Freedom of religion Flashcards
How do we know that this was an important issue for the FF?
The constitution deals with religion in the very 1st amendment
What does the first clause of the first amendment state?
The 1st amendment states ‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion (1) or the free exercise thereof (2)’. This is the 1st clause in the 1st amendment of the BoR, so this was an important idea for the FF
What two parts can this provision be separated out into?
The first part of this provision is called the establishment clause, the second is called the free exercise clause
What does the establishment clause mean?
The establishment clause means that no official state church can be created. This clause ensures that the US does not have any state endorsed religion and that it does not write its laws based on any religious edicts
What does the free exercise clause mean?
The free exercise clause means that you can’t be prohibited from being part of any religion, although it doesn’t mean that any religious practise is okay. If religious practise violates the law it is still illegal
Why is it important to draw a distinction between religious belief and practise?
A distinction should be drawn between religious belief and religious practise, you can believe whatever you want to believe, including the belief that certain illegal things are actually necessary for their religion. However, you cannot practise whatever you want to practises, as some religious practises can be in defiance of the law
There have been a number of cases that have established the difference between religious belief and religious practise
What has happened to these two clauses over the years?
What these two clauses mean have inevitably been clarified by SC decisions
Give an example of one of these cases
Lemon v Kurtzman (1971).
Why is this case complicated?
This decision is complicated because it combines two sets of facts, although they both involve public money and parochial schools – private schools supported by a particular church or parish…
What were the two cases the SC faced here?
In one case in Rhode Island, the state was using taxpayer money to pay teachers in parochial schools in an effort to educate Rhode Island children
In the other case in Pennsylvania that state was using public funds to pay teachers in private schools to to provide secular education services
What did the SC set up in response to these cases?
In this case, the SC set up a three-prong test to see if state law violates the religious freedom clauses of the 1st amendment.
Describe the first prong
Under the first prong, the court looks at whether the law in question has a secular legislative purpose. In this case, the purpose of the law was educating children, which is one of the powers reserved to the states, and that usually has secular motivations
Describe the second prong
Under the second prong, the court examines whether or not the laws primary effect neither enhances nor prohibits religion. Here, the court found that paying private school teachers or using private school facilities did not necessarily promote religion or prevent students from practising if they want to
Describe the third prong and how it got the two schools into trouble
The third prong requires that the law under consideration does not create excessive entaglement between church and state. This is where the Rhode Island and Pennsylvania laws got into trouble. In Rhode Island, the schools where the children were learning were full of religious imagery and 2/3 of the teachers were nuns. The court paid close attention to the fact that those involved were kids, said that the idea that there could be religious inculcation is enhanced by the impressionable age of the children, pointing towards the fact that parochial schools involve substantial religious activity and purpose. The problem was different in Pennsylvania, saying that in order to make sure the teachers were not teaching religion, the state would have to monitor them so closely that it would constitute excessive entanglement and give the state way too much control
Why was the Pennsylvania ruling controversial here?
The judges engaged in some slippery slope reasoning about the Pennsylvania case, arguing that even if the secular purpose was a good one in this case, there’s a tendency for states to take more and more power for themselves