who have family and friends buried in St. Johannes’ sacred ground. In other words, the FAA has admitted that its actions establish a prima facie violation of the Church’s rights under RFRA, but insists that reducing flight delays justifies this burden.
Japan Prime Minister Did Not Violate Constitution In Shrine Visit
Groups Urge USCIRF To Designate Turkmenistan
Thursday, September 29, 2005
North Carolina Moves To Dismiss ACLU's Oath Case On Standing Grounds
Moving Demonstrators From Church Does Not Endorse Religion
China Limits Religious Speech On the Internet
Law Favoring Churches Teaching Family Values Questioned
Another Challenge To A Cross On City Property
Lot Size Requirement Only For Churches Violates RLUIPA
Two Rastafarian Prisoner Cases Decided
In Clark v. Briley, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21350 (ND Ill., Sept. 26, 2005), an Illinois federal district court held that forcing a Rastafarian prisoner to cut his dreadlocks was the least restrictive means of achieving prison safety and security. His hair could serve as a hiding place of weapons or drugs, a significant risk considering this prisoner's past history. Therefore the court rejected the prisoner's claims under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act and under the First Amendment and granted summary judgment to the defendants.
New Organization Will Counter Religious Right Online
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
Denominational Disputes Over Gay Clergy Are Moving To Civil Courts
Similar disputes are racking the Episcopal Church. Last month (see prior posting), a breakaway Episcopal congregation in California was permitted to keep its church property as it broke away from the parent body in protest over its teachings on homosexuality. Now, according to an Associated Press report yesterday, a more far-ranging federal lawsuit has been filed in Connecticut. In it, six Episcopal parishes at the center of a dispute over gay clergy allege that their civil rights have been violated by Connecticut's bishop, the head of the U.S. Episcopal Church and others.
The priests of the six parishes that filed the lawsuit had asked to be supervised by a different bishop because they disagreed with their bishop's support for the ordination of the Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop. Interestingly, the lawsuit also names Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal as a defendant. The suit claims that the state has entangled itself in the religious dispute because state law requires Episcopal parishes to operate under the rules of the Connecticut diocese. The full text of the 67-page complaint in the lawsuit is available online. It asks for an injunction to prevent the parent church from interfering with the dissident parishes, an ejectment order, a declaration that various state statutes relating to the Episcopal Church are unconstitutional, and damages.
School Says Musical Violates Spirit of Church-State Separation
Prisoner Claims TB Testing Violates Religious Freedom
Order On Children's Travel Does Not Violate Mother's 1st Amendment Rights
Tuesday, September 27, 2005
FEMA To Reimburse Churches For Hurricane Relief
Incisive Analysis Of Bible In American Public Life
Political use of Scripture is at once more dangerous and more effective than the rhetorical or evocative. It is more dangerous because it risks the sanctified polarization that has so often attended the identification of a particular political position with the specific will of God. It can also be dangerous for religion. In the telling words of Leon Wieseltier,"the surest way to steal the meaning, and therefore the power, from religion is to deliver it to politics, to enslave it to public life."...
To foreign Roman Catholics during the Civil War, to Quebec nationalists of the 19th century, to American Jews in the first generations of immigration, and to African Americans in the period before the exercise of full civil rights, the Bible was held to be a living book, and it was held to be relevant to the United States. But it was not relevant in the way that those at the center of American influence—be they Bible believers or Bible deniers—felt it was relevant.