Updates on Major Religious Liberty Cases: Groff at SCOTUS and Catholic Charities Bureau in Wisconsin
April 27, 2023(As a reminder, for optimum viewing on a mobile device, orient the device to landscape.) Updates on Major Religious Liberty Cases: Groff at SCOTUS and Catholic Charities Bureau in Wisconsin The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments for a monumental religious liberty case on April 18th. Groff v. DeJoy is an important opportunity for the High Court to affirm the right of employees to honor their religious beliefs and the duty of employers to grant reasonable religious accommodations. Christian mail carrier Gerald Groff requested a religious accommodation from the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) that would excuse him from working on Sundays after they started doing Amazon package deliveries, so that he could observe the Sabbath and live by his Christian faith. The fact that regular mail isn’t delivered by the USPS on Sundays was a major factor in Groff’s choosing to work there over a decade ago. USPS refused to grant him the accommodation and Groff chose to resign rather than be fired. Groff brought a lawsuit alleging his religious freedom had been violated because USPS had failed to reasonably accommodate his religion. Groff lost at the lower court level. Groff is appealing to the Supreme Court in hopes it will overturn its erroneous 1977 precedent in Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Hardison, which allowed employers to deny certain religious accommodations. Thankfully, it appears that the conservative justices are poised to rule in favor of Groff and the religious liberty of every employee. The Supreme Court is expected to issue its ruling in this case by late June. At the state level, another religious liberty case will soon be heard by the Wisconsin Supreme Court. After the state refused to grant a Catholic charity legal recognition as a religious organization, the charity filed a lawsuit. Without legal recognition as an organization “operated primarily for religious purposes,” the charity is unable to use a Church-run unemployment system and instead must provide funds to the state-run unemployment system. Although the Diocese of Superior operates the charity, the state refused to grant it its legal rights because it does not consider providing services to the poor, disabled, and elderly to be a primarily religious function. Catholic Charities Bureau is arguing that caring for those in need is central to the practice of the Catholic faith. WFA has filed an amicus brief urging the Wisconsin Supreme Court to take this case, and just last week they agreed to do so. Please pray that our justices make decisions informed by the Constitution and our nation’s founding principles in both of these cases. If religious liberty is to be truly honored in Wisconsin and the nation at large, the justices must rule accordingly in these cases. |
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Read more about the Religious Freedom Matters! community event series by clicking HERE. Events around Wisconsin are coming soon!
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IN THE MEDIA WEEKLY RADIO COMMENTARY. “WISCONSIN FAMILY CONNECTION” Airing this week on over 20 stations statewide. This week: Conversion Therapy Bans: Judge says “No & Pay Up”
“WISCONSIN FAMILY MINUTE”
STAND UP FOR THE TRUTH – Q90FM HOME FRONT/InFOCUS – VCY AMERICA Julaine is also a monthly guest on VCY’s TV 30 live call-in program, “InFocus,” hosted by VCY America’s General Manager Jim Schneider. The program is on each Monday evening at 7 p.m., September through May. Julaine joined Jim on Monday, April 3. Watch online HERE. Julaine will be on InFocus again on Monday, May 15, 2023. |