U.S. coronavirus restrictions create split among religious liberty
advocates
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[April 08, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When an evangelical
Christian pastor was arrested in Florida for flouting a stay-at-home
order aimed at curbing the new coronavirus, a conservative religious
liberty group was quick to leap to his defense.
But the decision by Liberty Counsel to represent Rodney Howard-Browne,
co-founder of The River at Tampa Bay Church, marks a split among
religious liberty advocates, with others preaching caution on going to
court in the midst of a global pandemic.
Other groups, including Alliance Defending Freedom and the Becket Fund
for Religious Liberty have so far held their fire, saying states have
strong interest in protecting public health as long as the government
action is limited in time and scope, even as Sunday's Easter holiday
approaches.
Howard-Browne, who was arrested on March 30 after being accused of
presiding over two services attended by hundreds of parishioners, is
himself something of an outlier as most houses of worship have closed
their doors in the interests of public health.
He was charged with misdemeanor offenses of unlawful assembly and
violation of public health emergency rules for refusing to follow
Hillsborough County's stay-at-home order.
"We can't throw out constitutional rights even in an emergency," said
Mat Staver, Liberty Counsel's founder and chairman, in reference to the
1st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects freedom of
religion.
Other religious-liberty lawyers say a public health emergency changes
the legal calculation.
"The right of religious freedom doesn't give you carte blanche to
threaten the public health of your neighbors," said Luke Goodrich, a
Becket lawyer.
David Cortman, an Alliance Defending Freedom lawyer, said that although
some local governments have overstepped, most have sought to accommodate
religious groups as much as possible.
Various states, including Texas and Florida, provide exemptions for
religious gatherings, while others allow for limited gatherings.
"Overall, various government agencies have done a good job. What ADF is
trying to do is ensure everyone understands we are in a crisis and
people need to be careful," Cortman said.
Groups like ADF, which has a focus on conservative Christians, are on
the lookout for any state or local orders specifically targeting
religious groups, which would be an obvious violation of the 1st
Amendment. If religious groups are treated the same as other secular
groups, then it is difficult to argue that the state is guilty of
discrimination, the lawyers said.
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Pastor Tony Spell talks with journalists before attending Sunday
service at the Life Tabernacle megachurch challenging state orders
against assembling in large groups to prevent the spread of
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Baton Rouge, Louisiana U.S., April
5, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
The government can also claim that in the face of a global pandemic
it has a compelling interest in protecting public health that can
override concerns about short-term infringements on religious
freedom, they said.
Litigation over religious issues has been few and far between even
as other legal fights have broken out on other divisive social
issues including abortion and guns.
Media headlines have focused on the few churches that have remained
open in various states including California, Ohio and Texas despite
public health warnings. In Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Pastor Tony Spell
has continued weekly services at his Life Tarbernacle Church in
defiance of a state ban on gatherings of 10 people or more despite
having been arrested last month for doing so.
Tension could increase this week as Christians celebrate Easter and
Jews mark Passover. The Muslim holiday of Ramadan is also
approaching.
Liberty Counsel's Staver said most churches that closed their doors
voluntarily did so on the understanding it would be for a period of
weeks, not months.
"The longer that goes and obviously with Easter coming up you are
going to see more frustration and questioning," he added.
Maggie Siddiqi, who heads the faith and progressive policy
initiative at the liberal Center for American Progress, said some
states are accommodating religious groups too much and may be
putting the public at risk.
"Viruses do not discriminate on gatherings based on whether they are
religious or not," she said. "Our public health response should be
bans on gatherings whether they are religious are not."
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; editing by Grant McCool)
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