Around the Web

Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:

  • The First Circuit heard oral arguments in St. Dominic Academy v Makin and Crosspoint Church v Makin. Both cases stem from the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision in Carson v. Makin and involve challenges to a Maine statute that provides that schools receiving state funds cannot discriminate based on religion, sexual orientation, or gender identity. Plaintiffs allege that the Maine law has the effect of excluding certain Christian schools from Maine’s tuition assistance program.
  • In a new complaint in Berkemeir v. Genesee County Museum, the plaintiff alleges that the Genesee Country Museum violated the Free Exercise and Free Speech Clauses when it fired her because of her belief that the Museum’s Diversity, Equity, Acceptance, and Inclusion program was inconsistent with her sincerely held beliefs.
  • Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill posted Guidance regarding a Louisiana law that requires the display of the Ten Commandments in each public school classroom. Released after a Louisiana Federal District court enjoined five parishes from implementing the new law, the Guidance now requires posting only if the displays themselves or funding for the displays are donated and imposes no punishment if a school does not display the Commandments.
  • In Garner v. Southern Baptist Convention, the Tennessee Court of Appeals at Knoxville held that a defamation suit brought by a Baptist pastor against the Southern Baptist Convention cannot be excluded from judicial consideration under the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine. The Court of Appeals held that the suit did not require the court to resolve any religious disputes or to rely on religious doctrine, but was focused almost entirely on the Baptist Convention’s purported publication of written and oral statements that Mr. Garner was “an individual with an alleged history of abuse.”
  • The Pew Research Center recently published a study of the religious affiliation of members of the 119th Congress. The article reports 86.7% of the members of the Senate and House combined are Christian, of which 55.5% are Protestant, 28.2% Catholic, 1.7% Latter Day Saints, 1.1% Orthodox Christians, and 0.2% Messianic Jewish. Six percent of Congress is Jewish. Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Unitarian Universalists, and Humanist adherents account for less than 1 %. The religious affiliation of 3.9% of Congress is unknown.