Freedom &
Responsibility

Latest News

Latest News

Starting in 2026, this page will showcase items from our new “Freedom and Responsibility” blog.

In the coming months and years, this feed will serve to inform and to equip you to take action. It will point you to BJC’s our ongoing work in the courts and in legislatures. And it will bring you stories from the ground, where the loss of religious freedom is felt most viscerally. Our goal is to work alongside you to build a nation where religious freedom isn’t felt, it is lived. In the end, the choice to act is ours.

Do you use an RSS reader? Click here for the RSS feed

SCOTUS hears arguments in pivotal religious liberty case involving the unprecedented creation of religious charter schools

SCOTUS hears arguments in pivotal religious liberty case involving the unprecedented creation of religious charter schools

Oklahoma v. Drummond is a critical case, testing whether longheld Establishment Clause principles in the public school context will endure under the current Supreme Court’s trend away from protecting the institutional separation of church and state.
In oral argument, U.S. Supreme Court wrestles with the limits of public school parents’ opt-out rights

In oral argument, U.S. Supreme Court wrestles with the limits of public school parents’ opt-out rights

In oral argument in the case of Mahmoud v. Taylor, the U.S. Supreme Court probed the issue of whether and to what extent parents of young schoolchildren enjoy a right under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment to opt their students out of curricular activities that conflict with their religious beliefs.
BJC urges U.S. Supreme Court to rule nation’s first publicly funded religious charter school unconstitutional

BJC urges U.S. Supreme Court to rule nation’s first publicly funded religious charter school unconstitutional

If the Court holds that states can or even must accept religious schools as charter schools, it would upend decades of Establishment Clause jurisprudence. As BJC's brief says, “The state may not directly fund religious instruction. That line has long preserved both faith and freedom. It should be respected here.”
Kentucky faith leaders urge Gov. Beshear to veto bill erecting Ten Commandments monument at state Capitol

Kentucky faith leaders urge Gov. Beshear to veto bill erecting Ten Commandments monument at state Capitol

In a letter to Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, dozens of faith leaders – including Christian leaders – explained why returning an enormous, permanent Ten Commandments monument to the grounds of the Kentucky Capitol is a bad idea.
Flurry of state legislature activity would promote religion in public schools

Flurry of state legislature activity would promote religion in public schools

State legislatures across the country are back in session and are introducing troubling bills that, if enacted, will harm the cause of religious liberty for all.
New poll: 29% of Americans espouse Christian nationalism, unchanged from 2023

New poll: 29% of Americans espouse Christian nationalism, unchanged from 2023

PRRI questioned 22,000 Americans in all 50 states, and it measured support for Christian nationalism views by asking each participant whether and to what extent they agreed or disagreed with five core beliefs tied to Christian nationalism.
Quaker congregations file suit challenging new White House immigration policy

Quaker congregations file suit challenging new White House immigration policy

A lawsuit filed by several Quaker congregations challenges the Trump administration's new policy as a violation of religious freedom protections under the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), the freedom to associate under the First Amendment, and as a violation of various provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act.
U.S. Supreme Court agrees to hear cases involving religious school funding, parent rights to opt out of grade school curriculum

U.S. Supreme Court agrees to hear cases involving religious school funding, parent rights to opt out of grade school curriculum

In the last two weeks, the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review a pair of religious liberty cases, one of which is a closely watched case in Oklahoma that may reshape the landscape of church-state law surrounding government funding of religion, and the other involves parents’ challenge to a school district removing their ability to opt out of reading curriculum assignments that they object to on religious grounds.