In recent years, conflicts between religious liberty and anti-discrimination laws have increasingly appeared in American courts. One case that showcases this tension involves Chelsey Nelson, a wedding photographer in Louisville, Kentucky. Nelson’s story raises an important constitutional question about the limits of the government’s power to regulate businesses when those businesses are connected to religious beliefs and expression.
Chelsey Nelson runs a small photography business where she primarily photographs weddings. As a Christian, Nelson believes that marriage is a sacred covenant between one man and one woman. Because of this belief, she wanted to operate her business in a way that reflects her faith. She was willing to work with people from many different backgrounds, but she did not want to photograph same-sex wedding ceremonies because she felt that doing so would communicate approval of a view of marriage that contradicts her religious convictions.
The conflict arose because the city of Louisville has a local law known as the Fairness Ordinance. This law prohibits businesses that are considered public accommodations from denying services on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. The ordinance also prevents businesses from publishing statements indicating that they would decline services for those reasons. In other words, Nelson believed that if she publicly explained her religious position on marriage or declined to photograph a same-sex wedding, the city could investigate or penalize her.
Because of her concerns, Nelson filed a lawsuit challenging the ordinance before any punishment had occurred. She argued that the law violated her First Amendment rights, particularly the free exercise of religion and freedom of speech. According to Nelson, the city’s policy would force her either to create artistic expression that conflicts with her religious beliefs or to remain silent about those beliefs altogether.
This situation raises several constitutional questions about the meaning and limits of the Free Exercise Clause. The Supreme Court has struggled with how to interpret this clause when religious beliefs conflict with generally applicable laws. One important case is Sherbert v. Verner, where the Court ruled that the government cannot burden religious practice without a compelling reason. In that case, the Court sided with a Seventh-day Adventist woman who was denied unemployment benefits because she refused to work on Saturday, which was her Sabbath. The Court concluded that forcing her to choose between her religious practice and government benefits placed an unconstitutional burden on her faith.
However, the Court later narrowed this approach in Employment Division v. Smith. In that case, two individuals were denied unemployment benefits after they were fired for using peyote during a Native American religious ceremony. The Court ruled that neutral and generally applicable laws can be enforced even if they incidentally burden religious practices. Allowing religious exemptions from every law would make it difficult for governments to function effectively and create a slippery slope.
These precedents show that the meaning of the Free Exercise Clause depends heavily on whether a law is neutral, generally applicable, or specifically burdens religious practice. Nelson’s case falls into this complicated area of constitutional law. The city argues that the ordinance is neutral and applies to all businesses equally. Nelson argues that applying it to her artistic work would force her to act against her faith in a way that burdens her religious exercise.
In my view, Nelson has the stronger constitutional argument. While anti-discrimination laws serve an important purpose in ensuring equal access to public services, the Constitution still requires the government to respect sincere religious convictions. For Nelson, photography is not a regular commercial service. She uses wedding photography as a form of artistic expression that communicates meaning about an important event. Forcing her to participate in a ceremony that directly contradicts her beliefs places a significant burden on her religious exercise.
Allowing the government to force individuals to act against their faith in expressive professions could end up weakening the protections guaranteed by the First Amendment. Religious liberty is meant to protect individuals not only in private worship but also in how they live out their beliefs in everyday life. If people must abandon their religious convictions in order to participate in public commerce, then the promise of free exercise starts to dissipate.
For these reasons, I believe the Constitution should protect Nelson’s ability to operate her business according to her religious beliefs. Protecting religious freedom in cases like this does not mean eliminating anti-discrimination laws altogether. Instead, it means recognizing that in a pluralistic society, the law must allow space for individuals with different moral and religious convictions to coexist while still participating in public life.
https://adflegal.org/article/chelsey-nelson-story/
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/374/398/
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/494/872/

