Posted on 04/23/2020 8:05:15 AM PDT by Kaslin
Amid the coronavirus pandemic, authorities are shutting down churches, and pastors are being arrested. What does the law say about all of this?
In the fluid pandemic situation, religious freedom is being tossed around, both as the basis for continuing public gatherings and as a focus of derision from those using the crisis to argue that religious people are the problem. Some defiant pastors have held large gatherings, while some government officials have threatened to permanently close churches that wont comply with stay-at-home orders.
How would all these scenarios play out in a legal contest? There are basically three relevant rules:
Thanks to the pandemic, we’re now looking at real-world examples. A Louisiana pastor is under fire for holding church services for hundreds of parishioners despite a state ban on large gatherings. His attorney argued that people would rather come to church and worship like free people than live like prisoners in their homes and then suggested that depression and anxiety experienced by people confined to their homes could be worse than the people who have already contracted this virus and died.
Thats not the only example. A Florida pastor was also arrested for holding large church services in defiance of an executive order meant to limit gatherings.
Its important to note that these instances appear to be a small exception to the strong trend of religious groups canceling services to protect public health. In a recent survey, only 12 percent of regular church attendee respondents said that “in-person services at their house of worship have not been canceled.
The relevant rules applying to defiant pastors will depend on the state involved. The most high-profile case was in Louisiana, which has a RFRA. So the legal analysis would address three questions:
Absent another factor, the preclusion of gatherings in Louisiana would probably be found not to be an unfair imposition on religious freedom.
In a different state that does not have an RFRA, the analysis is simpler. If the government bans all gatherings, religious and nonreligious, it is not singling out religious practice for discrimination, so the bans would be allowed under the controlling interpretation of the U.S. Constitution.
Now, lets take an example on the other side. In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio received harsh criticism when he made the ill-advised comment that churches that did not close down might be closed permanently. If de Blasio were really to try this, it would likely be held unconstitutional.
While protecting public health is a valid and probably compelling interest, a permanent ban is not the narrowest way to advance that interest. The city could probably prevent gatherings during the pandemic, but once the public health threat is over, the compelling reason for the regulation disappears.
These examples arguably represent extremes, so lets look at another scenario thats not as clear on its face. Imagine a situation wherein churches are not singled out because other similar organizations are closed, but bars or restaurants are allowed to stay open. This seems problematic because apparently similar activities are being treated differently, and since religion has formal constitutional protections, this seems unfair on its face.
The legal rules that apply to this scenario would depend on the controlling law. Under the low-protection rule (a non-RFRA state), the fact that religious groups are not singled out may be enough to make these distinctions valid. Under the high-protection rule (an RFRA state), the result could be different.
Like the analysis above, there is a burden on religious practice, and the government would have an interest in preventing the spread of the disease. Importantly, however, the differential treatment of apparently similar circumstances suggests the government is not tailoring its solution of closing churches as narrowly as it should to avoid burdening religious freedom. In that scenario, the government would need to show a justification for treating bars differently from churches, or the courts could decide the regulation doesn’t fit the governments public health interest.
Of course, it will take time to establish this through litigation. Some states are trying to avoid these conflicts entirely by recognizing the important spiritual needs of citizens while simultaneously limiting exposure to the virus.
For example, in Utah, Gov. Gary Herbert’s directive, asking the state to avoid gatherings of any size, includes an accommodation for religious leaders and workers to perform their necessary work and singles out workers necessary to plan, record, and distribute online or broadcast content to community members. This approach allows the use of technology to meet the need for religious services while still preventing gatherings that could spread the virus.
So in Louisiana and Florida, the courts would likely rule that the states can limit religious gatherings. In New York, the court would almost certainly reject a permanent closure of churches. Other states that have sought a reasonable accommodation are likely to avoid these problems entirely.
Rather than attacking government officials for attempting to prevent the spread of the virus or attacking religious leaders who are trying to serve their congregations, we could look for appropriate ways to advance both needs. At a time of uncertainty, it is normal that hard questions will develop. The basic legal standards for protecting religious freedom are flexible enough to provide initial answers to most of these questions, and the process of finding appropriate accommodations can guide future resolutions to religious freedom conflicts.
“Shall Make No Law” actually means what it says.
Churches in general are going along voluntarily due to Biblical admonitions that Christians respect civil authority.
Churches meeting in person was thoughtless and selfish. Lots of people became ill. Common sense should rule, if nothing else. Having worship after a curfew, just law breaking.
A drive-in worship on a Sunday morning should have no restrictions. Nails in the driveway was wicked and is cause for a lawsuit.
Well so long as the mosque’s are open I guess there isn’t a total shutdown. (/sarc)
American Christiana are very much the tail and not the head.
Actually, it doesn't. Rastafarians are forbidden by federal law from the sacramental use of marijuana. Bans on the FLDS practicing polygamy have been upheld. Quakers who refuse to pay taxes to support the armed forces have been successfully prosecuted. Many more examples available.
So they should leave it up to folks to decide whether they ned to attend a church service during a pandemic but then they should sign a release if they get the COVID-19 do not put in hospital.
My sense is that this author avoided or does not know the issue. Reality is that there are different religions and denominations in the USA. I mean really different. Some believe that God says they MUST meet together. We can argue theology all day with them, but that is irrelevant. The bottom line is that they are allowed to be different.
So, when these people meet, are they trying to be uncooperative? I think not. They are simply doing what they think God wants them to do. In my mind, they are exactly the people for whom the 1st amendment was written.
We should bend over backward to find a way to accommodate them, in my opinion. I’m okay with asking them to hold multiple services with 120 square feet per person in the building. That’s roughly a 6 foot circle per person.
CONGRESS shall make no law. And they haven’t. Just Executive Orders.
Churches in general are going along voluntarily due to Biblical admonitions that Christians respect civil authority.
= = =
Who is the higher authority; a Governor, or the Constitution?
To ponder - as we say we are a nation ruled by law.
I present this, not personally having had to ‘rebel’, yet.
I’ll take “ Gross Infringements On Religious Freedom for $1000, Alex.”
As most churches are having online services and not being restricted by any government authority, I don’t believe it falls under freedom of religion. However, you could make a case for freedom of assembly. Still a first amendment issue, however.
I agree with you that that’s the way it should be. To me, the only way that parts of the Constitution can be canceled in an emergency would be a definition in the Constitution itself defining what establishes an emergency. To my knowledge there is no such part of the Constitution.
If I were the governor of a state I would inform the people of my state that, even though the lawyers may tell me I can suspend the Bill of Rights, I will not do so under any circumstances. However, I ask, I plead, I beg you to take precautions to protect yourselves and to protect others from the spread of this virus.
When religious group is told they cannot, and another group ignored, the ruling is illegal.
Not one mohammedan has done any of the suggestrd restrictions at any time or day, and have been ignored.
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