Lutheran church wins Supreme Court case

Lutheran church wins Supreme Court case June 27, 2017

Trinity Lutheran Church (LCMS) of Columbia, Missouri, won its case at the Supreme Court. ย The state of Missouri had denied its application for a program to useย shredded rubber to make its playground more safe,ย invoking a state law against taxpayer money going to a religious institution.

Said Chief Justice John Roberts in the decision, โ€œthe exclusion of Trinity Lutheran from a public benefit for which it is otherwise qualified, solely because it is a church, is odious to our Constitution all the same, and cannot stand.โ€

The vote was 7-2, with Justices Sotomayor and Ginsburg dissenting.

This was the second Missouri Synod congregation to successfully petition the Supreme Court in an important church/state case. ย In 2012, the court ruled thatย Hosanna-Tabor Lutheran Churchย could define its โ€œministersโ€ as it wishes, throwing out a discrimination suit from a teacher in its school who was fired.

From Robert Barnes,ย Supreme Court sides with religious institutions in a major church-state decision โ€“ The Washington Post:

The Supreme Court ended its term Monday with a major First Amendment decision, ruling that efforts at separating church and state go too far when they deny religious institutions access to government grants meant for a secular purpose.

In siding with a Missouri church that had been denied money to resurface its playground, the court ruled 7-2 that excluding churches from state programs for which other charitable groups are eligible is a violation of the Constitutionโ€™s protection of the free exercise of religion.

โ€œThe consequence is, in all likelihood, a few extra scraped knees,โ€ wrote Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. โ€œBut the exclusion of Trinity Lutheran from a public benefit for which it is otherwise qualified, solely because it is a church, is odious to our Constitution all the same, and cannot stand.โ€

Trinity Lutheran Church in Columbia, Mo., brought the case because it was excluded from a state program that reimburses the cost of rubberizing the surface of playgrounds. The church scored high in the grant process, but Missouriโ€™s state constitution, like those in about three dozen states, forbade government from spending public money on โ€œany church, sect, or denomination of religion.โ€

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Image Credit: Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States, Photographer: Franz Jantzen

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