RFRA Rights Revisited: Substantial Burdens, Judicial Competence, and the Religious Nonprofit Cases

S. W. Gaylord
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The most recent challenge to the free exercise of religion is here. And while it stems from the same legislation that prompted the action in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. — the contraception mandate under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “ACA”) — it raises unique and equally important issues: what constitutes a substantial burden on the exercise of religion and who gets to decide (the religious adherents or the courts). In Hobby Lobby, the government contended that for-profit corporations could not exercise religion and, consequently, could not avail themselves of the broad protection afforded free exercise under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. In the seven religious nonprofit cases pending before the United States Supreme Court, the government acknowledges that RFRA applies to religious nonprofits but now alleges that the ACA does not substantially burden the free exercise of these religious organizations. In particular, the government argues that the accommodation to the contraception mandate (which permits religious nonprofits to avoid directly providing coverage for all FDA-approved contraceptives and sterilization procedures by giving notice to their insurance issuers or third party administrators that the religious organizations object to providing such coverage) does not burden, let alone substantially burden, the religious nonprofits’ exercise of religion.To date, eight circuit courts of appeals have sided with the government, instructing the religious nonprofits that their sincerely held belief — that the accommodation makes them complicit in a grave moral wrong (i.e., the provision of contraceptives and abortifacients) — is incorrect because the ACA, not any actions by the religious nonprofits, is the legal cause of the insurance issuers’ and TPAs’ obligation to provide such coverage. Under the majority’s “Pontius Pilate” defense, the accommodation “washes the hands” of religious nonprofits, cleansing them of any legal or moral responsibility for providing the objectionable coverage. As a result, the religious nonprofits cannot meet their burden under RFRA because the accommodation does not substantially burden their exercise of religion. Only the Eighth Circuit has ruled for the religious nonprofits. The Supreme Court’s resolution of the circuit conflict, therefore, will impact the scope of free exercise protection far beyond the ACA context by deciding whether courts or religious practitioners have the right to determine when government-mandated actions actually contravene sincerely held religious beliefs.This article contends that the circuit court majority is wrong. Contrary to the majority’s claim, Hobby Lobby and Holt v. Hobbs preclude courts from deciding whether the ACA (or any other statute) actually burdens a religious adherent’s sincerely held beliefs. Although, as Chief Justice Marshall famously declared, “it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to declare what the law is,” courts lack the authority and competence to declare what the religious commitments of a faith are and when those commitments are violated. Under the Court’s free exercise precedents, courts can determine only whether the government puts a religious practitioner to the choice of engaging in conduct that violates her beliefs or of disobeying the government’s policy and facing “serious” consequences. Religious and philosophical questions regarding moral complicity are left to religious adherents, not the courts. As the Founders recognized, religious and moral questions transcend the legal, imposing a different — and higher — obligation on religious believers. For religious adherents, only God (through a religious authority determined in accordance with their sincere religious beliefs) can determine whether an action makes them complicit in sin. Consequently, as the Court explained in Hobby Lobby, “question[s]” about moral complicity are ones “that the federal courts have no business addressing.”
重新审视RFRA权利:实质性负担、司法权限和宗教非营利案件
最近对宗教信仰自由的挑战就在这里。虽然它源于促使Burwell诉Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc.一案的同一立法——《患者保护和平价医疗法案》(“ACA”)下的避孕规定——但它提出了独特而同样重要的问题:什么构成了宗教活动的实质性负担,谁来决定(宗教信徒还是法院)。在“爱好游说团”一案中,政府辩称,营利性公司不能行使宗教信仰,因此不能利用《恢复宗教自由法案》为自由行使宗教信仰提供的广泛保护。在美国最高法院审理的七个非营利性宗教案件中,政府承认RFRA适用于宗教非营利组织,但现在声称ACA并没有实质性地负担这些宗教组织的自由活动。特别是,政府认为,对避孕规定的适应(允许宗教非营利组织通过通知其保险发行人或第三方管理人员,宗教组织反对提供此类保险,从而避免直接为所有fda批准的避孕和绝育程序提供保险)不会给宗教非营利组织的宗教活动带来负担,更不用说实质性负担了。到目前为止,8个巡回上诉法院站在政府一边,指示宗教非营利组织,他们真诚地相信,这种住宿使他们参与了严重的道德错误(即,提供避孕药具和堕胎药),这是不正确的,因为ACA,而不是宗教非营利组织的任何行动,是保险发行商和tpa提供此类保险的义务的法律原因。在多数派“本提乌斯·彼拉多”的辩护下,这种妥协“洗净了”宗教非营利组织的手,洗净了他们提供令人反感的保险的任何法律或道德责任。因此,宗教非营利组织无法履行其在RFRA下的负担,因为这种便利并没有实质上负担他们的宗教活动。只有第八巡回法院做出了有利于宗教非营利组织的裁决。因此,最高法院对巡回法院冲突的解决,将决定法院或宗教从业者是否有权决定政府强制的行为何时实际上违反了真诚的宗教信仰,从而影响到保护自由行使的范围,远远超出了ACA的范围。本文认为,巡回法院的多数意见是错误的。与多数人的主张相反,“爱好游说团”和“霍尔特诉霍布斯案”排除了法院判定《平价医疗法案》(或任何其他法规)是否实际上对宗教信徒真诚持有的信仰造成了负担。尽管正如首席大法官马歇尔所说的那样,“宣布法律是什么,这显然是司法部门的职责和职责”,但法院缺乏权力和能力来宣布一种信仰的宗教承诺是什么,以及何时违反了这些承诺。根据最高法院的自由行使先例,法院只能决定政府是否让宗教信仰者选择从事违反其信仰的行为,还是不服从政府的政策并面临“严重”后果。有关道德共犯的宗教和哲学问题留给了宗教信徒,而不是法庭。正如国父们所认识到的那样,宗教和道德问题超越了法律问题,对宗教信徒施加了不同的、更高的义务。对于宗教信徒来说,只有上帝(通过与他们真诚的宗教信仰相一致的宗教权威)才能决定一个行为是否使他们成为犯罪的同谋。因此,正如最高法院在“Hobby Lobby”一案中所解释的那样,关于道德共犯的“问题”是“联邦法院无权处理的问题”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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