Editor's Note: During Christmas and New Year, our team will be spending time with family and celebrating the birth of our Savior. We will be back with The Weekly on January 8, 2021. We hope you have a Merry Christmas and a happy New Year! Courts overturn pandemic restrictions that discriminate against houses of worshipIn issuing pandemic restrictions, governors in several states have violated the Free Exercise clause of the First Amendment by treating religious organizations less favorably than secular organizations. As the ERLC has repeatedly advocated in our engagements with governor’s offices and city halls around the country throughout this pandemic, churches must be treated the same as similar businesses, spaces, and activities. Fortunately, several recent court decisions have upheld religious liberty and overturned these non-neutral applications. The national turning point in this judicial shift was the religious liberty case decided by the Supreme Court the Wednesday before the Thanksgiving holiday, Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo. As more cases have worked their way through the federal courts, it appears this New York case has set a new standard for how such disputes should be resolved. The Roman Catholic Diocese case was based on restrictions imposed in October by New York Gov. Mario Cuomo. The governor issued an Executive Order that imposed severe restrictions on attendance at religious services in areas classified as “red” or “orange” zones. In red zones, no more than 10 persons could attend each religious service, and in orange zones, attendance was capped at 25. While a house of worship in a red zone could have no more than 10 persons, businesses categorized as “essential” (which included such services as acupuncture clinics) could admit as many people as they wanted. In orange zones, churches were limited to 25 persons, while nonessential businesses could decide for themselves how many persons to admit into their facilities. This Week at the ERLC
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News From Capitol HillThis morning in Washington at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Vice President Mike Pence, Second Lady Karen Pence, and Surgeon General Jerome Adams received the COVID-19 vaccine. The public officials join frontline healthcare professionals and senior citizens in long-term care facilities at receiving this first to market in the U.S. vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech. "Karen and I wanted to step forward and take this vaccine to assure the American people that while we cut red tape, we cut no corners. Thanks to the great work at the National Institutes of Health, and the great and careful work of the FDA and the leadership of our president and Operation Warp Speed, the American people can be confident we have one, and perhaps within hours, two safe and effective coronavirus vaccines for you and for your family," said the vice president, according to a report by NBC News. Our nation is nearing the end of a wearisome year from a historic pandemic that reached yet another grave milestone passing 300,000 Americans deaths from the COVID-19 virus. Such a statistic is difficult to grieve because it’s challenging to even comprehend. And yet, many more people every day, have friends and family members who have or are now battling for their lives after contracting the virus. As the people of God we know that in such battles, we need our church communities. We need to pray together, provide meals for one another, support the nurses and doctors and pharmaceutical professionals providing healthcare, and yes, we need to gather together as the church. As the ERLC policy team helps defend fundamental religious liberty rights during this crisis, we also want to help Christians understand public health officials' guidance to keep one another, especially our vulnerable neighbors, safe. Specifically, the ERLC is equipping Christians with information about the COVID-19 vaccines and the public servants, like Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health, who made them possible.
Here are our latest resources: On this episode of the WeeklyTech podcast, Jason Thacker is joined by Dr. Paul Miller, professor in the Practice of International Affairs at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service. They talk about his forthcoming book, Just War and Ordered Liberty, and the use of technology in the international order. With the first COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer being delivered throughout the U.S., we wanted to bring you a discussion about the vaccines between Russell Moore and Dr. Francis Collins, the Director of the National Institutes of Health. From The Public SquareWhy We Plan to Get Vaccinated: A Christian Moral Perspective
Hunger study predicts 168,000 pandemic-linked child deaths
Federal Agencies Loosen Requirements For Faith-Based Grantees The Release amends existing rules to loosen restrictions on faith-based organizations operation of programs and activities funded by federal grants. The new rules impact grants by the Departments of Education, Homeland Security, Agriculture, Justice, Labor, Veterans Affairs, Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, and Agency for International Development. Church vandalism exposes divisions over faith and politics
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