Monday's Supreme Court ruling that the
Hobby Lobby crafts store chain does not have to provide all forms of birth
control for its employees marks the first time the high court has said some
businesses can hold religious views under federal law, in cases where there is
essentially no difference between the business and its owners.
All sorts of issues flow from this
decision. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and
three other justices, sharply disagreeing with the five conservatives on the
court, wrote, "In a decision of startling breadth, the Court holds that
commercial enterprises, including corporations, along with partnerships and
sole proprietorships, can opt out of any law (saving only tax laws) they judge
incompatible with their sincerely held religious beliefs,"
Here are a few issues that I see as central to the first
amendment:
1.
David and Barbara
Green, in communications to their employees, call them “family.” These
thousands of people, diverse in backgrounds and beliefs, are not their family.
A nice metaphor, but the word presumes a patriarchal and matriarchal role of
being domineering in making personal health decisions for employees, particularly
in regard to women and inconsequential sex.
2.
The Greens assert
that the Supreme Court decision is helping save the nation. The free exercise
clause of the First Amendment precisely is for the purpose of freedom of
religion for all. It is neither the privilege nor the calling of one sector of
one religion to claim for itself the role of “Savior of the nation.”
3.
In the First
Amendment there is no mention of “sincerely held” religious beliefs. Who is to
decide one’s sincerely? The nature of a belief? The quality of a religious
practice? The First Amendment protects each person’s exercise of each one’s
religion. The complexity of how one person’s practice many interfere with
another’s has been and will be debated for years. However, sincerity is not the
measure.
4.
The Establishment
clause of the First Amendment: “Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion,” has provided the freedom to establish faith
communities, build houses of worship, pray, teach and learn. For year religious
groups have been free from property taxation. But this freedom from taxation has stopped
short of commercial enterprise. A church or synagogue or mosque may be used for
worship and religious education but when it becomes a store to sell things for
profit, its activities are taxed. Freedom of religion—no matter how
sincere—needs to continue to be kept separate from commercial enterprise. Are
corporations people? Even privately owned ones have a goal to make money. They
should not be exempt from laws which are for the welfare of all people no
matter if their mission statement is “dedication” to certain religious
principles.
5.
No Hobby Lobby store
is open on Sunday "in order to allow our employees and customers more time
for worship and family." That is their choice. If they have gone as far as
the Supreme Court to not allow their employees to have insurance coverage for
all forms of birth control, perhaps they should post a sign that they will sell
their crafts only to people who agree with their sincerely held beliefs. That
would be logical. But that of course would not make them “open to the public”
in a commercial sense.
6.
The Green family has
ventured into wanting to impose their particular private beliefs on the public.
Steve Green is a driving force in the initiative to place a Bible-based
academic curriculum in the nation's public schools. It is his right to build a
business and try to establish a work environment that “builds character,
strengthens individuals and nurtures families,” as he defines those terms, but
the Constitution does not allow the Green family to impose their “sincerely
held beliefs” on the children of the entire nation. That would mean the loss of religious freedom
for everyone.
Now, I happen to be a Christian, although not of the same
branch as the Hobby Lobby owners. I treasure the Constitution. I, a progressive—a liberal—on this issue could
certainly be considered a strict constitutionalist. I hold to the First
Amendment. That means institutional
separation of church and state. And it certainly means separation of commercial
enterprises from another person’s beliefs. The First Amendment insures freedom
from religious domination, particularly by the powerful over the less powerful,
freedom from having decisions of life and belief and health determined by someone
else.
Sincerely, The free exercise of religion is for the
worker as well as the boss!
Fifty years ago the Civil Rights Act was signed into law by
President Lyndon Johnson just a few hours after House approval on July 2, 1964. Yes, there are some connections here. We
still have challenges!