Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:
- A Virginia federal district court held that the Riverside Regional Jail Authority (along with its superintendent and the program chaplain) violated the Establishment Clause when they created the Christian-based Life Learning Program (known as the “God Pod”).
- A New York federal district court refused to grant a preliminary injunction to the Roman Catholic Diocese in its challenge to New York’s COVID-19 cluster action initiative that targets specific zip codes.
- Another lawsuit was filed in New York federal district court by three Hasidic Jewish congregations in Rockland County, New York challenging New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s action initiative targeting COVID-19 hot spots.
- An Indiana federal district court held that a former Catholic school guidance counselor who was fired because of her same-sex marriage may bring a discrimination claim under Title VII.
- A Colorado federal district court granted a preliminary injunction barring enforcement against two churches of portions of Colorado’s COVID-19 restrictions on worship services.
- A Tennessee federal district court struck down Tennessee’s requirement that women seeking an abortion must receive specified information in person and then wait 48 hours before undergoing the procedure.
analyses papal pronouncements in the context of the substantial and on-going social, political, and economic changes of the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries, as well the characters and preoccupations of individual pontiffs and the development of Christian theology. She breaks new ground in exploring the other side of the story – Jewish perceptions of both individual popes and the papacy as an institution – through analysis of a wide range of contemporary Hebrew and Latin documents. The author engages with the works of recent scholars in the field of Christian-Jewish relations to examine the social and legal status of Jewish communities in light of the papacy’s authorisation of crusading, prohibitions against money lending, and condemnation of the Talmud, as well as increasing charges of ritual murder and host desecration, the growth of both Christian and Jewish polemical literature, and the advent of the Mendicant Orders.