Individuals, Institutions, and Religious Freedom

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Richard Garnett
Associate Dean and Professor of Law, University of Notre Dame

搁别蝉辫辞苍诲别苍迟:听Gregory Kalscheur, S.J., Boston College

Date:听November 29, 2012

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Abstract

Should our laws aim to protect the religious practices and beliefs of individuals or groups, or both? Are these ends at odds with one another? What sustains the free exercise of religion in the United States? On November 29 the Boisi Center hosted legal scholars Richard Garnett and Gregory Kalscheur, S.J. to address these questions in a lively forum on religious freedom.听

Speaker Bios

Richard Garnett

Richard Garnett听is Associate Dean for Faculty Research听and Professor of Law, and concurrent Professor of Political Science, at听the听University of Notre Dame.听His areas of scholarly interest and听expertise include constitutional law, religious freedom, Catholic education and the First Amendment. He is the author of dozens of scholarly听articles and book chapters, and comments regularly in print and broadcast media on legal matters. 听His current book project,听Two There Are: 听Understanding the Separation of Church and State,听is forthcoming from Cambridge University Press.听 Prof. Garnett is the founding director of the Notre Dame听Law School鈥檚 Program on Church, State, and Society, an interdisciplinary project that focuses on the role of religious听institutions, communities, and authorities in the social order. He is also a fellow of Notre Dame's听Institute for Educational听Initiatives, a founding Associate of the American Center for听School Choice, and a听senior fellow of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University.听After earning a his B.A. in Philosophy from Duke University and J.D. from Yale Law School, he clerked for the听Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, then for the听Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, William H. Rehnquist.

Gregory Kalscheur, S.J.,

Gregory Kalscheur, S.J.,听is Associate Professor at Boston College Law School and Senior Associate Dean of Arts and Sciences. Prior to his employment at Boston College, he taught political science at Loyola College, was assistant to the director of Loyola鈥檚 Center for Values and Services, and served as assosciate pastor at St. Raphael the Archangel Church in Raleigh, NC. Before entering the Society of Jesus in 1992, he served as clerk for Judge Kenneth F. Ripple, US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, and worked as litigator at Hogan & Hartson.听听

Event Photos

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Richard Garnett (Notre Dame) and Gregory Kalscheur, S.J. (Boston College) discuss individual and institutional religious freedom from a legal perspective.

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Richard Garnett lectures on the relationship between individual and institutional religious freedom.

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Gregory Kalscheur, S.J. responds to Richard Garnett's arguments.

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Richard Garnett responds to questions after his lecture.

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Gregory Kalscheur S.J. responds to a question during the discussion.

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Erik Owens, Associate Director of the Boisi Center, moderates the discussion

Event Recap

Should our laws aim to protect the religious practices and beliefs of individuals or groups, or both? Are these ends at odds with one another? What sustains the free exercise of religion in the United States? On November 29 the Boisi Center hosted legal scholars Richard Garnett and Gregory Kalscheur, S.J. to address these questions in a lively forum on religious freedom. Garnett, a prolific scholar and legal commentator, is professor of law and associate dean for faculty research at the University of Notre Dame School of Law. He began by noting that 鈥渞eligious freedom is a human right, grounded in human dignity, essential for human flourishing.鈥 The special protection the Constitution gives to religion is a recognition that religious freedom is 鈥減art of the very structure of a free society, not merely a grudging concession made by a tolerant sovereign.鈥 Religious freedom protections aren鈥檛 accidents or anachronisms; they are 鈥渇eatures, not bugs鈥 in our laws.

Garnett argued that religious freedom is properly protected in this country by a secular government and its secular laws鈥攏ot to marginalize religion but rather 鈥渢o protect religious freedom in private, in public, in civil society and in politics.鈥 Still, these stout legal protections are insufficient without a robust cultural commitment to religious freedom. Quoting Archbishop Charles Chaput, Garnett said that the Constitution is 鈥渏ust another elegant scrap of paper unless people keep it alive with their convictions and lived witness,鈥漵omething Garnett said was under threat today.

Religious freedom is equally essential to individuals as it is to institutions, Garnett argued, and institutions have inherent rights to religious freedom that are not merely derivative of individual rights. Indeed, individual and institutional religious freedoms are complementary, not conflicting. If we reduce religious freedom to the individuals exercising it, we overlook the institutional contexts that shape individuals in society as well as the communal aspect of religious experience.

Boston College law professor and associate dean of arts & sciences Gregory Kalscheur, S.J. offered a response. Kalscheur agreed with Garnett鈥檚 account of religious freedom as intrinsic to both individuals and institutions, and strongly endorsed the Supreme Court鈥檚 recent decision in Hosanna Tabor, which maintained the rights of religious communities to hire and fire (without concern for employment discrimination laws) employees who perform religious functions.

What, then, are the limits of the church鈥檚 freedom from government interference? All human activity has an inherently religious dimension, Kalscheur argued, citing Jesuit Michael Buckley鈥檚 claim that 鈥淭here is a religious density to all things.鈥 But this does not mean all church activity should fall outside the realm of regulation. Kalscheur proposed that while 鈥渦niquely religious鈥 activities should be exempt from scrutiny, 鈥渨hen the church embodies its religious mission through temporal education and social services activities that are not uniquely religious (though they are inherently religious), they are engaged in activity that the civil authority may have the jurisdiction to regulate.鈥 When religious activity violates public order to a degree that intervention is required, the state should still honor the privileged character of religious freedom by interfering in the most minimal way possible, and thus upholding a culture of respect and tolerance.

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Further Reading

Berman, Harold.听.听(Harvard University Press, 1983).

Horwitz, Paul.听听UCLA Law Review听Vol. 54. 2007.

Garnett, Richard.听听Notre Dame Legal Studies听No. 08-17. 2008.

Garnett, Richard.听听Journal of Catholic Social Thought听Vol. 4. 2007.

Garnett, Richard.听听Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy听Vol. 106. 2011.

Garnett, Richard.听听St. John鈥檚 Journal of Legal Commentary听Vol 22. 2007.

Garnett, Richard.听听Notre Dame Legal Studies Paper听No. 10-10

Maritain, Jacques.听(C. Scribner鈥檚 Sons, 1931).

Murray, John Courtney.听听(Sheer听 & Ward, 2005).

Smith, Steven.听听San Diego Legal Studies Paper听No. 11-061. August 2011.

ARTICLES

Richard Garnett in听Public Discourse: Ethics, Law, and the Common Good,听