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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?

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BJC Report
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BJC Newsletter Archive
See copies of Report from the Capital dating back to January 2005.

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This edition of Report From the Capital focuses on the role of religion in public schools. Plus, Holly Hollman writes about the BJC's amicus brief in the U.S. Supreme Court case of Salazar v. Buono, and Brent Walker reflects on the life and religious liberty contributions of Sen. Ted Kennedy.
This edition of Report from the Capital wraps up the oral arguments in the U.S. Supreme Court case of Salazar v. Buono, and BJC General Counsel Holly Hollman shares her thoughts from inside the courtroom. Plus, the newsletter has BJC Executive Director Brent Walker's reflections on the Muslim prayer rally on Capitol Hill, the winning essay in the 2009 scholarship contest, a report on the 2009 meeting of the BJC Board of Directors, and much more!
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National Prayer Breakfast a "Religious Festival"
Boston Globe columnist James Carroll revisits last week's National Prayer Breakfast and warns of its implications: However “ecumenical’’ its trappings, and whatever the small number of non-Christian participants make of it, the tradition amounts to a religious f...
 
Landmark Designations Create Unusual Church-State Conflict
When churches close their doors, who controls the building? A growing number of local governments, concerned with architectural beauty and community tradition, are applying landmark status to church structures. Religion News Service explores the controversy this is creating in the Catholic church...