Broad array of religious groups support medical nonprofit at 6th Circuit
Christian, Jewish, Islamic groups rally in favor of suit challenging Michigan law
CINCINNATI – Several groups from diverse religious and philosophical backgrounds have united in support of a faith-based medical ministry in friend-of-the-court briefs filed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit in Christian Healthcare Centers v. Nessel. Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys representing Christian Healthcare Centers are asking the 6th Circuit to protect the ministry’s constitutional right to operate according to its faith.
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and other state officials are responsible for enforcing Michigan’s civil rights laws. These laws threaten to force Christian Healthcare Centers to hire people who do not share their faith, to prescribe cross-sex hormones, and to use pronouns that do not accord with a person’s sex. The laws also prohibit Christian Healthcare Centers from explaining its religious reasons for these choices to the public. All of this violates the ministry’s religious beliefs and undermines its ability to provide safe healthcare to the needy and the rest of the community.
“Religious organizations should be free to operate and serve their communities according to their beliefs. Rather than respecting Christian Healthcare Centers’ religious motivations to provide quality care to all members of the community, Michigan state officials are threatening to punish the ministry for living out its faith,” said ADF Senior Counsel and Vice President of Appellate Advocacy John Bursch. “Christian Healthcare Centers should be free to operate and serve their community according to their beliefs. Allowing the government to compel a religious organization to violate its beliefs nullifies longstanding First Amendment protections.”
Christian Healthcare Centers is a nonprofit medical provider that offers high-quality healthcare to all of its members—including several members who identify as LGBT—while substantially reducing prices for patients with lower incomes who cannot afford quality care elsewhere.
Christian Healthcare Centers was founded to offer a distinctly Christian alternative to traditional primary care, focusing on meeting patients’ medical, emotional, and spiritual needs. To that end, the ministry hires staff who share its religious mission and provide medical care consistent with its religious beliefs.
“Religious faith is not an isolated compartment of life, but a broad worldview that intersects every square inch in the lives of adherents and the organizations they operate,” the Classical Christian Schools brief explains. “The promise of liberty requires broad religious protections, including the ministerial exception, in order to protect religious believers and their institutions. All Americans benefit when we enable the ordering of our lives around those principles most important to us without fear of backlash.”
“The uniquely difficult burden placed on religious minorities, in a world where their traditions are often completely foreign to the state emphasizes the importance of deference to religious minorities in their employment decisions based on the tenets of their faith,” states the brief from the Jewish Coalition for Religious Liberty and the Religious Freedom Institute’s Islam and Religious Freedom Action Team. “Refusing to allow deference greatly increases the odds that minority religious groups will be subjected to exactly what the Supreme Court feared in being forced to ‘engage in conduct that seriously violates [their] religious beliefs.’”
Christian Healthcare Centers also received friend-of-the-court support from the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
Alliance Defending Freedom is an alliance-building, non-profit legal organization committed to protecting religious freedom, free speech, parental rights, and the sanctity of life.
# # #