From the court, a vindication of faith-based service. From Alito, a blueprint for the future.
Justices lift New York’s COVID-related attendance limits on worship services
Symposium: Amid polarization and chaos, the court charts a path toward peaceful pluralism
Symposium: So what exactly are the parties still fighting about in NYSRPA v. City of New York?
Symposium: Anti-Catholic Blaine Amendments like Montana’s are presumptively unconstitutional
Symposium: The calm before the storm for religious-liberty cases?
Symposium: Shotgun wedding? Forcing religious vendors to participate in wedding ceremonies
The Court after Scalia: Neither left nor right – The enduring principle of Free Exercise
September 14, 2016, SCOTUS Blog
SCOTUSBlog Symposium: A soft landing at the Supreme Court
Court to consider prison beard ban: In Plain English
SCOTUSBlog October 3, 2014
For starters, they have the some of the same lawyers, from the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty – which describes itself as a “non-profit, public-interest legal and educational institute with a mission to protect the free expression of all faiths.”
Read the full article here.
Plea for a new church-state ruling
SCOTUSblog, May 7, 2014
The Elmbrook case is not about prayer. Rather, it is about a public high school’s decision to stage a graduation ceremony in a church that is adorned with numerous religious symbols, displays, and literature.
Symposium: Lemon wins a reprieve, but the end is near
SCOTUSblog, May 6, 2014
Eric Rassbach is Deputy General Counsel at the Becket Fund, which filed an amicus brief in support of the Town of Greece.