February 11, 2026

Federal Appeals Court Green Lights Discrimination Against Non-Theists

082919-04-Religion-Politics
Federal Appeals Court Green Lights Discrimination Against Non-Theists

Federal Appeals Court Green Lights Discrimination Against Non-Theists
According to the court, non-theistic people are not capable of meeting the goals of legislative prayer โ€“ only believers in the divine can do that. (Photo: A member of the Pennsylvania House of Representative recites an opening prayer)

It’s yet another in a problematic line of recent decisions that allow government entities to endorse and promote religion.


Federal Appeals Court Green Lights Discrimination Against Non-Theists

By Rob Boston


A federal appeals court handed down a disturbing ruling that elevates the rights of theistic believers over those of non-theists. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appealsโ€™ decision in Fields v. Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives is part of a troubling trend in the courts that not only dilutes separation of church and state but grant special privileges to people because they believe in a god.

Americans United and American Atheists brought the case on behalf of a group of non-theists in the state who wanted to do something theistic believers do frequently: give guest invocations before the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Officials at the House refused, and AU filed suit.

Itโ€™s important to remember that Americans United and its allies were not trying to stop the prayers before the House entirely. All we sought was equal treatment between believers and non-theists.

Nevertheless, the court ruled 2-1 that the House could constitutionally turn away the non-theists. Its logic is troubling. According to the court, non-theistic people are not capable of meeting the goals of legislative prayer โ€“ only believers in the divine can do that.

โ€œ[O]nly theistic prayer can satisfy all the traditional purposes of legislative prayer,โ€ wrote the court. โ€œSecond, the Supreme Court has long taken as given that prayer presumes invoking a higher power.โ€

The court went on to say, โ€œ[A]s a matter of traditional practice, a petition to human wisdom and the power of science does not capture the full sense of โ€˜prayer,โ€™ historically understood. At bottom, legislative prayers seek โ€˜divine guidanceโ€™ in lawmaking.โ€

The court buttressed its argument by pointing to โ€œhistorical practices.โ€ This is blind to the reality of modern-day America where increasing numbers of people are declaring themselves โ€œnonesโ€ โ€“ individuals who seek spirituality outside the confines of a house or worship or discard religion entirely.

As Judge L. Felipe Restrepo noted in his dissent, limiting prayer to theists only requires the government to wade into a theological thicket. Buddhism, he noted, doesnโ€™t have a concept of a personal god but is still considered a major world religion. Yet under the rules of the Pennsylvania House, Buddhists could be excluded from offering guest prayers. (The courtโ€™s majority opinion, however, insisted that it would be unconstitutional to exclude Buddhists.)

Restrepo further observed, โ€œBy mandating that all guest chaplains profess a belief in a โ€˜higher powerโ€™ or God, the Pennsylvania House fails to stay โ€˜neutral in matters of religious theoryโ€™; in effect, the Pennsylvania House โ€˜promote[s] one . . . religious theoryโ€™ โ€“ belief in God or some sort of supreme deity โ€“ โ€˜against anotherโ€™ โ€“ the denial of the existence of such a deity.

While the ruling is limited to the issue of legislative prayer, itโ€™s still troubling. It’s yet another in a problematic line of recent decisions that allow government entities to endorse and promote religion (just about always Christianity) as long as itโ€™s being done for โ€œhistoricโ€ purposes. (The U.S. Supreme Courtโ€™s ruling in the Bladensburg Cross case is another example of this.)

While treating non-theists like second-class citizens may have been part of our nationโ€™s history, itโ€™s a shameful practice, hardly something we ought to uphold today. Yet rulings like the one in the Fields case do just that: They preference believers in god while sending a message of exclusion and even scorn to non-theists. That type of unequal treatment is exactly what the separation of church and state is intended to prevent.


Published by Common Dreams, 08.28.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.