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Religion
in the public square
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The
First Amendment
Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for
a redress of grievances.
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The
most telling religion stories arent usually hidden inside
churches, synagogues, mosques or temples. Theyre out in public,
where people of all sorts of different faiths mix with each other,
along with people who have no faith at all. They happen in schools,
neighborhoods, workplaces, hospitals, government meetings, movie
theaters, courts, science labs, football stadiums and more. Often
stories begin when one person lives out his or her beliefs in a
way that feels uncomfortable or unfair to others such as
a supervisor who invites workers to a weekly Bible study in her
office, a pharmacist who refuses to fill a prescription for birth
control or an atheist who posts anti-religion bumper stickers in
his cubicle. Sometimes they occur when someone asks for an accommodation
to practice faith such as the middle-school soccer player
who wants to wear her hijab despite rules against head coverings
or the inmate who requests a special diet. These conflicts mostly
can be traced to the tension in the First Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution, which prohibits the government from endorsing one
religion over others while also protecting all Americans right
to practice their faith, whatever it is. Such conflicts often draw
journalists into the nuances of the legal system and faith, with
a good dose of politics as well. The U.S. Supreme Court has yet
to rule decisively on many church-state issues, so journalists should
be aware that court rulings may vary region to region, allowing
people to act in different ways depending on where they live. Many
disputes involve peoples responses to other religious traditions.
A movie about Jesus death or a cartoon about the Muslim Prophet
Muhammad can set off reactions throughout the world.
Resources
The
resources available are endless, so we will not try to list them
all here.We recommend checking the ReligionLink
archives on the topics you encounter for interview sources and
background on many issues.
Two primary sources are ReligionLinks extensive Guide
to Church-State Experts and Organizations and Guide
to Experts on Religion and Pop Culture.
The First
Amendment Center offers research, news and analysis of First
Amendment issues. It has offices in Nashville, Tenn., and Arlington,Va.,
and is an operating program of the Freedom Forum.
The Pew Forum
on Religion & Public Life distributes information, surveys and
expert opinions about issues at the intersection of religion and
public affairs. It doesnt take sides on policy issues and
is a project of the Pew Research Center.
Several
email services will help journalists keep abreast of news about
religion in the public square. They include:
Sightings,
a twice-weekly email from the Martin Marty Center at the University
of Chicago, reports and comments on religion in public life,mostly
from a mainline Protestant perspective.
Crosswalk.coms Religion
Today summarizes news from around the world.
Christianity Todays CT
Direct daily email includes news and commentary from an evangelical
perspective.
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