The Bible plainly states that everyone must either bring every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ or continue as enemies in your mind. Un-Biblical thinking, like un-Bibical actions, leads one on a path away from God. Part II of this Article will briefly introduce a Biblical approach to thinking about contemporary issues and discuss how Christians can unwittingly abandon distinctively Biblical thinking under the guise of neutrality. Part III will present a number of cases that highlight the fallacy of neutrality in the battle between religious liberties and rights based on homosexual conduct. Part IV will contend that the battle for rights based on homosexual conduct is a zero-sum game and that, therefore, society should c...
Part I of this Essay will start with the Kulturkampf connection and will argue that religion and sex...
Book Chapter Richard W Garnett, Wrongful Discrimination? Religious Freedom, Pluralism, and Equality,...
Reviewing: Francis J. Beckwith, Taking Rites Seriously: Law, Politics, and the Reasonableness of Fai...
The Bible plainly states that everyone must either bring every thought into captivity to the obedie...
My goal in this piece is to surface some of the commonalities between religious belief liberty and s...
The thesis of this Article is that the myth-of-neutrality argument is partially right and partially ...
The authors\u27 goal in this chapter is to surface some of the commonalities between belief liberty ...
A major domestic issue in the United States today is the battle between gay rights and religious lib...
This Article identifies a difficulty with the neutrality paradigm that currently shapes thinking abo...
This Article challenges the criticisms of religious freedom that have emerged among recent academics...
There appears to be an intractable debate between those who favor religious accommodations and those...
Governmental neutrality is the heart of the modern Free Exercise Clause. Mindful of this core princi...
Nowadays, liberty of conscience as an inalienable right is a standard of demoliberal constitutionali...
This Article will refer to separationism as based on older assumptions. The Court\u27s presupposit...
This Article addresses the controversial question of 'neutrality' as a crucial test in a number of i...
Part I of this Essay will start with the Kulturkampf connection and will argue that religion and sex...
Book Chapter Richard W Garnett, Wrongful Discrimination? Religious Freedom, Pluralism, and Equality,...
Reviewing: Francis J. Beckwith, Taking Rites Seriously: Law, Politics, and the Reasonableness of Fai...
The Bible plainly states that everyone must either bring every thought into captivity to the obedie...
My goal in this piece is to surface some of the commonalities between religious belief liberty and s...
The thesis of this Article is that the myth-of-neutrality argument is partially right and partially ...
The authors\u27 goal in this chapter is to surface some of the commonalities between belief liberty ...
A major domestic issue in the United States today is the battle between gay rights and religious lib...
This Article identifies a difficulty with the neutrality paradigm that currently shapes thinking abo...
This Article challenges the criticisms of religious freedom that have emerged among recent academics...
There appears to be an intractable debate between those who favor religious accommodations and those...
Governmental neutrality is the heart of the modern Free Exercise Clause. Mindful of this core princi...
Nowadays, liberty of conscience as an inalienable right is a standard of demoliberal constitutionali...
This Article will refer to separationism as based on older assumptions. The Court\u27s presupposit...
This Article addresses the controversial question of 'neutrality' as a crucial test in a number of i...
Part I of this Essay will start with the Kulturkampf connection and will argue that religion and sex...
Book Chapter Richard W Garnett, Wrongful Discrimination? Religious Freedom, Pluralism, and Equality,...
Reviewing: Francis J. Beckwith, Taking Rites Seriously: Law, Politics, and the Reasonableness of Fai...