Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Religious liberty in employment marches forward across the Atlantic
Religious liberty in employment marches forward across the Atlantic
Mar 16, 2026 5:11 AM

On Friday, the Department of Health and Human Services issued two interim rules rolling back the HHS mandate, which requires employers to furnish female employees with contraception, sterilization, and potentially abortifacient drugs for “free.”

The two rules, which take effect immediately, do not repeal the HHS mandate. One rule grants an exemption to nonprofits, closely held businesses, and some publicly traded corporations that have sincerely held religious objections to its terms. The other allows all but publicly traded corporations to refuse ply due to moral, but not religiously based, objections.

“The new rule is a huge win for business and ministry leaders who, since 2013, have been fighting the government’s disregard for their religious beliefs and moral convictions,” said Jeremy Dys, deputy general counsel for First Liberty. “Now, they can lead their organizations in good conscience without choosing between their convictions and obeying law.”

Those who refused ply with the old rule faced a $100-a-day fine for each uncovered employee. The policy resulted in our government “threatening hardworking, patriotic Americans with crushing fines for simply seeking to live their lives according to their faith,” said Family Research Council PresidentTonyPerkins on Friday.

By punishing businesses on the basis of their adherence to their religious teaching, the government in effect punishes that religion. The Ottoman Empire charged non-Muslims a tax not paid by others. Beginning in 1943, the USSR taxed priests at a rate of up to 81 percent of their e. Until today, the U.S. government provided economic disincentives to remaining faithful to any religion with well-defined teachings on contraception and/or abortion.

Yet paradoxically, it is often the underlying faith which motivated the individual to serve others in the first place. Would monks and nuns have cared for the dying without a religious motive? One of the litigants against the HHS mandate understood this. “The beliefs that inspire Christian colleges and universities and the Little Sisters of the Poor to serve munities should be protected,” said Gregory Baylor, a senior counsel for the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF).

Nor does the religious motive apply only to nonprofit work. Many entrepreneurs and business people see serving others in the marketplace as an extension of their faith. “It is by God’s grace and provision that Hobby Lobby has endured,” said pany’s founder and CEO, David Green. “Therefore, we seek to honor God by operating pany in a manner consistent with Biblical principles.”

Punishing this outlook, as the HHS mandate did, is antithetical to the American founding, which reflected a Lockean belief in the inviolability of “life, liberty, and property.” And as James Madison, the father of the U.S. Constitution, said, “Conscience is the most sacred of all property.”

The good news is this is one of two recent developments across the transatlantic sphere that upheld the integrity of religious faith as applied to the world of work.

Good news from Hungary

On September 14 – the traditional feast of Holy Cross – the European Court of Human Rights ruled that secular courts should not rule on whether clergy have been unfairly fired.

Károly Nagy, a pastor in the Reformed Church of Hungary (Magyar Református Egyház), lost his position after making public statements the denomination deemed objectionable. After exhausting the ecclesiastical court appeals process in 2006, he sued the denomination in labor and civil court.

The labor court trial ended in April 2007 on the grounds that Nagy’s case involved church, not labor, law. His civil case was dismissed in May 2009.

He turned to the ECHR in 2009, after the Hungarian Supreme Court refused to hear his case.

ADF International told the ECHR that church independence is respected by Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and Article 10 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.

On September 14, the ECHR’s Grand Chamber ruled that the former pastor’s case was “governed by ecclesiastical law, and [the church’s] decision to discontinue [his service] cannot be deemed arbitrary or manifestly unreasonable” by a secular court. The ruling is binding on all 47 member states subject to its authority, from Iceland to Azerbaijan.

This decision was implicit in a 2000 ECHR ruling holding that religious “believers’ right to freedom of religion passes the expectation that munity will be allowed to function peacefully,” because “the autonomous existence of munities is indispensable for pluralism in a democratic society.”

Ecclesiastical independence, while necessary, is a rare blessing. Upholding church integrity led holy people – perhaps most prominently Thomas Beckett and John Fisher – to the executioners’ block. As U.S. courts have ruled, it is impossible for secular courts to decide whether a church improperly fired a priest or pastor without deciding whether the church is properly following its own dogmas. In effect, that hands the right to determine church doctrine in the hands of black-robed judges instead of white-robed clerics.

The ruling in Nagy v. Hungary is a e development – and not one unfamiliar in the United States. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on an employment lawsuit against by a Detroit-area Lutheran school for dismissing Cheryl Perich, a teacher and missioned minister,” for breaking a church doctrine. Its Hosanna v. Tabor ruling affirmed that the “ministerial exception” allowing churches to decide who can or cannot serve as clergy is rooted in the First Amendment – that serving as a minister is not a civil right. (In that instance the Obama administration, through the EEOC, sided unsuccessfully against the church.)

The fact that religion, liberty, and vocation are inseparable has always lay at the heart of the American experiment. Samuel Adams said in 1776, “Driven from every other corner of the earth, freedom of thought and the right of private judgment in matters of conscience direct” new citizens on a “course to this happy country as their last asylum.”

Today’s scaling back of the HHS mandate indicates that the United States has not abandoned its role as the world’s preeminent champion of religious liberty.

The Nagy decision shows that, thankfully, Europe has not discarded this vital part of our Western heritage, either.

Both show that employment is an ponent of religious practice and, thus, something in which no government should intervene.

Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. This photo has been cropped.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Religion & Liberty: Fighting for totalitarianism’s victims
The unofficial theme for Religion & Liberty’s first issue in 2017 is despotism. In this issue, you’ll find stories from the Soviet Union, a close look into the North Korea regime and a reexamination of Hitler’s rise to power. The cover story is an interview with human rights expert Suzanne Scholte, who discusses her passion for fighting the sadistic rule of Kim Jong Un and working with North Korean defectors. After 20 years fighting for those who don’t enjoy freedom...
Why is customer service better at Starbucks than at the DMV?
Note: This is post #22 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. Prices are signals that indicate to suppliers how much is being demanded. So what happens when the government puts a cap on the price that can be charged for a product or service? Two effects are shortages and lower quality. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, economist Alex Tabarrok explains why this happens. (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d mend watching...
5 Facts about Washington’s Birthday
Today is the U.S. federal holiday known as Washington’s Birthday (not “Presidents Day—see item #1). In honor of George Washington’s birthday, here are 5 things you should know about the day set aside for our America’s premier founding father. 1. Although some state and local governments and private businesses refer to today as President’s Day, the legal public holiday is designated as “Washington’s Birthday” in section 6103(a) of title 5 of the United States Code. The observance of Washington’s birthday...
To avoid a demographic winter, Europe must understand human dignity
Like all of Europe, Poland is suffering from a steep demographic crisis. Despite a relatively large (European) population andan expansive land mass that serves as a bridge between Europe and Asia, Poland has a fertility rate lower than that of China – a nation that only recently relaxed its One-Child Policy. (Beijing now enforces its two-child policy no less ruthlessly.) Several European (and non-European) nations have tried to incentivize their citizens to have more children through various means: taxpayer subsidies...
Video: Arthur C. Brooks on how to bring America together
American Enterprise Institute President Arthur C. Brooks joined us here at the Acton Institute on Monday evening as part of the Acton Lecture Series, and as usual he delivered a great and optimistic message, even in the midst of this time of deep divisions in the United States. It’s impossible to avoid the fact that America is more deeply divided politically today than it has been in decades, and the question is whether or not the current state of affairs...
Toward a Christian view of economics
Embed from Getty Images Many Christians assume that the Bible has nothing at all to say about economics, says theologian Albert Mohler, but a biblical worldview actually has a great deal to teach us on economic matters. Mohler outlines twelve theses for what a Christian understanding of economics must do. Here are three of them: 1. It must have God’s glory as its greatestaim. For Christians, all economic theory begins with an aim to glorify God (1 Cor. 10:31). We...
Samuel Gregg on the legacy of the late Michael Novak
In a recent article for Public Discourse, Samuel Gregg articulates the great impact that the late Michael Novak had both on him personally, but also in promoting free market economics and moral living for a greater, more virtuous world. He says: When news came of the death of the theologian and philosopher Michael Novak, the loss was felt in a particularly sharp way by those of us who knew him personally. Like many people of all ages, I was fortunate...
Explainer: What is the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA)?
On Wednesday, February 15, the European Parliament approved theComprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), a free trade agreement abolishing most trade restrictions between the European Union and Canada. Negotiators hammered out the 1,600-page agreement over the course of seven years before Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and European Council President Donald Tusk signed CETA last October 30. Then, the pact swept through the Strasbourg-based European Parliament by a vote of408-254 with 33 abstentions last week. What does it do? CETA...
When morality evaporates
When Tzvetan Todorov died on Feb. 7, the Bulgarian/French philosopher and literary critic was lamented only in certain intellectual ghettoes. To the men and women eulogizing Todorov in these circles, he was feted properly if not stingily, which is most unfortunate. Finite word counts are a harsh mistress when a fellow writer endeavors to create a fully realized portrait of his or her subject. Todorov leaves behind a body of historical and moral philosophy that connects the dots between the...
How Michael Novak changed your life
Michael Novak died last Thursday at the age of 83. In a remembrance for The Hill, Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico reflects on the passing of his friend and mentor, and how he changed all of our lives: Some of my most memorable conversations took place over what would e effectively known as the Salon Novak: dinner parties that Karen and I would orchestrate where we witnessed Clare Boothe Luce contending with Jack Kemp and Bill Bennett on...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved