No Images? Click here The Weekly is a highlight of the work the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission is doing to strengthen you and our churches for God’s glory. Three Southern states move to ban abortionOver the past two weeks, three neighboring Southern states have passed legislation to ban some or all abortions. Last week Georgia passed a law that recognizes the unborn as legal persons as soon as they have a “detectable human heartbeat.” This week Tennessee became the latest state to sign a “trigger law” criminalizing abortion, while Alabama passed the strictest abortion ban in the nation. The laws in Alabama and Georgia will inevitably be challenged in the federal courts. But that is what the state legislators who passed the laws intend. “With the political and legal landscape finally tilting in their favor, anti-abortion legislators feel empowered to move beyond abortion restrictions and take a shot at full bans,” says Emma Green in The Atlantic. “One day, they believe, this legislation won’t just be politically symbolic—they hope abortion will become illegal across the country.” Here is what you should know about the recent pro-life laws in these three states. This Week at the ERLC
What You Need to Know
![]() News From Capitol HillToday the House of Representatives voted on H.R. 5, the Equality Act. The bill passed the chamber by a vote of 236 to 173 with 23 members not voting. We worked diligently in opposition to H.R. 5 by raising the religious liberty and human dignity concerns with this piece of legislation. In this effort on Capitol Hill, we sent several letters to the committees of jurisdiction and one to every representative on behalf of a broad coalition. This bill represents the most invasive threat to religious liberty ever proposed in America because it would codify as illegal discrimination what are, actually, sincerely held religious convictions. ERLC President Russell Moore commented on the bill’s passage:
Among its most extreme provisions, H.R. 5 would enact a 50-state ban on faith-based foster care and adoption providers seeking to operate in accordance with their deeply held religious beliefs. This is alarming for the future of our social safety net, especially during the opioid crisis. To discuss how such legislative efforts threaten the foster-care system, Jeff Pickering and Chelsea Patterson Sobolik welcomed coalition partner Hillary Byrnes, a religious liberty advocate from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, to discuss the future of faith-based child welfare. Listen here: Keeping the faith in child welfare. Featured PodcastsHow can parents and youth pastors and other influencers create environments that nuture the faith of young people? Dan Darling talks to Dr. Kara Powell, executive director of the Fuller Youth Institute (FYI) and a faculty member at Fuller Theological Seminary, on The Way Home podcast. Tune in here. On Better Together, a special series on the ERLC Podcast, Trillia Newbell interviews Melissa Kruger. Kruger serves as Women's Ministry Coordinator at Uptown Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. She helps us think through topics related to training women and woen's ministry in the local church. Listen here. From The Public SquareThe (national) fall and (local) rise of pro-life Democrats The evisceration of pro-life Democrats from Congress is all but complete. Attacked by both Democrats and Republicans and pro-life and pro-choice activists, most of these legislators have been either forced to change their views or defeated at the ballot box. Religious Freedom: What’s at Stake If We Lose It Religious freedom is more than the “freedom to worship” at a synagogue, church, or mosque. It means people shouldn’t have to go against their core values and beliefs in order to conform to culture or government. Russian Evangelicals Penalized Most Under Anti-Evangelism Law The tight restrictions on minority faiths have increasingly gotten Protestants in trouble and continue to raise concerns over religious freedom. A New York Times Op-Ed Is Very Wrong About Religious Liberty The First Amendment is too often treated as an annoyance, a speed bump on the road to social justice. |