American Civil Liberties Union

The right to practice religion, or no religion at all, is among the most fundamental of the freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights. The ACLU works to ensure that this essential freedom is protected by keeping the government out of religion. Learn more about how the ACLU works to preserve Freedom of Religion and Belief and take action to protect the rights guaranteed to all Americans.


Watch List Counter: Who's a Terrorist Now? Defend freedom today - and tomorrow!

Ideological Exclusion

ACLU NewsfeedsACLU News Feed
ACLU Blog
US Constitution

ACLU Cases Defending Religious Freedom

The ACLU and Freedom of Religion and Belief

CASES
> Case: Moreno v. Ector County School Board
> Victory: The Challenge to Intelligent Design
> Litigation: The Mt. Soledad Cross

MORE
> The ACLU and Christmas

President Bush is continuing his campaign to allow taxpayer funds to be used for religious discrimination.  His "faith-based initiatives" seek to grant religious social service providers - who have long provided admirable and essential services to America's communities -- the right to discriminate, proselytize and play by different rules than other charities while spending tax dollars.

If the President is successful, social workers, psychologists, counselors and others seeking to work in tax-funded social service programs could be denied jobs solely because of their faith.

Supporting the good work of faith-based social service providers should not mean abandoning basic American ideals. We must not allow the vital services of faith-based groups to become co-opted by the administration as mere government-funded religion.

The government already can and does work collaboratively with faith-based organizations.  It has long granted tax dollars to religious social service providers that agree not to discriminate in hiring or providing services, and that operate their social services in a secular manner.  These types of religiously affiliated charities do not deny people employment based on faith, nor do they mix religious activity in with their government-funded services.

Religion and Belief : Government-Funded Religion : Press Releases view all

Senate Votes Down More Federal Funds for School Vouchers (03/10/2009)
WASHINGTON – An amendment that would continue an expiring program to provide federal funds for private and religious school vouchers in the District of Columbia was defeated today in the Senate. The amendment would have extended the federally-funded District of Columbia school voucher program, the nation’s first and only federally-funded private and religious school program of its kind. Federal funding for private and religious school vouchers are currently set to expire at the end of the next school year. The amendment, number 615, was proposed to H.R. 1105, the Omnibus Appropriations Act of 2009 by Senator John Ensign (R-NV), but was defeated by a vote of 58-39.

White House Announces Troubling Faith-Based Order, ACLU Says Administration Is Heading Into Uncharted Waters (02/05/2009)
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama announced today that he is taking the unprecedented and troubling step of forming a federal advisory committee to be made up mostly of religious leaders. Also of great concern, President Obama will increase federal funds going to religious organizations without first changing the Bush-era rules allowing federally-funded religious organizations to apply religious hiring tests to employees.

ACLU Settlement Stops Louisiana From Earmarking Taxpayer Funds To Favored Churches (01/16/2009)
NEW ORLEANS – As part of a settlement reached with the American Civil Liberties Union, the state of Louisiana agreed to stop funneling taxpayer-funded grants to certain selected churches. The agreement settles an ACLU lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of portions of a 2007 law that directed unrestricted cash payments to churches favored by the government.

Federal Lawsuit Challenges District Of Columbia's Funding Of Religious Mission (09/18/2008)
WASHINGTON – The ACLU of the National Capital Area, Americans United for Separation of Church and State and the American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit today challenging the District of Columbia's plan to grant more than $12 million in public property and cash to the Central Union Mission, a religious homeless shelter.

Lawsuit Aims To Remove Amendments 7 And 9 From Florida's November Ballot (06/13/2008)
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - A group of concerned organizations, including The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the ACLU of Florida, filed a lawsuit today in the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial Court in and for Leon County on behalf of a group of Floridians representing parents of public school students, teachers, administrators and concerned citizens. The goal of the lawsuit is to prevent Amendments 7 and 9 from reaching the November ballot.

Religion and Belief : Government-Funded Religion : Legal Documents view all

Chane v. District of Columbia - Complaint For Declaratory And Injunctive Relief (09/18/2008)

Decision - ACLU of Louisiana v. Blanco, et al. (10/05/2007)

ACLU v. Blanco - Memo in Support of Plaintiff's Motion for Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunction (08/13/2007)

ACLU v. Blanco - Complaint (08/13/2007)

ACLU of N. Carolina, Matten v. North Carolina Order (05/24/2007)
ACLU of N. Carolina, Matten v. North Carolina Order

Religion and Belief : Government-Funded Religion : Legislative Documents view all

Obama Administration Executive Order Regarding the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (02/05/2009)

ACLU Letter to Senate Urging Opposition to DeMint Amendment 189 to H.R. 1, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (02/05/2009)
On behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), a nonpartisan organization with over a half million activists, members and 53 affiliates nationwide, we write to urge you to oppose Senate Amendment 189, offered by Senator DeMint. The DeMint Amendment would remove a provision that reinforces constitutional protections by prohibiting the government from providing “green-building” federal funds for the construction or repair of buildings used for worship and other religious purposes.

ACLU Coalition Letter Urging Restoration of Religious Liberty and Civil Rights Protections in the Faith-Based Initiative (07/10/2008)
As you evaluate and formulate policies on the role that community-based and faith-based organizations should play in providing government-funded social services, we write to urge you to restore religious liberty and civil rights protections into these partnerships. We believe that the policies pursued under the title “Faith-Based Initiative” in recent years lack the proper accountability and constitutional safeguards necessary to preserve the independence of religious organizations and protect the civil rights and religious liberty of the employees and beneficiaries of government-funded programs.

Coalition Letter to Senate regarding "Creation Science" Earmark (10/10/2007)
Dear Senator: We, the undersigned religious, civil rights, education, science, and advocacy organizations write to urge you to remove an earmark from the Fiscal Year 2008 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriation Bill’s Committee Report. The Fund for Improvement of Education, under Title III, contains an earmark for uses that, if funded, would be blatantly unconstitutional. The earmark would fund curriculum that promotes teaching creationism in the science classroom, even though uniformly prohibited by federal courts.

SUPPORT BIPARTISAN REAUTHORIZATION OF HEAD START BY OPPOSING ANY ATTEMPT TO REPEAL THIRTY-FIVE YEAR OLD CIVIL RIGHTS PROVISION (04/20/2007)
We, the undersigned religious, civil rights, labor, education, health, and advocacy organizations urge you to support H.R. 1429, bipartisan legislation that would reauthorize the Head Start program, and to oppose any attempt to repeal longstanding critical civil rights protections. As reported out of the House Committee on Education and Labor on a 42-1 bipartisan vote, H.R. 1429 keeps in place a 35-year old civil rights provision that protects over 213,000 Head Start teachers and staff and over 1,360,000 parent volunteers from employment discrimination based on religion in federally-funded positions in Head Start programs.

Religion and Belief : Government-Funded Religion : Resources view all

Statement on The Bible in Public Schools: A First Amendment Guide (05/09/2007)

The Mt. Soledad Latin Cross: Q&A (08/24/2006)

The Mt. Soledad Latin Cross (08/24/2006)
The ACLU of San Diego & Imperial Counties and the ACLU Foundation, through its Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief, filed suit in Federal Court in the Southern District of California in August 2006, to contest the Federal government's eminent domain seizure and continued display of the Mt. Soledad Latin cross in San Diego.

ACLU Cases Defending Religious Freedom (08/24/2006)
The ACLU vigorously defends the right of Americans to practice religion. But because the ACLU is often better known for its work preventing the government from promoting and funding selected religious activities, it is often wrongly assumed that the ACLU does not zealously defend the rights of religious believers, including Christians, to practice their religion. The cases below - including several where the ACLU even defended the rights of religious believers to condemn homosexuality or abortion - reveal just how mistaken such assumptions are.

NYCLU Letter to Thompson (01/14/2004)

Religion and Belief : Government-Funded Religion : Fact Sheets

The Real Effect of the Bush Administration’s Faith-Based Initiatives on (07/11/2008)
Imagine the outcry if, under the guise of increasing social service programs and resources, an administration sought to fulfill its own partisan political interests using a smokescreen of ‘compassionate conservatism’ and the good intentions of social service advocates.

GOVERNMENT-FUNDED DISCRIMINATION: (07/11/2008)
In the waning days of his administration, President Bush is continuing his campaign to allow taxpayer funds to be used for religious discrimination. His “faith-based initiatives” grant religious social service providers - who have long provided admirable and essential services to America’s communities - the right to discriminate, proselytize and play by different rules than other charities while spending tax dollars.

Click to show/hide issues list
Your Local ACLUcongressional scorecardmultimediadonatepublicationssupport usblogcontact