The liberty principle for this
Freedom Friday is the simple fact that “religious liberty is one of America’s
foundation freedoms.” It is the first freedom listed in the Bill of Rights, and
it is the freedom that protects our freedom of conscious or our freedom to
believe as we choose. According to a Deseret News Editorial, the U.S. Supreme Court made two decisions this week that show the importance of
our First Freedom.
In the first case, the Court ruled
that religiously affiliated companies will no longer be required to protect
health coverage for birth control if they consider it to be morally wrong. “This
case is separate, and yet related in principle, to one several years ago”
concerning the Little Sisters of the Poor. This “order of Catholic nuns … cares
for sick elderly people.” “Founded in 19th century France by Saint
Jeanne Jugan,” it no longer must provide contraception coverage in its
employees’ health plan. “That case led the court to recognize a religious
exemption to the Affordable Care Act. In this case, the court expanded that
exemption.”
The Court recognized that Obamacare
conflicted with “the Constitution’s guarantee of free religious exercise.” This
includes churches, business owners, and individuals – many of whom “hold deep,
faith-informed beliefs.” If the government forced these people to provide
something that they did not believe to be good, it would violate “government
neutrality on religious believes” and inhibit “the free exercise of
convictions.”
The second “decision involved two
cases that focused on the ministerial exception that prohibits governments from
interfering in matters between churches and their ministers.” The Court ruled
that the government cannot require “a church to accept or retain an unwanted
minister, or [punish] a church for failing to do so” because this involves more
than a decision about employment. Justice Samuel Alito wrote, “Such action
interferes with the internal governance of the church, depriving the church of
control over the selection of those who will personify its beliefs.” The editorial
concluded with these paragraphs.
Significantly, this ruling offers an important
clarification to another recent ruling that protected gay and transgender
employees from workplace discrimination. Faith-based schools such as BYU, for
instance, will be less exposed to lawsuits over LGBTQ-related policies and
decisions.
Some are viewing these decisions as
weakening the principle of a separation of church and state. In fact, the
opposite is true. By increasing religious exemptions from government
requirements, the court has kept government from intruding on, and thus weakening,
the ability of religious people and churches to exercise their beliefs. It has
stopped government from effectively deciding which religious beliefs are
sanctioned and which are not.
That’s good news for faith-based people and
institutions, and for the U.S. Constitution.
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