Saturday, October 12, 2019
Religious Freedom Restoration Act :: essays research papers
 Religious Freedom Restoration Act           In this paper I will describe the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.  This Act was used to contradict the decision of the court case of Employment  Division v. Smith, which allowed the government to forbid any religious act  without giving a reason. The RFRA brought back the requirement that the  government provide an adequate reason to forbid any religious act. The  government once again had to show that the act was of compelling interest  against the state.         In 1993 one of the most important acts that has gone thorough Congress  was passed (Religious Freedom, Map of the RFRA). This was the Religious Freedom  Restoration Act (RFRA) of 1993 (Religious Freedom, Map of the RFRA). This act  was passed to answer the 1990 court case Employment Division v. Smith (Questions  and Answers, Map of the RFRA). Employment Division v. Smith was a court case in  which the issue was whether ââ¬Å"Sacramental use of peyote by members of the Native  American Church was protected under the free exercise clause of the First  Amendment, which provides that ââ¬ËCongress shall make no law...prohibiting the  free exercise of religion'.â⬠(Questions and Answers, Map of the RFRA). According  to Justice Scalia, ââ¬Å"if prohibiting the exercise of religion was merely the  incidental effect of a generally applicable and otherwise valid provision, the  First Amendment was not offended.â⬠ (Questions and Answers, Map of the RFRA).  Thus,    "...the government no longer had to justify most burdens on religious exercise.  The free exercise clause offered protection only if a particular religious  practice was singled out for discriminatory treatment. In short, free exercise  was a sub category of equal protection. This placed religious rights in an  inferior position to other First Amendment rights such as freedom of speech and  press." (Questions and Answers, Map of the RFRA).    This court case caused a series of court cases about religious freedoms  (Religious Freedom, Map of the RFRA). Congress enacted the RFRA to contradict  the negative affect that court cases had recently had on religious  freedoms(Religious Freedom, Map of the RFRA).         The RFRA is what it states it is in the title, a restoration  act(Religious Freedom, Map of the RFRA). Congress decided that in Employment  Division v. Smith,    "the supreme court virtually eliminated the requirement that the government  justify burdens on religious exercise imposed by laws neutral toward religion  and the compelling interest test as set forth in prior Federal court rulings is  a workable test for striking sensible balances between religious liberty and  competing prior governmental interests."(Religious Freedom, Map of the RFRA)    In other words, the government did not have to have a reason to impose laws    					    
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