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2017 | Book

Religious Liberty in a Lockean Society

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About this book

This book assesses the concept of religious liberty in the United States according to the political theory of John Locke. Protecting the individual freedom of religion without infringing on the rights of others or on legitimate political authority requires delicate balance. The work analyzes Locke’s concept of religious liberty and, from it, derives nine criteria for locating that balance. The most important of these criteria requires government neutrality and equality before the law. The United States has historically struggled with providing this balance, particularly through Supreme Court decisions, resulting in the passage of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). Application of Locke’s criteria for balancing religious liberty and government authority to three recent cases—a government employee, an employer, and a small business owner—reveal that RFRA legislation threatens this balance by undermining neutral government action and treats citizens unequally before the law.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Balancing Religious Liberty in the United States
Abstract
Alzate provides a unique approach to assessing religious liberty in the United States by applying John Locke’s political theory. The United States has struggled with balancing religious liberty against both government authority and the rights of other citizens in society, a struggle which culminated in the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). This chapter sets up three cases—the government employee, the employer, and the small business owner—that demonstrate the difficulty in identifying the proper extent and limits of religious liberty. Alzate argues that Locke’s theory of religious liberty provides clear criteria for assessing the concept. Given the indebtedness of American political ideas on Locke’s political theory, these criteria are both relevant and necessary.
Elissa B. Alzate
Chapter 2. John Locke and Religious Liberty
Abstract
Alzate analyzes John Locke’s theory of religious liberty found in A Letter Concerning Toleration to elucidate the individual’s right of religious belief and worship, as well as the origins, extent, and limitations of that right. Although freedom of religion is an individual right, it is necessarily a political issue. By examining this concept in conjunction with his broader political theory of the Second Treatise , Alzate discerns nine criteria that Locke argued were essential to balancing religious liberty against other rights and the political authority of government. The two most important of these criteria are government neutrality and equality under the law. Thus, in protecting the individual freedom of religion, the government must above all remain neutral and treat all citizens and religions equally.
Elissa B. Alzate
Chapter 3. Religious Liberty, Free Exercise, and RFRA in the United States
Abstract
Alzate provides an overview of the Supreme Court’s attempts to balance the individual freedom of religion against both government authority and the rights and freedoms of other people. This is particularly difficult in laws that are otherwise neutral and of general applicability but have the effect of restricting religious liberty. The difficulty in finding this balance resulted in the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which imposes the compelling interest test on neutral laws that infringe on religious liberty. This chapter examines the significance of RFRA, as well as the case history leading up to it. Alzate analyzes the concept of religious liberty embodied in this history as applied to three examples: the government employee, the employer, and the small business owner.
Elissa B. Alzate
Chapter 4. Assessing Religious Liberty in a Lockean Society
Abstract
Alzate applies Locke’s criteria for legitimate government action to three examples of religious liberty in the United States: the government employee (Kim Davis), the employer (Hobby Lobby), and the small business owner (Barronelle Stutzman). The difficulty the United States has had in balancing freedom of religion with political authority and other rights derives from the lack of clear, consistently applied criteria. Application of Locke’s nine criteria reveals that debates over religious liberty in the US for the most part appropriately balance individual rights against other interests. Still, there is room for improvement. The “least restrictive means” requirement of RFRA legislation unduly restricts legitimate government authority, thereby undermining civil society. Moreover, the practice of exempting some individuals from otherwise neutral laws of general applicability introduces inequality in the rule of law.
Elissa B. Alzate
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Religious Liberty in a Lockean Society
Author
Elissa B. Alzate
Copyright Year
2017
Electronic ISBN
978-1-137-58414-4
Print ISBN
978-1-137-58477-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-58414-4