Supreme Court to Decide If Prison Guards Can Be Sued Personally for Alleged Religious Rights Violations
Landmark suit may reshape personal financial exposure for frontline prison staff in religious rights cases.
Landmark suit may reshape personal financial exposure for frontline prison staff in religious rights cases.
As war breaks out abroad and instability spreads at home, believers are reminded: trust doesn’t require total understanding—just confidence in the One who knows.
On June 20, 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed a district court ruling that blocked Louisiana from enforcing a law mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in every public school classroom. The court found
Launching a preemptive strike might feel decisive—but it could make the very outcome we fear far more likely. In the long shadow of past Middle East conflicts, the growing clamor for a more forceful U.S. response to Iran’s nuclear posture
Avoiding the Trap: Why Restraint on Iran Is the Safer Long-Term Strategy Read More »
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6–3 on June 18, 2025, to uphold a Tennessee law banning gender-affirming medical treatments for minors. In a decision that turned on what “standard of review” applied rather than direct engagement with the rights of
Supreme Court Upholds Tennessee Law Banning Gender-Affirming Treatments for Minors Read More »
Federal ruling allows California to pursue enforcement against clinics promoting unproven treatment, including those accepting insurance payments On June 13, 2025, a federal judge in San Diego ruled that a Catholic-affiliated clinic’s advertisements for “abortion pill reversal” (APR) are commercial
The pending Supreme Court case on LGBTQ-themed books could open the door to a powerful new argument against religious display laws in schools. At first glance, Mahmoud v. Taylor and the growing wave of Ten Commandments display laws in states like
If Parents Can Opt Out of Storybooks, Why Not the Ten Commandments? Read More »
Lawsuit claims Act 573 violates the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses of the First Amendment A group of Arkansas parents filed a federal lawsuit on June 11, 2025, challenging a newly enacted state law that mandates the permanent display of
Arkansas Families Sue to Block Mandatory Ten Commandments Displays in Public Schools Read More »
There is a refrain often spoken in quiet rooms and loud debates alike: “If we didn’t have illegal immigrants doing this work, grocery prices would skyrocket—because Americans won’t do these jobs under those conditions.” On the surface, it sounds practical.
Justice in the Fields: Ending the Two-Tiered Labor System That Shames a Nation Read More »
Cambridge Christian School argues loudspeaker prayer is protected private speech, not state endorsement of religion On June 3, 2025, Cambridge Christian School filed a petition asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn lower court rulings that barred its students from