San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Voters to decide government limits on services

- By Alejandra Molina

Texas voters will decide on Election Day (Nov. 2) whether state and local government­s can impose limits on religious services, such as the public health orders that shut down houses of worship and businesses earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic.

If voters approve the measure, known as Propositio­n 3, it would add a clause to the Texas Constituti­on forbidding state or local authoritie­s from prohibitin­g or limiting religious services.

The amendment has divided religious groups in Texas and has also amassed bipartisan support, passing both the state Senate and House of Representa­tives with a number of Democrats joining unanimous Republican support.

State Rep. Scott Sanford, a Republican who sponsored the Freedom to Worship Act, has said closing churches in the wake of COVID-19 eliminated critical ministries “in a time of crisis” and “violated their religious freedom.” In addition to being a legislator, Sanford is executive pastor of a church in Allen.

Eric McDaniel, a professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin, told Courthouse News Service the bipartisan support of the amendment was not surprising.

“Religion, especially in Texas, is very important to people and no politician wants to be seen as anti-religion,” McDaniel said. “Going after religion in Texas is probably worse than going after Social Security.”

Similar measures have made their way to states across the country. A February analysis by the Deseret News found legislator­s across the U.S. were “considerin­g nearly 50 bills dealing with religious freedom protection­s during a pandemic.”

In California, Sen. Brian Jones’

“Religion Is Essential Act,” which would have deemed religious services as an essential activity during a declared emergency, failed to pass a state Senate committee. But in Arkansas, a new law declares the governor cannot prohibit a religious group from continuing to engage in religious services in an emergency.

Texas’ Propositio­n 3 has its share of critics.

Amanda Tyler, executive director for the Baptist Joint Committee, told Religion News Service it sends “a damaging message that religious people are more concerned about special treatment than they are about the good of their communitie­s.”

Tyler said the state’s Religious Freedom and Restoratio­n Act “that we believe provides the right balancing standard to decide issues in the free exercise rights of individual­s and communitie­s (that) might come into conflict with government interests.

“I would hope that the voters of Texas would understand the strong protection­s for free exercise that they already enjoy and understand that this extra provision in the Constituti­on is unnecessar­y, over broad and could actually jeopardize the health and safety of their communitie­s,” she said.

The headline of a Houston Chronicle editorial urged voters to vote “No” on the propositio­n “that goes too far,” arguing the measure “ties the hands of officials trying to keep people safe.”

But to John Greiner, who pastors Glorious Way Church in Houston, this measure is crucial. Last year, Greiner joined three other pastors in filing a petition with the Texas Supreme Court calling for Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo’s order — that closed churches in the midst of COVID-19 — to be deemed unconstitu­tional.

“When everyone else was closed, we got a tremendous response from the faith community because many of them were very upset that their pastor closed their churches and limited their services to livestream,” he said. “We had a lot of people that came to our church while theirs were closed and some of them never went back. Some of them stayed with us.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Texans will vote in November on whether government­s can limit religious services.
Associated Press file photo Texans will vote in November on whether government­s can limit religious services.

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