BJC Blog RSS Feeds
Close
An Overview
Working with Congress
Working with the Courts
Working with Churches
Center for Religious Liberty
Watch
Close

SOLID, RELIABLE, CONFIDENT — these are three words that describe the Baptist Joint Committee as we carry out our work every day on Capitol Hill.

From the halls of Congress, to the agencies and in the courts, the BJC works to defend and extend God-given religious liberty for all people.

With its guarantees of our most fundamental freedoms, the First Amendment must be defended if we are to preserve religious liberty for everyone. Our challenge is great, but we are determined to meet it.

For more than 70 years, the BJC has sounded the alarm and fought the battles from our office on Capitol Hill. We are the only religious organization in the country that works solely on religious liberty issues.

As always, we need your financial support to continue to wage the fight for religious liberty.

Won't you make an investment in religious liberty for your children and grandchildren?

Donate
BJC Report
Home arrow News & Opinions arrow Press Room arrow BJC: Supreme Court nominee should protect our first freedom -- religious liberty
BJC: Supreme Court nominee should protect our first freedom -- religious liberty E-mail

istock_supctMay 10, 2010

WASHINGTON — At today’s White House announcement of her nomination to succeed Associate Justice John Paul Stevens on the U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan said, “law matters. . . it keeps us safe . . . it protects our most fundamental rights and freedoms.”

The Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty hopes the nominee, if confirmed, will protect our most fundamental freedom — religious freedom — with a commitment to principles of both no establishment and free exercise embodied in our “first freedom.”

Click here to read more from the Baptist Joint Committee regarding the nomination of Elena Kagan to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In her remarks, she praised the retiring Stevens as having “played a particularly distinguished and exemplary role” on the Court. “It is therefore a special honor to be nominated to fill his seat,” she continued.

Stevens’ church-state record, which included more than five dozen cases, demonstrated a strong view of the Establishment Clause but a weaker view of the Free Exercise Clause. Over the past two decades, Stevens provided a solid vote against government-sponsored religious activities. For example, he wrote the majority opinion in Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe (2000), which struck a Texas school district’s policy permitting student-led prayer at public school events. Also, he has been the justice most likely to find Establishment Clause problems with legislative accommodations of religion, such as the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (1993).

In succeeding Stevens, Kagan would replace the last remaining Protestant member of the High Court. BJC General Counsel K. Hollyn Hollman said, however, that far more important than her religious beliefs are Kagan’s judicial philosophy, temperament, and respect for religious liberty.

“I hope the nominee incorporates Justice Stevens’ appreciation for the Establishment Clause, but with a more robust vision for the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause and the First Amendment doctrine that ensures the autonomy of religious organizations.”

 While Kagan has spent most of her career in public service, she never has served as a judge. In the coming weeks, the BJC anticipates learning more about Kagan by reviewing her writings and public statements, as well as the upcoming confirmation hearings.

  -30-

The Baptist Joint Committee is a 74-year-old, Washington, D.C.-based religious liberty organization that works to defend and extend God-given religious liberty for all, bringing a uniquely Baptist witness to the principle that religion must be freely exercised, neither advanced nor inhibited by government.
 
 
Back to School!
In a decision from late July that I missed, a district judge in Texas ruled against a local school in its decision to black out religious messages in some Christmas cards being sold as part of a fundraiser. Its an interesting case: school officials were concerned about running afoul of the separa...
 
Quote of the Day
From former George W. Bush speechwriter and policy advisor Michael Gerson in a Washington Post op-ed: The Christian fundamentalist view of Islam bears a striking resemblance to the New York Times' view of Christian fundamentalism -- a simplistic emphasis on the worst elements of a com...