By J. Brent Walker, Executive Director
Executive Director J. Brent Walker reflects on the passage of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and its journey over the past 20 years.
From the October 2013 Report from the Capital.
By K. Hollyn Hollman, BJC General Counsel
A Nov. 7 symposium, organized by the BJC and other groups, will use the occasion of the RFRA anniversary as an opportunity to reflect on the state of free exercise of religion in Americaby examining it in a number of contexts.
From the October 2013 Report from the Capital.
Written by Don ByrdVia Religion Clause, formal charges have now been filed by the Tennessee Board of Judicial Conduct against the Tennessee magistrate who made news earlier this year after she rejected “Messiah” as a child’s first name (in a parental dispute over the child’s last name). She indicated that “Messiah” is a religious title earned only by Jesus Christ and changed the baby’s name to Martin.
Written by Don ByrdLegislative prayer may be the most controversial church-state issue today. Supporters of unchecked government prayers opening public meetings argue government invocations are free speech and free religious exercise protected by the First Amendment. They reject any solution that would place any limitation on government prayers as in improper intrusion of government into religious matters. Opponents of such a practice – like the Baptist Joint Committee, which filed a brief in the case – argue government prayers improperly promote and endorse religious views and potentially coerce or chill the First Amendment freedoms of citizens, in violation of the Establishment Clause. (you can listen to a BJC podcast detailing their views on the case here.)
As you probably are aware by now, the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a legislative prayer case next month to weigh in on this issue for the first time in 30 years. Town of Greece v. Galloway is a case challenging the prayer policy of a city council in New York. What you may not be aware of is the content of the prayers in question in the case. It’s one thing to talk abstractly about this issue: about the constitutional and religious dangers of government prayer, whether they should be non-sectarian, whether the participating clergy should rotate, and what safeguards local governments should put in place to protect from coercion or the appearance of endorsement the citizens who have business at the meeting. It’s another thing altogether to actually listen to some of the prayers that precipitated this lawsuit. I highly recommend it.
Written by Don ByrdToday the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty joined more than 120 national, state and local organizations in calling on the Department of Justice to open an investigation into possible improper surveillance practices of the New York Police Department. In a letter to the heads of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, the groups argue that ten years of religious profiling and improper monitoring directed at New York’s Muslim communities jeopardize their civil rights.