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Protecting religious liberty for future generations
through education, legislation and litigation
By K. Hollyn Hollman
Hollman Report
April 2005
During election cycles many of us tire of opinion polls.
The news media’s dependence on them tends to be numbing.
I’m sure there’s a poll somewhere that says so.
A recent survey of high school students, however,
should alarm us and make us keenly aware of the challenges
and opportunities for the BJC in three aspects of our
ministry. We sometimes describe the work of the BJC as
involving education, legislation and litigation.
Promoting religious liberty for
all, as our mission statement describes,
requires that we do battle on at least
those three fronts.
Our challenge in education becomes
crystal clear when we see results of surveys
like the recent Knight Foundation
poll of 100,000 high school students
that suggests a majority of them assign
little or no value to the rights guaranteed
by the First Amendment.
Among the BJC’s various education efforts, speaking to
student groups is one of our best ways to promote religious
liberty for the long-term. Since most kids are growing up
with peer groups that are far more diverse than those of
their parents, I often find them quick to see the inherent
fairness in our perspective, even if they have not heard it
before. It just seems fair for government to avoid taking
sides in religious matters, to protect the freedom to practice
religion, and to treat non-believers as equal citizens under
the law.
Still, we know the challenge is growing. Beyond simply
taking freedom for granted, young people are targets of
misinformation. The BJC has seen a disturbing surge in stories
about those who promote a misreading and mischaracterization
of our nation’s history in order to attack the constitutional
tradition of religious liberty.
What can you do? If you know some high school students,
ask them what they know about the protections in
the First Amendment. See if they understand that the same
constitutional provisions that keep their public schools
from promoting religion, also promote their freedom.
Engage them on issues that illustrate how our country’s
legal tradition allows for a vibrant expression of religion
and protects against government dominance of religion. Let
us know if we can assist education efforts on religious liberty
in your church or community.
Our education efforts extend into the legislative arena.
Our ability to protect religious liberty depends on members
of Congress understanding our perspective and knowing
that people in their district care about the issue. It is not
surprising that matters dealing with the relationship
between church and state are difficult for many members.
Any issue that touches on religion in politics can potentially
divide constituents or lead to an unfair label.
In the current political environment, we know there is
real pressure to go along with any proposal that sounds
like it is “pro-religion.” This is certainly the case in the area
of faith-based initiatives. Members need to hear from the
many whose religious beliefs lead them to be strong supporters
of religious freedom and wary of government funding
of religion. They need to hear that cooperation between
government and religious entities does not require, and
should not allow, government-funded discrimination in
employment or unnecessary risks of government-funded
religion.
In recent weeks we met with two new members of
Congress—one Republican, one Democrat. The goal was to
welcome them to Washington, inform them about our perspective
and current church-state issues and to listen for
ways we can help them. In both cases, supporters of the
BJC were crucial in setting up the meeting with the member
and making sure they heard that religious liberty is an issue
of great concern for individuals and houses of worship in
their district. The members welcome hearing from church
leaders and church members in their district. We should
always let them know that we are paying attention, encourage
them to stand strong for religious freedom, and thank
them when they make the right choice on a tough vote.
The BJC’s litigation work primarily consists of analyzing
and reporting on church-state cases and filing friend-of-the
court briefs in significant cases. The Supreme Court’s docket
this term provided an obvious opportunity to advocate
our balanced approach to the First Amendment. The Court
recently heard arguments about the prohibitions of government
endorsement of religion in the Ten Commandments
cases and the accommodation of free exercise in the review
of a free exercise statute. For religious liberty to remain the
vital force it has been in our country, both religion clauses
must be fully enforced.
While the substance of the cases provided an opportunity
for us to advocate positions consistent with our Baptist
commitment to religious liberty for all, the atmosphere
warned of the difficulties ahead. In recent years, most
church-state decisions have been decided by slim majorities.
In the next few years, we will likely have new members
on the court whose positions are unknown.
Much is at stake these days. For religious liberty to be
preserved, it must be protected.
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