Sunday, April 12, 2026

Are National Leaders Engaging in Religion Differently Than in the Past?

On May 21, 2025, the Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, began offering the Secretary’s Christian Prayer & Worship Service to all Department of Defense (DoD) personnel. The Prayer Service is led by Hegseth, who sends out RSVP email invitations to all DoD personnel and encourages them to forward his invitation widely within their organizations. The monthly services are held in the Pentagon’s auditorium and are broadcast on internal DoD TV channels. The Prayer Service centers around Hegseth’s own religion, a denomination of Protestant Christianity, as demonstrated by the frequent references to an Almighty God and the consistent use of prayers in Jesus’ name. For example, on March 26, Hegseth led a prayer from the Book of Psalms amid the ongoing military operations in the Middle East, using the same prayer that had been given to troops before the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. In addition to his own remarks at the services, Hegseth has invited Doug Wilson, from the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC) to speak at the Prayer Service. Wilson’s prayers also invoke very specific references to Christianity. 

The First Amendment requires the government to remain neutral toward religion and not endorse or promote a particular religious denomination. Although the Prayer Service is voluntary, it raises the constitutional question of whether or not Hegseth is using his influence as Secretary of the DoD to promote religion in government. It also raises the question of government endorsement of a particular religion as the Prayer Service aligns more specifically with a subgroup of Protestant Christianity.

So far, legal action has been taken by the Americans United for Separation of Church and State which has filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia to obtain all the information regarding the details of the Prayer Service, including:


All records and communications (including but not limited to letters, memos, emails and attachments, calendar invitations and attachments, text messages, and other electronic messages and attachments on messaging platforms such as Signal, WhatsApp, Teams, Slack, WeChat) related to the Secretary’s prayer services held on May 21, 2025 and any other similar group prayer services held or to be held in the future at the Pentagon.


Americans United’s primary objective is to have the district court review the information requested above to determine whether or not the Prayer Service violates the Establishment Clause. The request under the FOIA was filed on December 19th, 2025. Since then, the DoD has ignored the request and the Americans United group has been clear that they are still waiting for the detailed information on the Prayer Service but are now also requesting further legal action be taken due to the DoD’s initial failed compliance. 


The Supreme Court has demonstrated its careful evaluation in cases dealing with public prayers. In Marsh v. Chambers (1983), it upheld the practice of a traditional legislative prayer before Nebraska legislative sessions. In Lee v. Weisman (1992), it struck down a prayer that was offered in the context of a public school graduation ceremony. The critical considerations in these cases are coercion and neutrality. For example, in public schools, a concern is that young and impressionable children will be coerced to participate in religious prayer. While one could argue the issue of coercion is less applicable to adult personnel in the DoD who are less impressionable than young children, it is worth noting Hegseth holds the highest ranking position in the Department and his military influence is superseded only by the President. Since Hegseth’s appointment at the start of 2025, he has dismissed over a dozen high ranking military officers and denied many promotions of highly qualified military officers. There is speculation that some of these dismissals are disproportionately gender and racial based with mostly no explanations for their removal. The authority Hegseth has established since taking office suggests that the requested information by Americans United may be relevant to determine if potential DoD personnel feel like they must attend these services out of fear that they will lose their jobs or not get promoted. 


On the issue of neutrality, the majority opinion in Town of Greece v. Galloway (2014) states that a prayer in legislative contexts can be constitutional while making specific references to a particular religion as long as it represents a longstanding tradition and history and there is no coercion or denigration of other faiths. In terms of the Prayer Service, Hegseth has attempted to unify people by invoking common Christian identity. Last month he said, “we share the same interests, and, because of this, we face an essential test – whether our nations will be and remain Western nations with distinct characteristics, Christian nations under God, proud of our shared heritage with strong borders and prosperous people, ruled not by violence and chaos but by law, order, and common sense.” While the Prayer Service remains voluntary, a potential concern is the lack of neutral language used by Hegseth, especially in a government and military context. Even though roughly seventy percent of the military are of the Christian faith, that still leaves a third that have a plurality of religious backgrounds that might not agree with Hegseth’s explicitly Christian language.


Without the complete details surrounding the Prayer Service, I can only speculate as to how the district court should rule if the information is obtained. If the information demonstrates that the meetings have been promoted within the DoD due to Hegseth's military influence, and that there has been no effort to move the services to a location off of government property, then I believe that the Prayer Service should be ruled unconstitutional. However, if the DoD continues to withhold information regarding the services, there might continue to be a constitutional gray area where the service raises serious concerns but lacks substantive information to make an official ruling. I believe the lack of religious neutrality and the intent to have United States foreign policy informed by Christian values conflicts with the constitutional boundaries designed to ensure the United States does not have an established religion. 




Saturday, April 11, 2026

National Religious Broadcasters v. Werfel


    National Religious Broadcasters v. Werfel is an attempt to challenge the Johnson Amendment. The Johnson Amendment prohibits nonprofit organizations, including churches, from endorsing or opposing any candidate running for public office. This is important because all nonprofit organizations receive tax breaks from the IRS, and with those tax breaks come certain restrictions. In August of 2024 the National Religious Broadcasters and Intercessors for America along with two Texas churches filed a lawsuit against the commissioner of the IRS, Danny Werfel. The plaintiffs claimed that their right to speak about political candidates and issues was being unconstitutionally censored. Other organizations have gone out of their way to try to bait the IRS into revoking their tax exempt status just to take them to court, but the IRS has been avoiding this issue.

    This case involves both free exercise and establishment clause issues. The churches are claiming that they are unable to freely speak about politics and political candidates. Meanwhile, the IRS and the government are trying to avoid an establishment of religion through tax breaks to churches that endorse politicians. These organizations receive various financial benefits for maintaining their nonprofit status and following restrictions like the one being debated here. Nonprofit organizations pay 0% federal income tax on revenue, their donors get tax breaks and they receive various other state, local, and property tax breaks. This raises the question, is it unconstitutional to make tax exempt status for religious organizations conditional upon political speech censorship?

    The case of Bob Jones University v. United States provides some legal guidelines for how to handle tax exempt organizations and religion. Bob Jones University enrolls students from kindergarten through graduate school and is dedicated to the teaching and propagation of Christian beliefs. The university operated under the following rules, no interracial dating, students who did so were expelled, members of groups that are affiliated with an organization that advocates for interracial marriage are expelled and students who promote or encourage it are expelled. In 1976 the IRS revoked the university’s tax exempt status. The Supreme Court ruled that the government’s state interest in racial equality is more compelling than the private institution’s tax exempt status.

    The Texas churches would argue that the ruling in Bob Jones does not apply to them. Bob Jones deals with racial discrimination, which is illegal, while National Religious Broadcasters is about their first amendment right. Therefore, they should not be penalized for exercising their first amendment right. Meanwhile, the plaintiffs would argue that similar to how anti-racial discrimination adds to the public interest, so does maintaining a division of the church and state through keeping tax deducted money out of political campaign promotion.

    The implications of a decision in this case make it all the more complex. If the courts were to uphold the amendment, the IRS would be forced to begin to enforce this law and monitor religious organizations. Monitoring creates an entirely new set of issues as it could possibly involve an excessive entanglement between the church and state. Lemon v Kurtzman established that a statute that creates excessive entanglement is unconstitutional. Therefore, one can see how the Johnson Amendment could be deemed unconstitutional because it forces the IRS to monitor religious sermons. However, removal of the amendment altogether would mean that taxpayers are indirectly funding political campaigns. The IRS has only revoked tax exempt status for one church in the 70 year history of the Johnson amendment. Therefore, it is clear that they have been trying to avoid enforcing this law due to its complexity.

    Given these outcomes, I believe that the Johnson Amendment is constitutional and should be upheld. The IRS therefore should enforce this law more accurately and actively than they have in the past. Not upholding the law would create an issue of “dark money”, in which donors of churches are not aware of where their funds are going. There will be increased involvement between the IRS and churches, but this does not necessarily need to be excessive. An alternative that creates less entanglement can be created. The IRS can rely more on reports from church patrons and outsiders and then investigate as needed. Essentially, the cost of some entanglement and more censorship is lower than the cost of tax payers indirectly funding political campaigns.

Apache Stronghold v. United States

    In Apache Stronghold v. United States (“United States”), Congress authorized a sale of “Oak Flat” in 2014. The sale transfers Oak Flat to mining companies, which would allow them to destroy the federal land for the purpose of extracting the valuable copper underneath. However, as Oak Flat is federal land, the federal law of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (“RFRA”) applies.

    Additionally, the government protects federal land under federal law like RFRA. As Oak Flat was central to the Western Apache’s religious practices, the nonprofit organization “Apache Stronghold” (“Stronghold”) challenged the sale by invoking RFRA. RFRA prevents the federal government from “substantially burdening a person’s exercise of religion”. Thus, Stronghold argues RFRA prohibits government authorization for companies to destroy Oakland Flat, as it would be a (beyond) substantial burden against the free exercise rights of the Western Apache.

Would desecrating sacred indigenous land actually violate the Free Exercise Clause?

    The Ninth Circuit acknowledged that the destruction of Oak Flat would prevent the Western Apache from ever “engaging in religious exercise” again (Gorsuch, 2025). However, the Ninth Circuit still rejected Stronghold’s RFRA-argument that this was unconstitutional by invoking “Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association” (1988) (“Lyng”) to apply its precedent, as facts of Lyng and facts of United States are similar. In Lyng, the United States Forest Services planned road construction through federal land, which was religiously “indispensable” (O’Connor, 1988) to Native American Tribes, which is relevant as the road construction would “virtually destroy” the Tribes’ ability to practice their religion. Lyng precedent proclaims the First Amendment does not prohibit “government programs” simply because of their “incidental effects” on religion. This means that the government’s role as a landowner permits its programs, so long as they do not “coerce” people into acting “contrary” to their religious beliefs, to be constitutionally allowed to incidentally hamper religious exercise.

    The facts of Lyng mirror those within United States, as both cases are about corporate use of federal land that would destroy Native Americans’ practice of religion. As such, I understand how the precedent of Lyng could reasonably be applied to the facts of United States. However, I believe that the actual precedent of Lyng is wrong.

    Lyng precedent differentiates free “exercise” and religious “beliefs”. Lyng wrongfully increases government capacity to encroach peoples’ religious actions and practices simply by saying that the “beliefs” are still intact by not coercing people to forgo their faith. However, this nuance between “beliefs” and “actions” is wrong because, so long as the government does not compel one’s internal thoughts and beliefs to change, the government programs are supposedly constitutional. Lyng precedent on its own facts tries to justify the construction of a road offending Native Tribes by saying the indigenous people still believe in their religion. Similarly, Lyng precedent on United States facts tries justifying conglomerates’ destruction against sacred grounds as constitutionally allowed so long as Western Apache still hold their religious beliefs. But the beliefs that make these government actions offensive are also fundamentally changed, as the desecration of sacred lands renders Natives with a new belief from the government’s actions, as the “portal” of Oak Flat is severed Apache connection to “the Creator” (Gorsuch, 2025). Therefore, the argument of “incidental effects” being constitutoinal is wrong because materially changing sacred lands directly changes beliefs. Extreme harm towards indigenous religions in Lyng and United States are far beyond “incidental” effects.

    Lyng precedent is absurd because its wording diminishes the absurdly grandiose suffering of desicrating sacred indigenous lands. I argue to replace Lyng precedent with Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) (“Yoder”) precedent.

    Yoder facts apply to United States facts because both explore the religious right to exist by imparting their faith to their kin. In Yoder, the government mandated compulsory public school for the Amish. However, the Amish have a 300 year religious tradition to limit their exposure to the outside world and its ideas. Compulsory public school would jeopardize the Amish religion, so Yoder established the government can only constitutionally achieve their goals by narrowly tailoring their methods. Yoder relates to United States because desecrating sacred indigenous lands could jeopardize an Apache girl’s rite of passage to become an Apache adult. Apache induction into womanhood “depends on Oak Flat” (Gorsuch, 2025), where girls supposedly receive blessings from “holy spirits” that dwell in the ground (Gorsuch, 2025). However, authorizing copper mining could make a “1,000” foot deep crater, destroying both the practice and belief. I argue that Yoder constitutionally protects Oak Flat.

Sources:

https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/485/439/

https://fedsoc.org/commentary/fedsoc-blog/supreme-court-denial-of-cert-in-apache-stronghold-substantial-burden-analysis-remains-confused

https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24pdf/24-291_5i26.pdf

Friday, April 10, 2026

Hunter v. State of California (2026)

In the State of California, marriage is treated as a civil institution over which the state legislature has full authority. It requires a license issued by a county clerk in order to be recognized, and once it is recognized, it can only be dissolved through a state court judgment, the death of a spouse, or a declaration of nullity. For many people, marriage has been interconnected with religious traditions over the course of centuries, which can create tension as it is also interconnected with law. In the case of Hunter v. State of California (2026), this becomes clear from Kathryn Rose Hunter, who entered into multiple state-recognized marriages before later arguing that the state should have no role in marriages at all. She challenged the state of California’s “authority to impose and maintain marital status" and "maintenance of marital records,” by claiming that this violates her First Amendment rights. Hunter based this claim on her deeply held religious belief that marriage should only involve “two persons and God.” She argued that by requiring the issue of marriage licences from the state and by authorizing the marriage, that the state is therefore participating in the marriage, which Hunter claims is the equivalent of polygamy. This violates her right to freely exercise her religious beliefs. 

Additionally, in Hunter’s view, the state inserting itself as a third party into a relationship creates excessive entanglement between religion and the government, as she has a “state imposed marital status” and can not proceed with a divorce without state involvement. She views marriage as religious, meaning that further involvement with legal procedures establishes this entanglement and violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. 

In the federal district court, they reviewed this case and dismissed it. In general, the state of  California is immune from lawsuits under the 11th Amendment. In regard to the Free Exercise Clause, the court emphasized that individuals have the right to believe in their religious virtues, but not the absolute right to action based on these views. They said that in order to make a claim under the Free Exercise Clause, a plaintiff has to show that the government action has "substantially burdened” their religious practice and the government action is not justified by a "substantial state interest,” if a law is not “neutral and generally applicable.” In this case, the court found that California's marriage laws are neutral and generally applicable because they do not refer to religion or provide individual exemptions. Even if the law was not neutral, the court still found there to be several substantial state interests, including protecting children, enforcing marital responsibilities, managing property, etc. Therefore, the court concluded that California's legal framework does not violate the Free Exercise Clause.

The district court also rejected Hunter’s claim that the Establishment Clause was violated. They noted that the Lemon Test was used in older cases to determine Establishment cases, but now it is no longer relied upon. Instead, the modern court focuses on historical practices and how the Founding Fathers would interpret what is permissible. The court cited Maynard v. Hill, 125 U.S. 190, 211 (1888), where the Supreme Court said that marriage is a civil institution that the state has the power to regulate, not just a religious or private contract. In using Maynard v. Hill, the court shows how this is a national tradition that has been around for multiple centuries. State involvement in marriages was permissible in the time of the Founding Fathers, meaning that California does not violate the Establishment Clause. 

The central question in this case is whether California’s involvement in recognizing and regulating marriage violates the Free Exercise Clause and Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. More specifically, the issue is whether a neutral legal system can be considered unconstitutional because it conflicts with individual religious beliefs about marriage. In my opinion, the district court reached the correct decision. California's marriage laws serve as a neutral civil system, not a religious one. Even though marriage is deeply religious to many people, the state still has a compelling interest and secular purpose of maintaining the legal framework in order to regulate issues such as property and family responsibilities. Additionally, there could be a slippery slope if the government were required to remove itself from any institution that has religious significance. Society would not be able to be regulated, and there would be a challenge in determining what counts as significant to a person's religious beliefs. While the Constitution does protect religious belief, it does not require the government to restrict neutral laws to align with every individual's religious views. I do not think the court should rely solely on the intentions of the Founders when determining whether this case violates the Establishment Clause. However, even if the court applied the Lemon test as Hunter was implying, California’s marriage laws would still pass and be considered constitutional. 


https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/28021311-hunter-v-california-2026-us-dist-lexis-73135pdf/

https://religionclause.blogspot.com/2026/04/californias-marriage-laws-survive.html 


Facially Discriminatory Policy Against LGBTQ+ or Religious Ministerial Exemption?

Aubrey McMahon v. World Vision Inc. 

In 2020, Aubrey McMahon applied for an administrative position with World Vision Inc., a Christian-based nonprofit organization that provides humanitarian services to fight hunger and poverty. After further interviews for the Customer Service Representative position at World Vision Inc., McMahon was denied employment due to a conflict with World Vision's Standard of Conduct policy. McMahon, a female, is married to another woman. After finding this information out, World Vision let McMahon know that they could not go further with the employment because she had violated the SOC policy stating that World Vision does not tolerate “sexual conduct outside the Biblical covenant of marriage between a man and a woman.” McMahon then sued World Vision Inc. under unlawful discrimination due to the basis of sex, sexual orientation, and marital status in violation of Title VII and the Washington Law Against Discrimination. In 2023, the District Court of Washington ruled in favor of McMahon on the ground that World Vision's policy was facially discriminatory, denying World Vision's claim of a ministerial exemption. Ministerial exception applies to individuals who perform “vital religious duties” that are “essential to the institution’s central religious mission.” Following the district court's ruling, World Vision Inc. appealed to the Ninth Circuit under the question of whether their biblical marriage standard of conduct policy facially discriminates against sex, sexual orientation, marital status under Title VII, and the WLAD, or can World Vision establish an exemption by concluding that the CSR (customer service representative) position qualifies for the ministerial exemption.

Determining ministerial exemption in this case required the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to refer to prior cases such as Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Church and School v. EEOC, Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru, and Behrend v. S.F. Zen Center. In 2011, the Supreme Court set a precedent for ministerial exemptions in the case of a school teacher who also served as a minister at the School and Church, and was fired. The Supreme Court decided these 4 components need to be considered,  “(1) the employee’s formal title; (2) the “substance reflected in that title,” such as “a significant degree of religious training followed by a formal process of commissioning”; (3) the employee’s use of that title; and (4) whether the employee performed important religious functions.” However, they also argued that these components should not be used as a checklist to be weighed together, but instead to guide the court in its consideration of such cases. These guiding principles were also used in determining a ministerial exemption in Our Lady of Guadalupe, where the Supreme Court decided that what matters most in terms of granting ministerial exemption is what matters at the very bottom, and what an employee does, and whether they perform “vital religious duties.” After this notion was created in the Supreme Court, in the case of Behrend, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals claimed that “the ministerial exception applied to Behrend because, although he performed mostly menial work, that work was itself 'an essential component of Zen training.” In all three cases, the main exception concerned the notion of vitality in the positions and religious duties. Each institution was granted an exemption because the position in question had vital religious responsibilities and therefore the religious entity was able to be selective even if it was presumed to be discriminatory.

Based on these precedent cases. The Ninth Circuit of Appeals in the case World Vision Inc. v. McMahon granted a ministerial exemption to World Vision, in disagreement with the district court's opinion. World Vision’s mission statement describes the non-profit's purpose as to “follow the lord and Savior Jesus Christ in working with the poor… and bear witness to the good news of the Kingdom of God.” Not only does their mission statement show how deeply religious and devoted this organization is, but it also describes the CSR employment position as a vital role in its mission. The CSR position reaches out to donors and solicits donations, viewing World Vision as a ministry. As employees in CSR, not only do they collect donations but also participate and even are expected to lead worship and teach potential donors about World Vision's mission, as well as the witness of Jesus Christ. For these reasons, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals viewed the employment responsibilities of a Customer Service representative as requiring the performance of vital religious duties at the heart of World Vision's religiously rooted mission.

I agree with the Ninth Circuit's ruling. In my opinion, World Vision Inc. should be granted ministerial exemption because of its deeply rooted Christian belief system, which not only informs its mission statement but also permeates its employees. In the eyes of Biblical standards, any sexual conduct should only be between a man and a woman. Therefore, to accommodate an employee such as Aubrey McMahon would be asking World Vision to completely disregard their devout religious beliefs about marriage that are reiterated in every connection with donors for their nonprofit when reciting their mission and their savior, Jesus Christ. In understanding precedents such as Hosanna, Our Lady of Guadalupe, and Behrend, I resonate with the idea of vitality in performing religious duties. The employees of World Vision are not only employees but also ministers of the foundation, and they perform employee-wide prayer and worship. Forcing World Vision to hire employees who go against all foundational beliefs about marital status and sexual orientation according to the Bible would be unconstitutional and go against their First Amendment Rights according to the Free Exercise Clause, and is therefore why they were and should be granted a ministerial exemption.

References:

https://www.oyez.org/cases/2019/19-267

https://www.oyez.org/cases/2011/10-553

https://www.aclu.org/cases/aubry-mcmahon-v-world-vision-inc

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2025/08/05/24-3259.pdf

https://firstliberty.org/news/federal-appeals-court-protects-freedom-of-religious-groups-in-hiring/

https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2024/07/17/23-15399.pdf?lctg=123645130

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

U.S v. Safehouse: Fighting for Harm Reduction in the Opioid Epidemic


In Philadelphia, a nonprofit group named Safehouse is involved in an ongoing legal and constitutional controversy reflecting a key intersection between public health and religious freedom. Safehouse seeks to implement a supervised injection site—a location where individuals can use drugs under medical supervision to minimize the risk of overdose and help stop the spread of disease. Safehouse describes its outreach and programs as participation in religious exercise, as its mission is grounded in the Judeo-Christian foundational belief to preserve life and care for the sick. On the other hand, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has long opposed these types of organizations, claiming that the Controlled Substances Act makes it illegal to assist or facilitate an unlawful act of drug use. This disagreement has resulted in the current case to be heard at the Circuit Court for the Third Circuit, U.S. v. Safehouse (3rd Cir. Case No. 24-2027), which addresses many unresolved aspects of the First Amendment, specifically the Free Exercise Clause, and its application to not-for-profit organizations’ exercise of religious freedom.


This case has many layers and historical context. Safehouse was created by a Reformed Protestant couple who operate a community center in Philadelphia that provides shelter and recovery assistance for people suffering from abusive or compulsive behavior. They argue that their activities are essential to their religious beliefs, including maintaining relationships with those suffering from addiction or violence. Safehouse first announced it would open its service site in 2019 during the Trump presidency, hoping to become the first supervised injection facility in the U.S. The non-profit stated that its operation is based on moral and religious reasons that aim to reduce harm and protect lives, as well as an example of long-standing religious commitments to protect people who are at risk. The DOJ sued to stop Safehouse from opening based on arguments that Safehouse’s actions would violate federal law. The federal district judge first ruled against the DOJ but was then overruled by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, which stated that local innovations addressing the opioid epidemic could not be contrary to federal drug law. Most recently, the Third Circuit Court has revisited this case and officially found that Safehouse is entitled to argue that it is covered by religious protections based on precedent created in the Burwell v. Hobby Lobby case. The case has since been sent back to the district court to review Safehouse’s claims, and holds likelihood to rise to the Supreme Court.


The legal concerns central to this matter include the First Amendment's Free Exercise Clause and the Establishment Clause. Safehouse will argue that it doesn’t have to have begun with the intent to establish a religious organization in order to be eligible for the First Amendment protections against federal interference, but must also demonstrate that operating the supervised injection site is an exercise of faith.The DOJ's rationale will therefore rely on asserting supremacy of secular legal tradition and of its ability to enforce federal criminal law upon the states without respect for a state's efforts to offer safe drug-harm-reduction services.


This case raises significant questions about definitions of religious expression in modern day society. If the courts rule in favor of Safehouse, it would mean that religious involvement could exist outside of predetermined methods of worship and can additionally include social or medical ways that are inspired by religion. This interpretation would be consistent with recent examples of Supreme Court rulings around corporate religion rights such as was seen in the Hobby Lobby case. However, it would also raise tensions with the rule that no one group may violate laws that are criminally prosecuted simply by using religion as a sort of loophole. Although the establishment clause does not apply in as many ways, it also influences how this discussion is formed, as any acknowledgment that Safehouse’s implementation is religious must avoid creating any appearance that the government is advancing a religious agenda.


I believe that the courts should rule in favor of Safehouse, as public health crises such as the opioid epidemic require innovative approaches to be resolved. Additionally, I think that a religiously driven response can absolutely serve as an exercise of faith if the group truly believes that it is doing so for reasons of morality. Courts have dealt with similar disputes throughout history (e.g., Employment Division v. Smith where the U.S. Supreme Court limited free exercise claims when individuals were affected by generally applicable statutes, and Burwell v. Hobby Lobby where the Court increased the protections for corporations exercising religion). Safehouse’s circumstances challenge prior precedent by asking the courts to balance the competing interests of the government to stop people from using drugs illegally and provide for a religiously motivated alternative form of expression through unconventional means. The Court's ultimate decision may determine how closely faith-based activities must be regulated to minimize the impact on people's liberty and the Government's responsibility to protect public safety and well-being.


Sources:

https://filtermag.org/safehouse-philadelphia-religious-freedom/ 

https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/religious-freedom-laws-apply-drug-injection-site-case-court-says-2025-07-24/



Saturday, April 4, 2026

Wilberforce Academy of Knoxville v. Knox County Board of Education: Does Knox County Board of Education violate the First Amendment by denying a Christian school charter status?

 In November of 2025, the case Wilberforce Academy of Knoxville v. Knox County Board of Education was filed. Wilberforce Academy, a Christian school in Knoxville, Tennessee, sued the County Board of Education for denying the school charter status. Tennessee law, specifically statutes governing public schools, prohibits private, religious, or church-affiliated schools from becoming public charter schools because they are public entities that must remain non-religious and open to all students. The school claims the Board of Education violated the Free Exercise Clause by denying charter status based on religious reasons. Wilberforce Academy openly claimed to provide an explicitly biblical and Christian education. Part of the school's argument is that the state should allow religious groups to run public charter schools because Tennessee allows religious schools to receive taxpayer-funded vouchers through the state's Education Freedom Scholarship program. The Education Freedom Scholarships allow students who are residents of Tennessee and entitled to attend a public school in grades K-12 to use state funds toward education expenses, while enrolled in grades K-12 at registered Category I, II, or III non-public schools located in Tennessee, prioritizing tuition and fees. The majority of private schools receiving voucher funds have religious affiliations. The school submitted a letter of intent to operate a kindergarten through 8th-grade charter school by the 2027-2028 school year, but the Board denied. Wilberforce Academy filed a lawsuit following the rejection. This case is ongoing and has not yet been tried. 

Furthermore, on January 30th, United States District Judge Charles Atchley Jr. allowed a group of religious leaders, parents, and community members to support the Knox County School Board. The Tennessee taxpayers, known as the intervenors, are seeking to join the lawsuit on the side of the Knox County Board of Education and its members. They oppose the school’s proposed use of public funds to aid Wilberforce Academy as a religious public charter school. Dedicated to supporting public education and the separation of Church and State, they filed a motion to intervene in a federal lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a religious public charter school being opened in Knoxville, Tennessee. The proposed parties refuse to allow their tax dollars to fund a religious public charter school that will indoctrinate students into one religion. They believe this would violate Tennessee and federal laws, and the First Amendment's Establishment Clause, which prohibits the government from establishing a religion or inordinately favoring one. The “wall of separation” between Church and State protects both religious freedom and government neutrality, ensuring equity for all religions across the United States. The intervenors simply want to ensure that public schools remain secular and available to all students and families seeking education. 

Here is some perspective from two Tennessee taxpayers who side with the defendants. “Public Education is part of the common good. A religious charter school would be at odds with the need to ensure public schools remain appropriate for and welcoming to students of all faiths, families, and backgrounds. And it would divert already limited public funds and scarce resources away from other public schools in Knox County. We can't let this happen,” said Amanda Collins, a retired school psychologist and parent of Knox County. Reverend Dr. Richard Coble, a pastor at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Knoxville and the parent of two Knox County public school students, also says, “The reformed tradition in which I am formed has long supported the separation of Church and State, believing that our faith, and all faiths, are best supported when they are free of undue state interference. This is why I object to the use of tax dollars to support religious education of any kind, including my own religion. Religious education is the job of churches, denominations, and private religious schools.”

We have seen plenty of Free Exercise cases like West Side Community School v. Mergens (1990) and Rosenberger v. University of Virginia (1995). We have also seen Establishment Cases like Epperson v. Arkansas (1968) and Stone v. Graham (1980). Stone v. Graham established that the Kentucky statute requiring the posting of a copy of the Ten Commandments on a public school classroom wall was unconstitutional due to non-secular purposes. Epperson v. Arkansas established that the Arkansas Legislature's law prohibiting teachers in public or state-supported schools from teaching, or using textbooks that teach human evolution, is also unconstitutional. The law had been based solely on the beliefs of fundamentalist Christians, who felt that evolutionary theories directly contradicted the biblical account of creation. These two cases establish the need for separation between Church and State to protect the Establishment Clause under the First Amendment. The Knox County Board of Education is responsible for eliminating any government entanglement or advancement of a non-secular organization; therefore, they are defending the Establishment Clause, not violating the Free Exercise Clause.  

In my opinion, the Wilberforce Academy of Knoxville should not receive charter school status as a religious-based school. The Academy wants to teach Christian ideals like a private, religious institution while receiving the benefits of a common charter school funded by public dollars. This would be unfair to both taxpayers, who could potentially be supporting ideals they don't align with, and secular schools that need tax dollars to operate. The issue is that Tennessee has already provided private, religious schools with financial aid, so there is too much room for uncertainty. But in cases like Epperson v. Arkansas and Stone v. Graham, the court denied government support for non-secular teaching. Therefore, I agree with the defendants in this case. Keep in mind that this case has not yet gone to trial, and the ultimate question is whether or not the school board's refusal to authorize a religious charter school violates the Free Exercise Clause. I say no because the Board of Education is not preventing Wilberforce from exercising religion, but is protecting the Establishment Clause.  


Sources:


https://www.splcenter.org/resources/civil-rights-case-docket/wilberforce-v-knox-county-board-education/ 

https://www.knoxnews.com/story/news/education/2026/02/02/taxpayers-can-intervene-in-religious-groups-lawsuit-against-kcs/88436591007/ 


https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/449/39/ 


https://www.oyez.org/cases/1968/7 


https://www.tn.gov/education/efs.html 


Friday, April 3, 2026

Prayer in the Courtroom: Can Judges Lead Religious Expression?

         In recent years, disputes over religion in public life have extended beyond schools and legislative settings into new and more complex areas. One such controversy is presented in Freedom From Religion Foundation v. Mack, a case involving a Texas judge who incorporated prayer into his courtroom proceedings. Before hearings began, Judge Wayne Mack would invite those present (litigants, defendants, attorneys, and observers) to stand for a voluntary prayer, sometimes led by himself or by a chaplain. Although participation was not formally required, the practice took place within the formal structure of judicial proceedings. The Freedom From Religion Foundation challenged this practice, arguing that it violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. While lower courts have grappled with the issue, the Supreme Court has not yet issued a definitive ruling, leaving the constitutional question unresolved.

The Supreme Court and the Prodigal Spirit: How Christians Should Pray for  the Court — Destiny Image

The controversy raises a familiar but difficult issue: whether a government official may incorporate religious expression into an official proceeding without crossing the line into unconstitutional endorsement. Judge Mack and his supporters defend the practice as voluntary and consistent with longstanding traditions of public prayer in American government. They argue that such expressions reflect the historical role of religion in public life and do not compel participation. The plaintiffs, however, contend that the courtroom context fundamentally alters the constitutional analysis. Unlike legislative settings, where individuals may observe or leave freely, those in a courtroom are subject to judicial authority and may feel pressure to conform. In their view, prayer in this setting carries an implicit coercive force that violates the Establishment Clause.

The most relevant precedents are Marsh v. Chambers and Town of Greece v. Galloway, both of which upheld the constitutionality of legislative prayer. In Marsh, the Supreme Court emphasized the historical tradition of opening legislative sessions with prayer, concluding that such practices were deeply embedded in the nation’s political history. Similarly, in Town of Greece, the Court upheld sectarian prayers at town meetings, reasoning that they were permissible so long as they did not coerce participation or discriminate among faiths. These decisions suggest that government-affiliated prayer is not inherently unconstitutional and may be permissible when rooted in tradition and conducted in a non-coercive manner.

However, the courtroom setting presents a critical distinction. In both Marsh and Town of Greece, the Court relied heavily on the voluntary nature of attendance and participation. Legislative sessions and town meetings are, at least in principle, forums that individuals may choose to attend or avoid. A courtroom, by contrast, is a mandatory environment for many participants. Defendants, litigants, and witnesses are often required to be present and cannot easily opt out of proceedings. This difference raises serious concerns about coercion. Even if prayer is formally optional, the authority of the judge, who controls outcomes and exercises significant power, may create pressure to participate. The presence of that authority complicates the assumption that such prayer is genuinely voluntary.

New Courtrooms

This distinction also highlights a broader issue within Establishment Clause doctrine: the role of context in determining whether a government practice constitutes endorsement of religion. The Supreme Court’s more recent decisions have placed increasing emphasis on historical practices and traditions. Yet tradition alone may not resolve cases where the surrounding circumstances differ in meaningful ways. The courtroom is not just another public forum; it is a site of adjudication, where individuals’ rights, obligations, and liberties are directly at stake. The power dynamics in that setting amplify the potential for perceived or actual coercion.

In my view, Freedom From Religion Foundation v. Mack demonstrates the limits of extending legislative prayer precedents into fundamentally different contexts. While Marsh and Town of Greece support the idea that some forms of government-associated prayer are constitutionally permissible, they do not fully account for the coercive pressures that may arise in a courtroom. The Establishment Clause is not only concerned with explicit compulsion but also with subtle forms of pressure and the appearance of governmental endorsement. When a judge invites or leads prayer as part of official proceedings, it risks signaling that participation is expected or favored, even if not formally required.

In my view, Judge Mack’s practice is unconstitutional. Although some lower courts have been more receptive to extending legislative prayer precedents, I agree with the reasoning advanced by the plaintiffs that the courtroom context introduces a level of coercion that those precedents did not contemplate. Marsh and Town of Greece cannot simply be transplanted into the judicial setting without accounting for the fundamentally different role of a judge. The Establishment Clause is designed to prevent the government from placing its authority behind religious practice, and when a judge invites or leads prayer as part of official proceedings, that authority is unmistakably present. Ultimately, this case highlights the importance of context in interpreting the First Amendment. The line between permissible acknowledgment of religion and unconstitutional endorsement is not always clear, but it becomes sharper in environments where power and vulnerability intersect. Extending legislative prayer practices into that space risks undermining the principle of governmental neutrality that the Establishment Clause is meant to protect.

https://www.oyez.org/cases/2013/12-696

https://www.oyez.org/cases/1982/82-23

https://harvardlawreview.org/print/vol-135/freedom-from-religion-foundation-inc-v-mack/

https://www.au.org/how-we-protect-religious-freedom/legal-cases/cases/freedom-from-religion-foundation-v-mack/