Intolerant secularism is on the march. In a blatant campaign of cultural imperialism, secularists and their leftist allies aim to shrivel the “free exercise” of religion to mere “freedom of worship.”
Freedom of religion and freedom of worship aren’t the same concepts. Indeed, free exercise was ably described by the late Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy as having “a double aspect—freedom of thought and action.” In other words, we aren’t merely free to believe, but (generally speaking) to also act in the public square according to our faith precepts.
Freedom of worship is more limited. The Catholic Church can teach that the Eucharistic bread and wine transform into the literal body and blood of Christ, while Protestant denominations are equally at liberty to believe that Communion has a symbolic purpose. Mosques and Orthodox synagogues can require women to be segregated from men during services. Pentecostal Christians can speak in tongues. You get the idea.
Both free exercise and freedom of worship are important to religious liberty. We might even say, they’re mutually dependent to freely living a life of faith.
Gutting the First Amendment
What about the First Amendment, you ask? Alas, it isn’t what it used to be. In 1990, the Supreme Court significantly weakened the Constitution’s free exercise clause in Employment Division v. Smith. The case involved two Native Americans who were denied unemployment benefits after being fired for ingesting peyote during a religious ceremony. The men sued, claiming that they were being unconstitutionally punished for participating in a Native American religious ceremony. But a 6–3 court ruled that because the Oregon drug law was one of “general applicability”—meaning it didn’t explicitly target the men’s faith—and that their right to “free exercise” wasn’t violated.This ruling opened the door to oppressing faithful people by simply enacting laws of general applicability that are consistent with contemporary secular beliefs but also known to be offensive to certain religions. A perfect example of this suppression is ongoing in California. When the administrators of a Catholic hospital in the Dignity Health chain were informed that a patient’s planned hysterectomy was a gender transition, the surgery was canceled as a violation of Catholic moral teaching.
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act
Employment Division was unpopular on the left and right, leading to the passage of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which was signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993. The RFRA protects religious freedom by stating that the government “shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion” unless it can demonstrate that the law “is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest.”The RFRA only applies to federal laws and regulations. Thus, it’s of no help to Jack Phillips—the “Colorado Wedding Cake Baker”—who has been repeatedly attacked in Colorado courts for refusing to create cakes containing messages that violate his faith beliefs.
Private Sector Attacks Against Religious Freedom
The private sector may pose an even more potent threat to religious liberty by blackballing religious organizations and institutions. Former Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback—the U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom during the Trump administration—has a passion for protecting religious liberty. So after leaving government service, he formed the National Committee for Religious Freedom (NCRF) to advocate for freedom of religion for all Americans.At one time, such a group wouldn’t have been controversial. Today, social progressives, including some who manage many of the country’s most powerful corporations, scorn religious freedom because they see it as an excuse to discriminate against LGBT individuals—which may explain why Chase Bank closed all NCRF accounts last year. Notably, Chase never warned the NCRF that its relationship with the bank was imperiled, nor did it ask for information that might have clarified a legitimate business concern. Thus, it’s reasonable to suspect that Chase “de-banked” the NCRF because it defends religious freedom, including in LGBT controversies such as the Phillips cases.
Private acts of discrimination such as de-banking open a new front in the religious freedom wars. Indeed, Brownback worries that Chase’s actions against the NCRF may reflect a growing trend.
“Some corporations are stealthily discriminating against people of faith and faith-oriented groups,“ he told me. ”This must stop.”
If he’s right—and I think he is—such private-sector discrimination poses a potent threat to faith institutions that would be difficult to counter, since the Constitution only applies against the government. Think about it: If a religious organization can’t bank or, say, buy insurance, it would be hard to remain in operation.
Pertinent to this discussion: The judge applied other cases finding that the federal RFRA doesn’t protect against suits involving private parties. Thus, the government could readily circumvent the RFRA by authorizing private lawsuits against religious institutions that refuse services such as abortion, same-sex couple adoption, or gender transitions.
A gauntlet has been thrown. Secularists are determined to impose their progressive beliefs on conservative faith communities. Those of us who believe that freedom of religion is the “first liberty” had better gird our loins. Because if the right to free exercise of religion is effectively suppressed, freedom of worship will be the next religious liberty on the chopping block.