Archive for the ‘Church & State’ Category

Free. Free. No, not yet free.

Wednesday, July 4th, 2012

On this day, we celebrate our 236th anniversary of our independence and the dream of freedom in America. That dream is yet to be realized by millions of Americans.

Discrimination of all stripes, including the lack of marriage equality in most states. Sex trade. And the horrendous effects of money on political power, particularly post Citizens United.

Today, tho, I want to put the spotlight on the lack religious freedom due to government sponsorship of religion. The emphasis here is on federal sponsorships, altho state sponsorships are equally egregious.

The guiding principle is that government has no role to play in the religious sphere – neither to advance or be hostile towards religion. In America, we have both freedom from (government sponsored) religion and freedom of religion. The former is guaranteed by the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, the latter is guaranteed by the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.

We owe much to the name sakes of the JM Center – Presidents Thomas Jefferson (1801- 1809) and James Madison (1808 – 1817) – two of our Founding Fathers who were most instrumental in laying the foundation for religious freedom in America. Jefferson authored the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom and Madison proposed the Bill of Rights and sheparded its passage. To them, separation of religion and government were critical components of freedom in the new nation.

The road to religious freedom has been rocky from the very beginning when the first European settlers landed at Jamestown, Virginia in 1607. Space does not permit this blog to recant history in detail. Instead, I offer the following continuing major violations of religious liberty by the federal government:

  • Congressional paid chaplains. (1789)
  •  National Day of Prayer. (1952) (36 U.S.C. § 119)
  • “under God” added to the Pledge of Allegiance. (1954) (4 U.S.C. § 4)
  • “In God We Trust” adopted as national motto. (1956) (36 U.S.C. § 302)
  • “In God We Trust” added to paper currency. (1957)
  • The Supreme Court opening each session with the prayer: “Oyez! Oyez! Oyez! … God save the United States and this Honorable Court.”
  • The Chief Justice adding “So help me God” to the presidential oath prescribed by the Constitution and the invocation and benediction in presidential inaugural ceremonies. (Note: I served as co-counsel in Newdow v. Roberts, No. 10-757 (cert. denied May 16, 2011) challenging these practices).
  • Cross atop Mount Soledad near San Diego, California. (See Mount Soledad Memorial Association v. Trunk, Nos. 11-998 and 11-1115 (cert. denied June 25, 2012).
  • Presidential Thanksgiving Day proclamations.
  • Military bands playing “God Bless America.”
  • The housing allowance exemption granted to “ministers of the gospel.” (IRC § 107)
  • Government “economic development” and other grants to religious organizations.
  • President Obama’s White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships (and previously President Bush’s Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives).
  • Politicians/elected officials ending speeches with “God bless America.” (While hideous practice does not violate of the Constitution, the pandering to Christians violates the spirit of the First Amendment.)

I leave for another day a detailed discussion of the serious harms these practices inflict on our liberties and system of governance and would merely note that the quotes from the 9th Circuit in my blog Supreme Court KO’s the Mt. Soledad Cross of earlier today briefly discusses the nature of the violations and harms.

Just as then Senator John F. Kennedy said in his famous 1960 Houston speech: “I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute” – I too look to the day government absents itself from religion and the dream of freedom of religion in America is realized. THEN let us light the fireworks.

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Landmark Prayer Case Celebrates 50th Anniversary

Friday, June 29th, 2012

50 years ago this week, the Supreme Court handed down its landmark school prayer case in Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962).  The Court held that the New York state-composed prayer being recited in public schools violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.  Engel and Abington School District v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203 (1963), banning Bible readings in public schools, ignited a religious war between the Christian Right and secularists. The war is still smoldering — with the Christian Right fighting to maintain governmental preference of Christian and secularists seeking religious freedom, that is, governmental neutrality with respect to religion (better still complete separation of church and state).

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Bill of Rights Day

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

On this day in history 220 years ago — December 15, 1791 — Virginia became the 11th state to ratify proposed Articles of Amendment. Several states had reject rejected Articles I or II, with Articles III thru XII becoming the first ten amendments to the Constitution. These amendments are commonly called the Bill of Rights.

The Jefferson Madison Center wishes to recognize the contributions of its name sake James Madison for proposing a bill of rights and his leadership in the House of Representatives securing their passage in Congress.

While all of the amendments are important guarantees of our civil liberties, the first right — “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion” — established a wall of separation between church and state and ended any possibility that the United States would be a Christian nation.

As a consequence, our governments may not prefer one religion over another, or religion over nonreligion. Simply put, government in America has no legitimate role to play in the religious sphere.

Thank you Mr. Madison for your outstanding service to this country.

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Are church-school teachers ministers?

Friday, November 4th, 2011

The Supreme Court has been trying to define the contours of the Establishment Clause since Everson v. Board of Education in 1947.  In a case of first impression, the Court recently heard oral arguments  in a case that is expected to determine whether the clause mandates there be a “ministerial exception” to the anti-retaliation provision of the Americans for Disability Act (ADA). 

Sitting in the bar section of the courtroom, it seemed to me that the nine justices are very divided on the exception created by appellate courts over the last forty years ago.

In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC, an elementary school by the name of Cheryl Perich took a medical leave of absence.  Hosanna-Tabor refused to reinstate Perich upon her doctor clearing her to return to teaching.  The school most likely fired Perich because it had hired a replacement teacher.  However, the school subsequently argued that it fired Perich because she threatened to complain to the EEOC rather than to the Lutheran synod.

Douglas Laycock, attorney for Hosanna-Tabor, argued that the ministerial exception gives the church-school the unreviewable right to determine its “ministers,” including whom to hire and fire. After taking some religious training, Hosanna-Tabor classified Cheryl Perich as a “commissioned minister.” She taught secular subjects but was also assigned religious duties, including leading her students in prayer.

I offer these comments based on oral arguments and my familiarity with the case:

First, after reading David Barton’s Original Intent this summer and his view that the principle of separation of church and state is not “found in the Constitution,” it was refreshing to hear Hosanna-Tabor’s attorney base his argument in support of a ministerial exception on the principle. (I guess the principle comes in handy when it’s beneficial to the church.) Equally refreshing was a conversation I had with a senior attorney from the Christian Legal Society in which she also recognized the principle of separation of church as being embodied in the First Amendment. Long live my heroes Thomas Jefferson and James Madison!

Second, and where I would part from Laycock is his argument that the ministerial exception is categorical, that is, government is not permitted under any circumstances to interfere with a church’s firing of any employee that it calls a minister.  When asked by Justice Sotomajor to  define “minister,” Laycock gave this definition of minister: “a person who holds ecclesiastical office in the church or who exercises important religious functions, most obviously including teaching of the faith.” (Tr. 55)  The “important religious functions” criteria is likely to be too broad for some of the justices to swallow.

Because of the rigidity of his application of the ministerial exception and perhaps his broad definition of minister, Laycock was forced to back off a bit for situations involving ministers abusing children and violating OSHA (safety) regulations. The obvious question, then, is why shouldn’t Hosanna-Tabor have to comply with the non-retaliation provisions of the ADA?

Third, I was intrigued by the variety of strong arguments advanced by the Department of Justice’s and Perich’s attorneys – Leondra R. Kruger and Walter Dellinger, respectively.  They argued that the ministerial exception, even if it exists, doesn’t apply to the present case because: (1) Hosanna-Tabor holds itself out to provide a service to the public (i.e., educate youth which the DoJ attorney argued is a governmental function), (2) the ADA is a neutral law of general applicability (Employment Division v. Smith (1990)), (3) protecting employees from retaliation is a “compelling governmental interest,” (4) the church’s tenet that employment disputes should be resolved internally is not a core religious tenet of the Lutheran church and (5) Perich was not fired because of anything that she taught to her students. 

The Court could get bogged down in an effort to define the term minister in which case it could send Establishment Clause jurisprudence into deeper chaos. Or, it might find that enforcement of the anti-retaliation provisions of the ADA – in this case – would not excessively entangle government in church matters (i.e., the third prong of the Lemon test).

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Utah crosses gotta come down

Friday, November 4th, 2011

On Monday, the Supreme Court declined to hear a case involving government-permitted Christian crosses along roadways in Utah. As a consequence, the decision of a three-judge panel of the 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals holding that the state violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment stands and the crosses on public property will have to come down.

The Utah Highway Patrol Association (UHPA), with the permission of the state of Utah, erected twelve crosses on public property to memorialize fallen Utah Highway Patrolmen. Represented by the alliance Defense Fund, UHPA said that the crosses are secular symbols that “convey the nonreligious messages of individualized commemoration and roadway safety.” (I bet you won’t find the Christian cross as a safety symbol in Utah’s drivers manual.) With good reason, the appeals court found that the Latin cross is the preeminent symbol of Christianity and that a reasonable observer would see the crosses as endorsements of religion.

A couple of points are worth noting. First, Justice Thomas was the lone justice voting to hear the case. Four justices must vote in favor of hearing the case for the Court to put it on its docket for oral argument. In his dissenting opinion, Justice Thomas said that the Court should take the case in order to “provide clarity to an Establishment Clause jurisprudence in shambles.”  While disagreement among the circuits is a major reason for the Supreme Court agreeing to hear a case, perhaps in this case it is the reason that the Court voted not to hear the case. It may well be that the Court is too split at this time to provide the clarification the Justice Thomas is seeking. And I might add that Justice Thomas’s views on church-state matters are among the most divisive.

Second, the Court may have declined to take the case for tactical and strategic reasons. Tactically, the Court last term decided the case of Salazar v. Buono involving a Christian cross in the Mojave National Preserve in California. The Court split 5-4 in that case and sent it back for further proceedings. In one sense, then, it may be too soon to hear another “cross case.”

But strategically, several Christian Right justices may well have an eye on a 9th Circuit cross case  — Jewish War Veterans v. City of San Diego – that they would prefer to hear. That case involves a 43-feet high Christian cross atop Mount Soledad. Perhaps these justices were willing to sacrifice the Utah case for the bigger fish — the Mount Soledad cross. In short, three cross cases in such a short period would be too big a burden for the Court to bare.

If Justice Thomas wants clarification of the Establishment Clause, I recommend that he take a stroll down memory lane sixty-four years to remind himself of Justice Black’s majority opinion in Everson v. Board of Education (1947): “The First Amendment has erected a wall between church and state. That wall must be kept high and impregnable.”

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Pres. Obama gets an “F” on religious liberty

Sunday, October 30th, 2011

President Barack Obama is an absolute failure when it comes to religious liberty.

President Barack Obama

Responding to a petition of more than 5,000 signatures calling for elimination of “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance and repeal of the motto “In God We Trust,” President Obama slapped secularists in the face by saying “A sense of proportion should also guide those who police the boundaries between church and state.” (Sounds to me like a president more worried about re-election than doing the right thing.)

In over 40 years of studying the Constitution, I’ve never heard such a lame excuse for violating the First Amendment’s principle of separation of church and state. One of the reasons for America’s greatness is that we do not take a poll to see which way the wind is blowing to determine fundamental rights. Inalienable rights are inalienable.

The Supreme Court has said in numerous cases (e.g., McCreary County v. ACLU of Kentucky (2005)) that government may not prefer one religion over another, or religion over nonreligion. No matter what angle we look at the Pledge and the motto, “under God” and “In God We Trust” are blatant endorsements of monotheistic religion in violation of the First Amendment.

This isn’t the first time the Obama Administration has been on the wrong side of separation of church and state. He was wrong side for infusing religion into his presidential inaugural ceremony (see Newdow v. Obama, which I served as co-counsel for the plaintiffs), his Department of Justice supported displays of Christian crosses in the Mojave National Preserve and atop of Mount Soledad (Salazar v. Buono and Jewish War Veterans v. City of San Diego, respectively) and he has permitted religious discrimination in hiring in government funded social services. Internationally, puts Saudi oil ahead of religious freedom.

On the matter of religious freedom, President Obama has flunked the test of fidelity to the Constitution. So much for his having been a Con Law professor.

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Judge Bea’s bizarre theory of (religious) evolution

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Someone please tell Judge Carlos Bea that a large Christian cross is a large Christian cross is a large Christian cross. Its religious meaning does not change when a government surrounds it with US flags – in fact, it makes government’s First Amendment violation of endorsement of religion much worse.

Judge Bea, who sits on the 9th Circuit US Court of Appeals, recently wrote a dissenting opinion to the court’s denial of a petition for rehearing en banc in Jewish War Veterans v. City of San Diego (9 Cir., Oct. 14, 2011). The refusal to review a three judge panel’s decision that the presence of a 43-feet high Christian cross on Mount Soledad constitutes a governmental endorsement of religion in violation of the prohibitions of the First Amendment means that the panel’s decision stands.

 

Mount Soledad Cross (Courtesy of Wikipedia)

Judge Bea’s argument is this. After the city lost at every point in 17 years of litigation, the federal government purchased the Mount Soledad Memorial from the City of San Diego in 2006, including its large cross. Just as the Supreme Court found in Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 U.S. 668 (1984) that government can hide a Christian nativity scene among a Santa Claus house, reindeer, candy-striped poles, colored lights, etc. to make the holiday display secular, Judge Bea seems to believe that the 43-feet high Mount Soledad cross can be hidden among any US flags and over 2,100 placques, thereby removing the religious taint.

His dissenting opinion is a perfect example of judicial activism – the use of opinions to obtain results consistent with the judge’s personal beliefs but inconsistent with the Constitution.

I strongly recommend to Judge Bea that he read the transcript (relevant portion excerpted below) of oral arguments in Salazar v. Buono, 130 S.Ct. 1803 (2010) to understand how mistaken he is to believe that a Christian cross is a universal symbol of death and remembrance. The following exchange between Justice Antonin Scalia and Peter Eliasberg of the ACLU of Southern California illustrates the point:

JUSTICE SCALIA: It’s [the Mt. Soledad cross] erected as a war memorial.  I assume it is erected in honor of all of the war dead. It’s the — the cross is the — is the most common symbol of — of — of the resting place of the dead, and it doesn’t seem to me — what would you have them erect?   A cross — some conglomerate of a cross, a Star of David, and you know, a Moslem half moon and star?

MR. ELIASBERG: Well, Justice Scalia, if I may go to your first point.  The cross is the most common symbol of the resting place of Christians. I have been in Jewish cemeteries. There is never a cross on a tombstone of a Jew.

(Laughter.)

MR. ELIASBERG: So it is the most common symbol to honor Christians.

JUSTICE SCALIA: I don’t think you can leap from that to the conclusion that the only war dead that that cross honors are the Christian war dead.  I think that’s an outrageous conclusion.

Transcript at 38-39.

The simple point is that just as Justice Scalia’s Roman Catholicism prevented him from seeing the tree (Christian cross) for the forest (his religion), Judge Bea suffers from the same myopia. While I too laughed in the courtroom that day at Justice Scalia’s ignorance, it is a very sad how out of touch he is from reality. It is also unfortunate for our country.

Coincidentally, I toured the King David Memorial Gardens in Falls Church, Virginia for some research I was doing on religious symbols. Eliasberg was correct. I found no Christian crosses on the grave markers in the Jewish cemetery. Further, neither of my parents were Christian at the time of their deaths and neither has a Christian cross on their grave stones in Arlington National Cemetery. These examples, plus the fact that the Department of Veteran Affairs has approved 48 emblems of belief is incontrovertible evidence that the Christian cross is not a universal symbol of death and remembrance.  Rather, its use solely reflective of the large number of Christians in the US population.

Judge Bea cites Chief Justice Rhenquist’s plurality opinion in Van Orden v. Perry, 545 U.S. 677 (2005) to support his theory of evolution that the meaning of religious symbols can change over time and become secular.  His reliance is misplaced.  Aside from the fact that evolution takes substantially longer than the time it takes to transfer property, there was no majority opinion in Van Orden. The disingenuous reasoning of the five justices holding that display of the Fraternal Order of Eagles donated Ten Commandments monument on the Texas state capitol grounds did not violate the Establishment Clause is one of the worst reasoned Supreme Court cases of all time. For example,the Chief Justice wrote:

The inclusion of the Commandments monument in this group has a dual significance, partaking of both religion and government, that cannot be said to violate the Establishment Clause.  …

Despite the Commandments’ religious message, an inquiry into the context in which the text of the Commandments is used demonstrates that the Commandments also convey a secular moral message about proper standards of social conduct and a message about the historic relation between those standards and the law.

Van Orden at 678-679 (2005).

The Chief Justice was absolutely wrong. Taken as a whole, there is nothing secular about the Eagles Commandments monument in Austin, Texas which boldly states in large letters: “the Ten Commandments – I AM the LORD thy God” and then lists ten or eleven commandments (depending upon how you count). The monument is purely religious and was donated by the Fraternal Order of Eagles as part of a scheme concocted by Judge E.J. Ruegemer to promote Christianity. (See my ebook Supreme Scandal: The Supreme Court Blesses the Ten Commandments (currently a work in progress.))

Judge Bea quotes Chief Justice Rhenquist’s opinion in Van Orden to support his theory of evolution:

Of course, the Ten Commandments are religious—they were so viewed at their inception and so remain.  The monument, therefore, has religious significance.  According to Judeo-Christian belief, the Ten Commandments were given to Moses by God on Mt. Sinai.  But Moses was a lawgiver as well as a religious leader.  And the Ten Commandments have an undeniable historical meaning, as the foregoing examples demonstrate. Simply having a religious content or promoting a message consistent with a religious doctrine does not run afoul of the Establishment Clause.

Quoting Van Orden v. Perry, 545 U.S. 677, 690 (2005) at 18971.  The last quoted sentence above of the Chief Justice’s opinion is totally bizarre given that the state of Texas uses the monument to promote Christianity especially when one considers that the Ten Commandments was primary content of the monument. Similarly, the Mount Soledad cross is the dominating feature of the Mount Soledad Memorial.

Arguing that “context” is critical and that the context is a war memorial, Judge Bea discredits the Lemon test. (At 18973-74.)  In Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971), the Supreme Court held that to withstand an Establishment Clause challenge to a governmental action, the act: (1) must have a secular purpose, (2) must not have the primary effect of either advancing or inhibiting religion and (3) must not result in an “excessive government entanglement” with religion. Obviously, the real problem that the Christian Right has with the Lemon test is that its use prevents them from using government to promote their religion. In Jewish War Veterans, the federal government’s (as did San Diego before it) use of a Christian cross to memorialize war dead clearly violates all three prongs of the Lemon test. Its purpose was religious. Its effect is religious. And its display entails an excessive entanglement with religion.

In summary, the federal government’s purchase of the Mount Soledad Memorial was a brazen attempt to save the cross as an element of the memorial. Having violating all three prongs of the Lemon test – three strikes – the Christian cross should be removed from Mount Soledad forthwith.

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Appeals Court Holds Mt. Soledad Cross Is Government Endorsement of Religion

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

A 3-judge panel of the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals unanimously held on Tuesday that the Mount Soledad Cross “primarily conveys a message of government endorsement of religion in violation of the Establishment Clause.”

The appeals court reversed a grant of summary judgment by the U.S. District Court (S.D. Calif.) in favor of the City of San Diego/US, granted summary judgment in favor of Trunk and the Jewish War Veterans and remanded the case back to the district court for further proceedings.

Procedurally, that is correct. Now the case goes back to the district court for disposition of the case consistent with the appeals court decision.  It is true that by doing this, the appeals court passed the buck for ordering the cross’s removal – but there is a sound reason for doing so. It is because the remand allows the parties and/or the district court the opportunity to fashion a remedy, including where to move the cross to.

When the 9th Circuit suggested that it might be possible to modify the memorial to pass constitutional muster, I doubt that includes retaining the 43-foot high cross on Mount Soledad – because the size of the cross was a very significant factor in the court’s decision (it could be seen from Highways 5 and 15 but the secular memorials could not).

While I generally agree in the opinion, I strongly disagree with some of the panel’s reasoning, especially that Congress had a secular purpose for acquiring the cross (perhaps the Court was trying to politely avoid a separation of powers confrontation with Congress) and Fraternal Order of Eagles-donated Ten Commandments monuments were not used as religious objects (e.g., Austin, Texas / Van Orden v. Perry (2005)) – neither reason is supported by the facts in my opinion.

(My essay at www.JMCenter.org  – Supreme Scandal: How the Supreme Court Blessed the Ten Commandments – discusses the religious purpose of the Eagles Ten Commandments Program and the Court’s flawed decision in Van Orden.)

Bob Ritter / JM Center

New DC Mayor Starts Off On Wrong Foot

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Vincent Gray, inaugurated earlier today as mayor of Washington, DC, started off the new year by thumbing his nose at the First Amendment.

Gray’s inauguration kicked off at 8:30 a.m. this morning with an Interfaith Prayer Service “One City … Praying Together” sponsored by his transition team.

The prayer service is an act “respecting an establishment of religion” that violates the separation of church and state requirement of the First Amendment. The Supreme Court said in <em>McCreary County v. ACLU</em> (2005): “The touchstone for our analysis is the principle that the ‘First Amendment mandates governmental neutrality between religion and religion, and between religion and nonreligion.’”

Mayor Gray — shame, shame, shame on you for violating the Constitution by not treating all DC residents with equal dignity.

Bob Ritter / JM Center

Salazar Does It Again

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar gets the JM Center’s Un-American Award for 2010 for repeat violations of the First Amendment.

The Interior Secretary not only allowed Henry Sandoz to keep his Christian cross on a rock in the Mojave National Preserve without the required permit but also allowed a Christian nativity scene on the Ellipse across from the White House. Shame, shame, shame on Salazar.

The nativity scene is an embarrassment for two reasons. First, it is so plastic looking. Yuck. But more importantly, being the only religious display as part of the government’s winter holiday display, it shows an unmistakable and inexcusable endorsement of Christianity.

The First Amendment of our Constitution prohibits government from preferring one religion over another, as well as, religion over nonreligion. McCreary County v. ACLU, 545 U.S. 844, 860 (2005). The display of the nativity scene violates both prohibitions as the crèche is uniquely Christian. Thus the National Park Service’s (NPS) display demonstrates a preference for Christianity over other religions such as Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and Wicca. It also shows a preference of Christianity over nonreligion.

Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 U.S. 668 (1984) is the leading Supreme Court case on holiday displays.  The essence of Lynch’s 5-4 decision is that if a municipality puts a nativity scene among a Santa Claus house, reindeer pulling Santa’s sleigh, candy-striped poles, a Christmas tree, carolers, cutout figures representing such characters as a clown, an elephant, and a teddy bear, hundreds of colored lights, a large banner that reads “SEASONS GREETINGS,” a conservative Christian majority on the Court will turn a blind eye to the First Amendment. 

Particularly troubling is the Lynch Court’s:

  • rejection of the Jefferson-Madison principle of church-state separation,
  • use of the euphemistic term “acknowledgement of the role of religion in American life” when the purpose and effect is government endorsement of the majority’s religion,
  • calling the benefit to Christianity “indirect,” “remote” or incidental” when the opposite is true,
  • excusing constitutional violation as merely “passive,”
  • labeling the nativity scene as “de minimus” because its present value was estimated at $200 and
  • last, but not least, stating that the Constitution “affirmatively mandates accommodation, not merely tolerance, of all religions” when accommodation is a synonym for “promoting” or “facilitating” Christianity.  

Inasmuch as NPS’s nativity scene is among 50+ holiday trees (the National Tree and one for each state and territory), model trains, wood logs for a bonfire and Santa’s Workshop, it’s doubtful that the Robert’s Court, citing Lynch, would be troubled by it.

But the rest of us should know better and say come on Ken – obey your oath to uphold the Constitution and stop promoting Christianity.

Bob Ritter / JM Center