And that's not religious freedom. If religious freedom means anything that the government does not oppose, then religious freedom does not exist. Just as freedom of speech does not mean speech that the government approves of, it means speech the government disapproves of, religious freedom means religious practices that the government disapproves of.
And when we forget that, this is what happens.
The interesting thing is the rather peculiar claim that church services open to the public do not serve a religious purpose. It's bad enough that public accommodation laws have been so far stretched beyond any reasonable interpretation that we are even having this conversation, but this is a horse of another color, breed and dimension.
If religious institutions that are open to the public must now be treated by that standard, then what's next? Religious institutions going underground? Censored sermons.
"The notion that the Civil Rights Commission can prohibit a church from sermonizing in whatever hateful or discriminatory way they want is absurd on its face," he said.
Drake University law professor Maura Strassberg, an expert on sexuality law, sees the matter as more clear-cut...
Strassberg said sermons that stick to human sexuality matters pertaining to theology would be constitutionally protected. But she suggested situations could arise where a preacher's remarks could cross over the line into harassment.
"There is a line: You can go from, 'This is what God believes' … to 'You are bad, so we don't want you here,'" Strassberg said.
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Daniel Greenfield is Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and a New York writer focusing on radical Islam. David Horowitz is a Contributing Author of the ARRA News Service
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