On September 6, 2017, the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit released its opinion in Bormuth v. County of Jackson, finding prayers offered by the Jackson County Board of Commissioners constitutional under the Establishment Clause. That decision involved detailed factual analysis, which varied greatly from the analysis used by the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit to find nearly identical prayers by the Rowan County Board of Commissioners unconstitutional in Lund v. Rowan County on July 14, 2017. This Comment argues that the method of analysis conducted by the en banc Fourth Circuit in Lund is the more comprehensive and, therefore proper, method of factual analysis contemplated by the U.S. Supreme Court in...
The article grows out of my research in writing an amicus brief for a group of distinguished theolog...
This paper briefly contrasts two concepts of religious liberty—the French concept of strict seculari...
The constitutionality of public school board prayer under the First Amendment Establishment Clause h...
On September 6, 2017, the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit released its opinion i...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that Lund was decided incorrectly in part because the Fourth Circuit fail...
This Note addresses whether, and to what extent, the four factors proposed by the Fourth Circuit, an...
Blog post, “The Fourth Circuit Gets a Prayer Decision Wrong“ discusses politics, theology and the la...
Leading a group in prayer in a public setting blurs the line between public and private. Such blurri...
In numerous communities throughout the United States, the American people are fighting over legislat...
On August 7, 2012, the state of Missouri passed by popular vote the Religious Freedom in Public Plac...
This Response to Mary Nobles Hancock’s Note, after noting the complexity of the issues she presents,...
The author discusses Galloway v. Town of Greece, a case which challenges official prayers at town co...
It is customary for each house of Congress to open its daily sessions with prayer delivered by its C...
The Court’s 2013-2014 Term did not begin auspiciously. In Madigan v. Levin1—the first orally argued ...
It is difficult to analyze a Supreme Court decision that is as fundamentally misguided and unpersuas...
The article grows out of my research in writing an amicus brief for a group of distinguished theolog...
This paper briefly contrasts two concepts of religious liberty—the French concept of strict seculari...
The constitutionality of public school board prayer under the First Amendment Establishment Clause h...
On September 6, 2017, the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit released its opinion i...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that Lund was decided incorrectly in part because the Fourth Circuit fail...
This Note addresses whether, and to what extent, the four factors proposed by the Fourth Circuit, an...
Blog post, “The Fourth Circuit Gets a Prayer Decision Wrong“ discusses politics, theology and the la...
Leading a group in prayer in a public setting blurs the line between public and private. Such blurri...
In numerous communities throughout the United States, the American people are fighting over legislat...
On August 7, 2012, the state of Missouri passed by popular vote the Religious Freedom in Public Plac...
This Response to Mary Nobles Hancock’s Note, after noting the complexity of the issues she presents,...
The author discusses Galloway v. Town of Greece, a case which challenges official prayers at town co...
It is customary for each house of Congress to open its daily sessions with prayer delivered by its C...
The Court’s 2013-2014 Term did not begin auspiciously. In Madigan v. Levin1—the first orally argued ...
It is difficult to analyze a Supreme Court decision that is as fundamentally misguided and unpersuas...
The article grows out of my research in writing an amicus brief for a group of distinguished theolog...
This paper briefly contrasts two concepts of religious liberty—the French concept of strict seculari...
The constitutionality of public school board prayer under the First Amendment Establishment Clause h...