Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Friday, June 3, 2011

"Gay softball league limit on straight players OK'd"

Here.  However, the organization, the North American Gay Amateur Athletic Alliance, apparently will have to answer to the federal court for how it defines who's gay.  Parallels to legal problems faced by traditionalist-conservative organizations are, of course, purely coincidental.  I'll keep comments open, but be on your best behavior.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

"Why Is Robert Mugabe Visiting the Vatican?"

Here.  Thoughts?

Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty in New York

As same-sex marriage is under consideration in New York state, our group of religious-liberty scholars has written a memorandum letter advocating religious liberty protections.  As before, we have differing views on the underlying question of SSM recognition, and the letter takes a position only on the need for religious liberty protections.  Our proposal has developed a bit over time, and this latest letter joins previous state letters archived here (MOJ from August 2, 2009).

Tom

Friday, April 22, 2011

Passion Poems by George Herbert

I recently read that Herbert, the great 17th-century Anglican poet and clergyman, was a man of social commitment as well as penetrating spiritual insight.  He was briefly a member of Parliament before leaving his seat in 1624 to become a rector in small country parishes.  Scholars suggest that he had entered public service, with a vision of the "Christian commonwealth" in mind, to try to support efforts to preserve peace with Spain.  But he resigned in disillusionment when the pro-war faction succeeded in dissolving the treaty.

"The Passion"

Since blood is fittest, Lord, to write
Thy sorrows in, and bloody fight;
My heart hath store; write there, where in
One box doth lie both ink and sin:

That when sin spies so many foes,
Thy whips, thy nails, thy wounds, thy woes,
All come to lodge there, sin may say,
No room for me, and fly away.

Sin being gone, oh fill the place,
And keep possession with thy grace;
Lest sin take courage and return,
And all the writings blot or burn.

"Redemption"

Having been tenant long to a rich Lord,
Not thriving, I resolved to be bold,
And make a suit unto him, to afford
A new small-rented lease, and cancell th' old.

In heaven at his manour I him sought:
They told me there, that he was lately gone
About some land, which he had dearly bought
Long since on earth, to take possession.

I straight return'd, and knowing his great birth,
Sought him accordingly in great resorts;
In cities, theatres, gardens, parks, and courts:
At length I heard a ragged noise and mirth 

Of thieves and murderers: there I him espied,
Who straight, Your suit is granted, said, and died.

Friday, April 15, 2011

More on the Ministerial Exception

Caroline Corbin has a third post at Concurring Opinions arguing against the ministerial exception to anti-discrimination laws.  The post makes a couple of claims.  One is that many discrimination suits do not raise religious questions:

For example, imagine a church fires a teacher who has an extramarital affair, arguing that she violated the church’s proscription against sex outside marriage. In a sex discrimination case, the issue of whether sex discrimination has occurred depends on whether the school applies the religious policy equally to male and female teachers. The court will not have to resolve any doctrinal dispute or otherwise evaluate the religious merit of the proffered reason: no one questions the school’s religious belief that sex outside of marriage is forbidden.

I still think this doesn't acknowledge the real-world problem of plaintiffs arguing "pretext."  The facts above are simple and clean, but most real cases are more complicated.  Either the church's proferred reason for dismissing the plaintiff is more nuanced--an asserted judgment call about his or her suitability or performance--or the church tries to distinguish other instances (say, the male ministers who weren't dismissed) on some ground.  Even in the case of the extramarital affairs, for example, if the church says that other ministers were sufficiently repentant while the plaintiff was not, the court now faces religious questions: is there a difference concerning repentance in the two situations; did the church have a reason for starting to emphasize repentance more than in the past; etc.

There are hypotheticals--and some cases--that don't raise religious questions.  But one ground for the ministerial exception is that most real-world cases will involve some such question.  To some extent it's a prophylactic rule, I suppose, but that doesn't make it unjustified.

Second, Prof. Corbin's premise is that "no religious determinations by courts" is the only ground for the ministerial exception.  And in her argument, "no religious determinations" operates as a freestanding, disembodied principle.  I think that's wrong.  The rule against religious determinations, while correct, is part of a broader notion of church-state separation as autonomy of religious life from government involvement.  If the rule is not embedded in such a broader vision, I don't see why we should care about it.  Overriding religious organizations' decisions on clergy is, at least presumptively, a violation of that broader vision of separation/autonomy.

Focusing only on "no religious determinations," and treating it as a stand-alone rule, leads Prof. Corbin to conclude that it's the ministerial exception, not the involvement of government in a clergy dispute, that violates the Establishment Clause--because to apply the exception, the court has to make a religious judgment about who is a "minister."  Of course, the same is true any time the court has to define what's "religious" and therefore falls under the Free Exercise or Establishment clauses.  To me, this shows that the "no religious determinations" principle can't stand alone; taken by itself, it makes the Religion Clauses themselves unconstitutional.  The "no religious determinations" rule works together with other principles against government involvement in religious life--like the principle that government should not decide who will serve as clergy.  It does not work by itself and in conflict with those other rules.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Prof. Corbin vs. the Ministerial Exception: What She Overlooks

Over at Concurring Opinions, Professor Caroline Corbin (U. Miami Law) argues that "the religion clauses [of the First Amendment] do not justify the ministerial exception" to antidiscimination laws.  She dismisses both strands in the intertwined argument for protecting churches.  I think her analysis overlooks several crucial points.

First, Prof. Corbin rejects the Establishment Clause argument "that resolving anti-discrimination cases [by clergy] will lead courts to substitute their judgment for that of the religious institution on spiritual and theological matters."  She says that the Establishment Clause means only that court may not "independently evaluate a minister's spiritual or theological qualifications"--for example, by ruling that "a church was wrong to fire a choir director for her choice of music because the music chosen was in fact perfectly suitable for Sunday services."  Under this standard, she assures, "many discrimination suits do not present any religious questions."

This overlooks, among other things. the central role of "pretext" questions in antidiscrimination cases, including Hosanna-Tabor.  Plaintiffs commonly say --as does Perich, the dismissed teacher here -- that their case presents no religious issue because the religious reason the church gives for acting did not actually motivate it.  But in order to determine whether a (religious) reason was a pretext, courts typically have to delve into its details and assess its credibility--since, of course, a major factor in deciding whether a given reason is sincere is whether it's at least colorable on its merits.  Antidiscrimination suits thus constantly invite courts to evaluate churches' religious assertions.  It's immaterial that the evaluation is a part of a "pretext" analysis rather than (as Prof. Corbin would have it) an "independent" determination.

In addition, Prof. Corbin seems to have too narrow an understanding of what constitutes a religious question.  Hosanna-Tabor refused to let Perich return early from her disability leave because, among other things, the school worried that her return would disrupt the students' school year.  In the context of a ministerial position, these facts surely lead quickly into religious inquiries.  Suppose that when a pastor seeks to return early from leave, the church declines because it judges that the congregation's members have become used to the interim pastor's preaching and counseling.  If the court were to hear and evaluate the plaintiff's argument that "No, the impact on the congregation wouldn't be very serious," it would dive immediately into religious judgments about the pastors'  effectiveness and the congregation's needs.  Perich was not a pastor, but she was formally commissioned as a minister--designating her as a clergy member in the church's eyes--and she had religious duties with respect to her students, so these concerns applied to her position as well.  But my main point here is about the ministerial exception in general: it is justified because religious questions are far more likely to appear in antidiscrimination suits than Prof. Corbin admits.

Another common problem with clergy antidiscrimination suits is present in Hosanna-Tabor: the church lost confidence in Perich as a commissioned minister because of her insubordinate manner in insisting she must return early and her threats to sue.  (Prof. Corbin claims that these facts are irrelevant because the church did not refer to them until after it fired her, but from what I can tell that does not appear to be the case.)  Many churches follow the New Testament exhortation that believers should resolve internal matters without resort to civil courts.  If a church cannot sanction a clergy member for disregarding that process without facing a retaliation suit, then antidiscrimination law will not only entangle courts in religious questions but will directly override churches' doctrinal tenets about how clergy should conduct themselves.  (Prof. Corbin elsewhere asserts that churches should be able to carry out their "religious tenets" concerning clergy, but not, for some reason, this one.) 

Finally, on the free exercise side, Prof. Corbin relies entirely on precedent--Employment Division v. Smith--in arguing that ordering a church to reinstate a dismissed clergy member does not violate free exercise rights.  But here she omits relevant language in Smith.  Even as it upheld most "neutral, generally applicable laws," Smith also said that the First Amendment "prohibits government from lending its power to one other side or the other in controversies over religious authority."  When a court orders reinstatement of a clergy member who the religious group believes should no longer be in the position, the court imposes state power in a controversy over religious authority.  The lower courts, which have uniformly preserved the ministerial exception after Smith, have properly followed this language.

After all this, Prof. Corbin reassures us that religious organizations still have some protection under ... general freedom of association (in other words, no more protection than any other organization expressing its beliefs).  Her post is a striking example of a struggle to avoid the obvious: the First Amendment's has two clauses specifically about religion, and they might sometimes require special rules protecting religion.

Tom B. (back after a hiatus)

Friday, August 6, 2010

Bonhoeffer on Justification by Faith as the Ground for Community

I'n my experience, the Christian doctrine that justification is by grace alone, not by our works or some other  contribution we make, is a message of great and joyous freedom.  A big reason I'm a Protestant is the heritage of that message.  Ever since New Testament times, people have worried that the message undermines moral behavior, but I think that Paul answered that well in his letters.  But is the emphasis on justification by grace alone individualistic--just "me and Jesus"?  I ask that sometimes as a Protestant who hangs around a lot with Catholics who are always talking about community and "the social nature of the human person."  Well, here's a passage from Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Life Together, which our church house group just read, that eloquently explains how the emphasis on grace alone is precisely the reason why community is so important.  It's beautifully Protestant and, I think, beautifully Catholic, worth an extended quote:

The death and the life of the Christian is not determined by his own resources; rather he finds both only in the Word that comes to him from the outside, in God’s Word to him.  The Reformers expressed it this way: Our righteousness is an ‘alien righteousness’ a righteousness that comes outside of us (extra nos).  They were saying that the Christian is dependent on the Word of God spoken to him.  He is pointed outward, to the Word that comes to him.  The Christian lives wholly by the truth of God’s Word in Jesus Christ.  If someone asks him, Where is your salvation, your righteousness? he can never point to himself.  He points to the Word of God in Jesus Christ, which assures him salvation and righteousness.  He is as alert as possible to this Word.  Because he daily hungers and thirsts for righteousness, he daily desires the redeeming Word.  And it can come only from the outside.  In himself he is destitute and dead.  Help must come from the outside, and it has come and comes daily and anew in the Word of Jesus Christ, bringing redemption, righteousness, innocence and blessedness.

But God has put this Word in the mouth of men in order that it may be communicated to other men. When one person is struck by the Word, he speaks it to others. God has willed that we should seek and find His living Word in the witness of a brother, in the mouth of man. Therefore, the Christian needs another Christian who speaks God’s Word to him. He needs him again and again when he becomes uncertain and discouraged, for by himself he cannot help himself without belying the truth. He needs his brother man as a bearer and proclaimer of the divine word of salvation. He needs his brother solely because of Jesus Christ. The Christ in his own heart is weaker than the Christ in the word of his brother, his own heart is uncertain, his brother’s is sure

And that also clarifies the goal of all Christian community: they meet one another as bringers of the message of salvation.  As such, God permits them to meet together and gives them community.  Their fellowship is founded solely upon Jesus Christ and this ‘alien righteousness.' . . . 

Arizona School-Choice Case

As many of you know, the Supreme Court is reviewing the Ninth Circuit's decision striking down Arizona's school-choice law that gives taxpayers tax credits for contributing to "student tuition organizations" that support scholarships at private, including religious schools.  Despite the huge similarities between this case and Zelman, where the Court upheld properly-designed school voucher programs, the Ninth Circuit stretched and strained to strike down this program.  I wrote this amicus brief together with Doug Laycock (now at Virginia) for the Catholic bishops, the Christian Legal Society, and others, pointing out how the court of appeals utterly disregarded the principles of respecting choice in religious matters that animated the voucher decision and should animate the Religion Clauses.  Other briefs in the case, as they are filed, are here

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

My Take on the Healthcare/Abortion Issue

I've been sufficiently consumed in associate-dean duties that I haven't blogged for months about anything,  including the debate over the health-care law and abortion.  I have, however, written a memorandum posted on the Democrats for Life of America website, arguing that the pro-life Democrats who voted for the bill acted quite reasonably in doing so.  Here's part of the summary:

This memorandum has three purposes.  First, it provides a brief reminder that PPACA contains many provisions reflecting pro-life values and having pro-life effects.  Second, it assesses the two major criticisms of PPACA concerning abortion raised by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).  Although the USCCB has been the most detailed and thoughtful critic of the statute on abortion-related matters, this memorandum concludes that there are convincing answers to the USCCB’s criticisms and thus it was eminently reasonable for pro-life legislators to support PPACA. 

Finally, the memorandum concludes that it also makes perfect sense for a pro-life legislator to support further efforts to clarify restrictions on abortion funding and protections of religious conscience in the context of a stand-alone bill.  Unlike the context of the PPACA vote, enactment of stand-alone clarifications will not destroy health-reform legislation and its many positive pro-life features and effects.  But support for such further clarification should in no way be seized on as an admission that PPACA’s provisions against abortion funding were inadequate. 

In particular, as the memo indicates, I think that the USCCB's criticism of the community-health-center funding overlooks that the statute's language most sensibly is read to say that the funding is to go through HHS accounts that are already subject to the Hyde Amendment and accompanying regulations (the provision refers to "accounts within HHS" and to "increas[ing] funding"); and the commingling of funds there solidifies the proposition that these funding increases cannot be used by CHCs for abortion.

In the Alvare/Jost debate, Professor Jost cites my memorandum, and my argument is indeed an expansion of a couple of the arguments he's made over the last few months.  He does misidentify me as a Catholic, whereas MOJ readers (at least those who've read for a while) will know that I've been a kind of Protestant observer welcomed at this site (maybe because I'm deeply drawn to Catholic social doctrine, maybe on the thought that I'll see the ecclesial light someday).  Jost and I have corresponded, and I imagine there will be some sort of correction at dotCommonweal.  The misidentification doesn't hurt his legal argument (nor would my being a Catholic bolster mine or his).

Tom

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Biblical Israel and Modern Political Thought

This book, The Hebrew Republic: Jewish Sources and the Transformation of European Political Thought, looks really interesting (and manageable at only 240 pages!):

Eric Nelson’s magnificent book is a trim and incisive scholarly history that aims to show how something called the Hebrew Republic “transformed political thought” between the sixteenth and early eighteenth centuries. The Hebrew Republic, imagined by Christian scholars during that golden age of new thinking about politics, was a reconstruction of the Israelite state described in the Bible. Its constitution, they believed, had been given directly by God and as such was a model of the perfect polity. Nelson argues that the discovery of this mythic civic past helped European political thinkers to establish three of the modern West’s “fundamental ideals”: the superiority of kingless government; the right of governments to redistribute wealth; and religious toleration. For the history of Western politics, this makes the story of the Hebrew Republic momentous indeed. . . .

Scholars working on modernity—and there are more and more of them as post-modernism’s star wanes—have revived the venerable view of secularization as a key ingredient in Western modernity. In different ways, both Mark Lilla’s The Stillborn God and Jonathan Israel’s ongoing Radical Enlightenment trilogy link modernity’s rise to the decline of religion.

The Hebrew Republic boldly claims that the secularism-as-modernism narrative is incomplete at best, and at worst totally backwards. The history of Israelite theocracy offered what we might call a “faith-based” route to toleration, which existed alongside the secularizing Spinozist path explored by Jonathan Israel. Republican exclusivism likewise emerged from a profound belief in and engagement with the Bible, not a rejection of it. Indeed, so deeply does Nelson find the Hebrew Republic enracinated in modernity that he wonders, near the end of the book, whether it might be that “God remains our sleeping sovereign after all.”