Mennonite Business Owners Challenge Obamacare Mandate

Conestoga, a family-owned cabinetmaking business whose founders are Mennonite, is challenging Obamacare’s abortion-pill mandate requiring businesses to buy insurance policies that include objectionable facets like abortion-inducing drugs and sterilization. The mandate forces Conestoga, Hobby Lobby, and other businesses with religious owners or founders to pay for things contrary to their deeply-held religious convictions.

If you are unfamiliar with the mandate and why it is outrageous, click here to read about it. Below is a video about Conestoga’s lawsuit, including interviews with Conestoga’s CEO and attorneys from Alliance Defending Freedom.

Student Banned from Distributing Flier Because of Bible Verse

A seventh-grader in Kansas has been barred from distributing fliers to classmates simply because the fliers contain a Bible verse.

Based on news reports, the school has what appears to be an unconstitutional policy prohibiting students from distributing any material of a religious nature on school property.

Courts have ruled repeatedly that students do not forfeit their religious liberties simply by walking onto school property; as long as they do not disrupt the learning environment, students are free to pray, discuss religion, share their faith, and engage in other forms of constitutionally-protected speech.

Watch the video below for more information on this situation.

Army Suspends Anti-Christian Briefings

Recently we told you about a training session in which U.S. Army personnel were told the American Family Association is a “domestic hate group.”

The AFA, a Christian ministry well known for its American Family Radio, was likened to the Ku Klux Klan, Black Panthers, and other groups. Similar incidents have happened across the country in what has become a very troubling trend.

Yesterday, however, the Pentagon announced it is putting a stop to these briefings. The training seminars in which these incidents have occurred will resume in November, but under a new directive that states in part,

Emphasize that neither [the Department of Defense] nor the Army maintain or publish any centralized list of specific organizations considered to be extremist in nature or in opposition to the Army’s core values….use [the] chain of command to answer questions and resolve issues.

This is a welcomed change for many who have been concerned about statements made against evangelical Christians by trainers at Camp Shelby, Fort Hood, and elsewhere in recent months.

You can download a copy of the new directive here.

You can read the American Family Association’s response to the new directive here.