Catholic Bishops Avoid Direct Rebuff of Biden over Abortion; Forty-One Countries Ban Religion-Related Groups; Christian Florist Settles Suit with Same-Sex Couple; Congress Issues Resolution Condemning Iran for Persecution of Bahai; Can Public Money go to Religious Schools?
Catholic Bishops Avoid Direct Rebuff of Biden over Abortion Issue
U.S. Catholic bishops overwhelmingly approved a long-anticipated document on Communion last week that stops short of calling for withholding the sacrament from politicians such as President Joe Biden who support abortion rights but offers plenty of tacit justification for individual bishops to do so. The document does not identify Biden or other politicians by name, though it says at one point, “Lay people who exercise some form of public authority have a special responsibility to embody Church teaching.”
Forty-One Countries Ban Religion-Related Groups
Forty-one countries – or around a fifth (21 percent) of those evaluated – banned at least one religion-related group in 2019, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of laws and policies in effect in 198 countries in 2019, the most recent year for which comprehensive data is available. Jehovah’s Witnesses and Baha’is were among the most frequently banned groups. In related news, U.S. Secretary of State Blinken said that he was designating Russia, as well as China and eight other countries “as Countries of Particular Concern for having engaged in or tolerated ‘systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.'” The other countries still on the US list for “religious freedom violations” are Myanmar, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan. Algeria, Comoros, Cuba and Nicaragua were placed on a watch list.
Christian Florist Settles Suit with Same-Sex Couple
Congress Issues Resolution Condemning Iran for Persecution of Bahai
The US House of Representatives is preparing to vote on a draft resolution condemning the state-sponsored persecution of the Baha’i community of Iran in a bipartisan move. Voices are mounting in Congress criticizing these violations against the Baha’i community. The Iranian regime and its affiliated militias, like the Houthis in Yemen, are accused of persecuting the Baha’is.
Can Public Money go to Religious Schools? Supreme Court to Weigh Issue
The latest case to come before the U.S. Supreme Court on religious rights and school choice has been nearly 150 years in the making. The justices on Dec. 8 will consider the state of Maine’s exclusion of “sectarian” religious schools from its distinctive “tuitioning” program that first took hold in the 1870s, in which towns without their own high schools pay the tuition for students to attend public schools in other communities or private schools. The consequences for private school choice and government aid to religion will likely be felt well beyond that state.