Austin American-Statesman

Religious exemptions will create new legal challenges

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In its professed zeal to protect religious Texans, the state Legislatur­e has included within an increasing number of laws exemptions for those with “sincerely held religious beliefs.” Unfortunat­ely, lawyers remain uncertain about the scope of “religious liberty” that it seemingly protects.

One might begin with some practical examples of conduct that are not protected under almost all current readings of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment or the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act (RFRA), which is the basis of almost all current litigation involving national law.

Consider Jehovah’s Witnesses who might demand that their children not receive blood transfusio­ns because of their undoubtedl­y sincere belief that it is the “drinking of blood” that is prohibited by the Bible. There are now multiple cases that reject this claim of parental authority — however sincerely religious it might be — because of the obvious threat to the life of the child. Courts have therefore ordered that transfusio­ns be given.

One should wonder whether a religious parent could invoke a “spare the rod and spoil the child” defense if charged with child abuse. Could an abusive husband quote the Bible to defend “chastiseme­nt” of his wife for disobedien­ce?

Courts have also been notably inhospitab­le to individual­s claiming that their idiosyncra­tic religions require the smoking of marijuana. An important Supreme Court decision in 1990 upheld the law against illegal drug use for participan­ts in well-establishe­d Native American religious ceremonies that involved peyote. No one doubted the sincerity of the beliefs, but the “war on drugs” took precedence, six of the justices said. It was this decision that triggered the almost unanimous passage of RFRA, which ultimately led the court in the 2015 Hobby Lobby case to adopt the catchphras­e “sincerely held religious beliefs” that was seized by the Texas Legislatur­e.

Throughout history, the U.S. has been a breeding ground for new religions. The most important example is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — or Mormons. The Supreme Court upheld jailing some of its polygamous leaders — and seizing the church’s assets — because polygamy was an “action” and not merely a “belief.”

It cannot be the case that all actions are exempted from potential punishment if one can justify them based on a “sincerely held religious belief.” Inevitably, we must pick and choose, with little genuine guidance from lawmakers or the Supreme Court.

Ultimately, we rely far more on general cultural norms as to what we wish to tolerate at a given time. Those who support a baker’s refusal to sell a cake to be used in a same-sex marriage are unlikely to be sympatheti­c if the same baker, quoting another passage of Scripture, refuses to sell a cake to an interracia­l couple.

It is a mistake to think that proponents of “religious liberty” are all politicall­y conservati­ve. Consider the issue of providing “sanctuary” to undocument­ed individual­s threatened by state and national policies. Even if one can ascribe religious sensibilit­ies to the cities that are refusing to collaborat­e with the federal government, that is clearly not the case regarding members of various churches who might decide that the biblical command to “remember that you were strangers in the land of Egypt” requires standing in solidarity with their threatened neighbors.

Will would-be devotees of religious liberty who are obsessed with issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage be equally sympatheti­c to claims made by those giving sanctuary to people that some consider to be mere criminals instead of vulnerable fellow human beings?

At the very least, it should be clear that the four words selected by the Texas Legislatur­e generate an almost endless set of problems and future cases to be litigated.

 ?? JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Dozens of clergy and faith leaders, in a gathering to oppose bills in the Texas Legislatur­e that they consider anti-LGBT, pray and sing on the stairway outside the House Chamber at the Capitol in early May.
JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Dozens of clergy and faith leaders, in a gathering to oppose bills in the Texas Legislatur­e that they consider anti-LGBT, pray and sing on the stairway outside the House Chamber at the Capitol in early May.

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