Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Supreme Court Delivers Setback to Free Speech and Religious Liberty
Supreme Court Delivers Setback to Free Speech and Religious Liberty
Jun 16, 2025 12:02 PM

“This ruling is more in the spirit of Nero Caesar than in the spirit of Thomas Jefferson,” said Russell D. Moore. “This is damaging not only to the conscience rights of Christians, but to all citizens.”

Moore, the president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, was responding to the U.S. Supreme Court’s refusal to rule on a case involving Elane Photography and its owners Jonathan and Elaine Huguenin. According to the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), Elaine received an email in 2006 asking her to photograph a mitment ceremony” between Vanessa Willock and her same-sex partner. Willock asked if Elaine would be “open to helping us celebrate our day . . . .” Elaine politely declined to use her artistic talents to express a celebratory message at odds with her deep convictions. (Elaine had previously declined requests from others for things such as nude maternity photos.)

Willock, a licensed attorney who has served in various paid “diversity” positions, filed plaint with the New Mexico Human Rights Commission. After a one-day administrative trial in 2008, mission ruled against the Huguenins and ordered them to pay $6,637.94 in attorneys’ fees. The case made its way through the state court system, with the New Mexico Supreme Court ultimately affirming mission’s coercive decision. In an ominous concurring opinion, one justice wrote that the Huguenins “now pelled by law promise the very religious beliefs that inspire their lives,” adding “it is the price of citizenship.”

ADF attorneys representing the Huguenins are presenting only one claim to the U.S. Supreme Court—that the punishment of Elane Photography violates the constitutionally protected freedom “not to speak,” known as pelled speech doctrine.

The government must not be empowered to either censor peaceful speech or force citizens into speaking against their will. The question presented to the Supreme Court reads as follows: “Whether applying a state modations statute to require a photographer to create expressive images and picture-books conveying messages that conflict with her religious beliefs violates the First Amendment’s ban pelled speech.”

mitment ceremony of the two women was filled with expression: the liturgy, the sermon and prayers, the music, the vows, etc. municates stories and messages through its images. Wedding photography is part of the celebration of the ceremony. Vanessa Willock affirms this, having asked Elaine Huguenin to “celebrate” the event. Wedding photographers have to use the best lighting, choose the right angles, and pose the couple—including instructing them on how to kiss, where to caress, etc.—all for the purpose municating through art something of beauty about the momentous event.

Elaine politely declined because she cannot use her artistic expression to celebrate events municate ideas about marriage with which she disagrees.

While the New Mexico Supreme Court rejected the Huguenins’ religious free exercise and free speech arguments, the U.S. Supreme Court denied review in response to the couple’s free speech claim. Moore, the Southern Baptist Convention’s lead religious freedom advocate, expressed disappointment that the justices did not accept a case that asks “whether the state can pretend to be a god over the conscience.”

“No one is seeking to outlaw photographers from working at same-sex marriage or civil union ceremonies,” said Moore. “At issue is whether these persons will be forced by the coercive power of the state to participate in something they believe to be sinful.”

ADF attorneys point out that the central concern in the case—government punishment of Americans for declining to create or promote messages with which they disagree—is alive in other ADF cases moving forward around the country.

“Only unjust laws separate what people say from what they believe,” said Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel Jordan Lorence. “The First Amendment protects our freedom to speak or not speak on any issue without fear of punishment. We had hoped the U.S. Supreme Court would use this case to affirm this basic constitutional principle; however, the court will likely have several more opportunities to do just that in other cases of ours that are working their way through the court system.”

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
The DIA, Public Art, and the Common Good
In today’s Acton Commentary, “It’s Time to Privatize the Detroit Institute of Arts,” I look at the case of the DIA in the context of Detroit’s bankruptcy proceedings. One of my basic points is that it is not necessary for art to be owned by the government in order for art to serve the public. Art needn’t be publicly-funded in order to contribute to mon good. In the piece I criticizeHrag Vartanian for this conflation, but this view is in...
How Improving Vocabulary Improves Human Flourishing
One of the core principles of the Acton Institute mitment to wealth creation since material impoverishment undermines the conditions that allow humans to flourish. We consider helping our fellow citizens to escape material deprivation to be one of the most morally significant economic concerns of our age. But how to do we gauge whether our neighbors are able to improve their economic security? A key metric that is often used is e or social mobility, the ability of an individual...
How Church Foreign Aid Programs Make Things Worse
In an interview with Forbes‘ Jerry Bower, Peter Greer, president and CEO of the the Hope International, explains why church foreign aid programs often hurts those its meant to help: Greer: There’s an entrepreneur named Jeff Rutt, and after the fall of the Soviet Union he had a desire to go over with his church and help. So, initially they did what people so often do, which is see that people don’t have food and then send over food, and...
Europe’s Curious Conception of Religious Freedom
By failing to recognize the importance of religion and its relationship to human rights, says Roger Trigg, European courts are progressively eroding religious liberty: [T]he Council of Europe affirmed in 2007 that “states must require religious leaders to take an unambiguous stand in favour of the precedence of human rights, as set forth in the European Convention of Human Rights, over any religious principle.” It is ironic that freedom of religion is expressly protected by the Convention and that the...
Women Speak For Themselves: ‘Don’t Insult Our Intelligence’
Ever since the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced that requiring most employers to cover birth control, abortificients and abortions as part of employee health care coverage, there has been a firestorm of attention focused on the mandate. Both secular and religious employers have fought the order, stating that it violates their moral and/or religious principles to pay for these things, which many do not believe fall into the category of “health care.” (See Acton PowerBlog posts here,...
Has Foodie Culture Forgotten the Poor?
Food has been an essential part of Christian culture since Jesus shared a last meal with his Apostles in Jerusalem before his crucifixion. So it’s not surprising that Christians — especially young Christians in urban areas — are the epicurean hobby culture of “foodies.” But as Erik Bonkovsky, a pastor in Richmond, Virginia, says, a truly great and thoroughly Christian food scene is one that blesses the privileged and under-privileged alike: Foodie culture—particularly with a local and healthy dimension—is now...
Pat Robertson, Poverty, and Possibilities
Television evangelist Pat Robertson is certainly known for saying provocative things, and he’s done it again. When Robertson’s co-host, Wendy Griffith, said not all families could afford to have multiple children, Robertson replied, ‘That’s the big problem, especially in Appalachia. They don’t know about birth control. They just keep having babies.’ ‘You see a string of all these little ragamuffins, and not enough food to eat and so on,’ he said, and it’s desperate poverty.’ Let’s not discuss how horrible...
Oikophilia Will Save the World
The central thesis of philosopher Roger Scruton case for an environmental conservatism, says Leah Kostamo, is that the primary motivation for care for the earth is oikophilia—a love of home. Oikophilia, Scruton argues, is what emboldens people to make sacrifices for their surrounding environment and neighbour. Scruton spends many pages tracing the history of oikophilia, particularly in his native Britain, and howoikophilia has been destroyed by internationalism and big-government subsidies and regulations. [. . .] In light of the success...
Contraceptive Mandate Divides Appeals Courts
Two different federal appeals courts have issued opposite rulings on whether Obamacare can pany owners to violate their religious beliefs by providing contraception and abortifacients to their employees. A divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit ruled that a Pennsylvania pany owned by a Mennonite family ply with the contraceptive mandate contained in the Affordable Care Act. The majority said it “respectfully disagrees” with judges in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit...
The Growth Of The Global Middle Class
It’s true: the middle-class is growing, globally. Here in the U.S., we keep hearing dire warnings about a shrinking middle class, but not across the globe. Alan Murray, president of The Pew Research Center, says witnessing its third great surge of middle-class growth. The first was brought about in the 19th century by the Industrial Revolution; the second surge came in the years following World War II. Both unfolded primarily in the United States and Europe. While those undergoing this...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved