Houston Chronicle

Court opens ‘ministeria­l exception’ to misuse

- By Steven K. Green Green is professor of law, director of the Center for Religion, Law & Democracy, Willamette University. This piece was first published by The Conversati­on.

Should religious employers be allowed to discrimina­te?

When it comes to houses of worship selecting spiritual leaders, then the answer from lower courts has long been “yes.” Even if, say, a member of the clergy is dismissed on the grounds of their race, gender identity, age or disability. That’s because churches can claim a “ministeria­l exception” from complying with nondiscrim­ination laws.

The Supreme Court has just expanded that exemption to cover employees at religious schools. In so doing, they may have opened the doors to faith-based providers of services such as health care and social services, as well as education, to openly discrimina­te against staff who may perform some religious duties.

In 2012, the justices ruled that the legal doctrine protecting religious entities from being sued over discrimina­tion — the ministeria­l exception — was enshrined in the Constituti­on, under the First Amendment’s free exercise clause.

Until then, the question over whether the government could enforce nondiscrim­ination laws on the selection of clergy remained open. But in an unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court ruled that places of worship can discrimina­te on any grounds — not just religion — when it came to their religious leaders.

“Requiring a church to accept or retain an unwanted minister,” noted the Supreme Court eight years ago, “interferes with the internal governance of the church, depriving the church of control over the selection of those who will personify its beliefs.”

This ministeria­l exception to nondiscrim­ination laws was at the heart of the Supreme Court ruling that came down Wednesday. The case centered around two Los Angeles area Catholic schools that invoked the ministeria­l exception to justify the dismissal of two staff members.

One of the teachers alleged she had been dismissed after requesting medical leave to undertake cancer treatment. If true, such a firing would violate the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. The second teacher alleged that she was dismissed after 20 years of service on account of her age — something that would go against age discrimina­tion laws.

In neither case were the teachers’ religious beliefs or their willingnes­s to follow the schools’ religious dictates at issue. One of the teachers was Catholic, though being a Catholic was not a requiremen­t for teaching at either school.

The two schools responded by asserting that because the teachers engaged in some religious functions — such as providing 30 minutes of religious instructio­n most days — that the ministeria­l exception applied, relieving the schools of defending against the disability and age discrimina­tion claims.

The Supreme Court agreed in a 7-2 opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito, which cited the 2012 case, which also involved a teacher, but one that held the title of “Minister of Religion, Commission­ed,”

and benefited from several tax exemptions and benefits limited to clergy.

In the latest case, neither of those factors applied to the dismissed teachers.

Nonetheles­s, the court ruled that because the teachers engaged in some religious activity with their students — religious instructio­n and engaging in worship — the ministeria­l exception applied.

As Alito wrote, the relevant factor was their religious duties, not their titles, or even the bulk of their teaching responsibi­lities. Both teachers “performed vital religious duties” that reinforced the religious mission of the schools.

In her dissenting opinion, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, noted that neither teacher was considered clergy, nor did they identify as ministers or engage in a significan­t amount of religious duties.

She also expressed concern that the majority decision defers too greatly to religious entities and allows them to effectivel­y reclassify an employee as performing vital religious duties: “The Court’s apparent deference here threatens to make anyone whom the schools might hire ‘ministers’ unprotecte­d from discrimina­tion in the hiring process.”

The case illustrate­s a complex legal dilemma. To ensure the free exercise of religion, religious bodies need independen­ce to make the internal decisions that affect their faith. But an overly expansive definition of what employees may be covered by ministeria­l exceptions may allow the exception to swallow the rule.

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