Religious Diversity Resources & Support Guide

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Religious Diversity Resources & Support Guide Religious Diversity Resources & Support Guide Location Contact Us Timberwolf Learning Commons Website: http://www.ntc.edu/library Wausau Campus, C178 Email: [email protected] Phone: (715) 803-1115 SUGGESTED TERMS Belief Systems Laws & Regulations Faith Afro-American religion American Indian Religious Freedom Fundamentalism Act (1978) Agnosticism Mosques Employment Division, Department of Amish / Anabaptist Human Resources of Oregon vs. Neopaganism Atheism Smith Orthodoxy Bahá'í Faith First Amendment (U.S.) Proselytization Baptist International Religious Freedom Act Qur’an (Koran) (1998) Buddhism Rites / rituals / ceremonies Lemon test Catholicism Sanctity Wisconsin v. Yoder Christianity Spirituality Hinduism Social Issues & Controversies Symbolism Islam Antisemitism Temples Jehovah’s Witnesses Creationism/evolutionism debate Theology Judaism Faith healing Torah Lutheranism Islamophobia Vatican City / Holy See Mormonism Religious persecution Religion and… Mysticism Separation of church & state Culture Native American Church Keywords Death / funeral rites Protestantism Bible Food Scientology Book of Mormon Gender / human sexuality Secularism Deities Health / medicine Shamanism STREAMING VIDEOS Click on titles Around the World in 80 A Promise to My Father: One Sons of Perdition Who Will Bury the Dead? Faiths (series) Survivor’s Journey Through the Holocaust 5/5/2020 CURRENT ISSUES & EVENTS Online religion grows rapidly in era of ‘holy unknowing’ Is the Catholic Church beyond redemption? March 22, 2020 September 1, 2018 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette The New York Times Ex-weather anchor Scott Steele claims anti-Semitic In Idaho, faith healing under fire culture at WTMJ in lawsuit February 20, 2018 December 26, 2019 The Washington Post Wausau Daily Herald A ‘holiday tree’ vs. ‘Bible week’: church-state debate returns to capitol for the holidays November 9, 2019 Wisconsin State Journal World reacts with anger, sadness to New Zealand mosque shootings March 16, 2019 Reuters E-BOOKS Click on titles Formed from this Asian Religions: A Islam: History, 50 Great Myths Understanding Soil: An Introduc- Cultural Perspective Religion & Politics about Atheism Religion and Popu- tion to the Diverse lar Culture History of Religion in America BOOKS (LIBRARY 2ND FLOOR) 201.7 Sm54u 200.9 M593 305.6773 Y15s 641.5676 St34L 342.7308 En19 5/5/2020 ACADEMIC JOURNALS & ARTICLES Click on titles Material Religion: Politics, Religion & Journal of Modern Studies in World Black Theology: An Journal of Objects, Ideology Jewish Studies Christianity International Journal Art & Belief The Role of Faith in Shaping Ethical Perceptions and Intentions from the International Journal of Religion & Spiritual- ity in Society (2020) The Devil is in the Trademark: A Discussion of the Satanic Temple v. Netflix from the Rutgers Journal of Law & Reli- gion (2019) Islamophobia and the Public Health Implications of Religious Hatred from the American Journal of Public Health (2018) Returning Women to Their Place? Religious Fundamentalism, Gender Bias and Violence Against Women from the Journal for the Study of Religions & Ideologies (2018) Building a Religious Brand: Exploring the Foundations of the Church of Scientology through Public Relations from the Journal of Public Relations Research (2017) ADVOCACY & EDUCATION RESOURCES Local Richard Mauthe Center for Faith, Spirituality, and Social Justice UW-Madison Loka Initiative Wisconsin Council of Churches National Hartford Institute for Religion Research—Official Denomination Websites Pew-Templeton Global Religious Futures Project Harvard Pluralism Project Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding U.S. Department of State Office of International Religious Freedom 5/5/2020 .
Recommended publications
  • Religion and the New Politics
    Religion and the New Politics Edited by Ronald A. Simkins and Zachary B. Smith 6. The New Politics of Religious Freedom Humanitarian Aid and Sanctuary as Religious Mandates Laura E. Alexander, University of Nebraska at Omaha Abstract Interreligious organizations that provide aid to immigrants are changing the way scholars and the public understand religious freedom in the United States. Members of these organizations draw on laws and ideals of free exercise of religion to challenge policies that limit humanitarian aid to immigrants. At the same time, they create networks across religious difference. In so doing, these groups enter a global debate over the value of borders and boundaries, making a religiously grounded case for building bonds of fellowship across both national borders and the boundary lines that separate people based on identity. The work of these groups provides a window both into legal debates over religious freedom, and postcolonial challenges to modern-era categories of difference. Keywords: religious freedom, interreligious cooperation, immigration, borders 81 Religion and the New Politics Introduction The First Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees freedom of religious exercise. How to balance this freedom against other constitutional rights and government interests has, of course, been a matter of debate since the Bill of Rights was ratified. With the passage of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (Pub. L. 103–41, 107 Stat. 1488) (RFRA) of 1993, as well as increased deference in United States courts to legal arguments based on religious freedom, it has become much more common for individuals and groups to successfully claim, on religious grounds, exemptions from laws that are neutral on their face but impact religious practice.
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  • The Satanic Temple, Scott Walker, and Contraception: a Partial Account of Hobby Lobby’S Implications for State Law
    \\jciprod01\productn\H\HLP\9-1\HLP104.txt unknown Seq: 1 18-MAR-15 13:55 The Satanic Temple, Scott Walker, and Contraception: A Partial Account of Hobby Lobby’s Implications for State Law Kara Loewentheil* INTRODUCTION Reaction to the Supreme Court’s opinion in Hobby Lobby1 was swift and extreme from almost all quarters. Beyond the predictable legal blogs, newspaper articles, and talking heads on TV, there were more unusual re- sponses from across the political spectrum. Members of The Satanic Temple, a religious group2 focused on “personal autonomy, individual freedom, and ethical action,” announced that they would henceforth be objecting to so- called “informed consent” statutes in the abortion services context.3 To make good on that promise, they made available an online form for anyone, Satanist or otherwise, who wanted to claim a religious exemption from being required to comply with such statutes.4 Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s Administration, on the other hand, announced that it would no longer be enforcing Wisconsin’s contraceptive equity law because it was “preempted” by the Supreme Court’s decision.5 But as is so often the case with extremes, neither interpretation of the case comes close to the mark. The confusion about the reach and scope of Hobby Lobby is of tremendous significance as state legislatures, courts, ad- ministrative agencies, and citizens begin to grapple with its consequences, * Research Fellow, Columbia Law School & Director, Public Rights / Private Conscience Project, Columbia Law School. The author is entirely indebted to Nicole Taykhman for her invaluable research assistance, without which this article would quite literally not have been possible.
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  • The Satanic Bible Anton Szandor Lavey
    Called “The Black Pope” by many of his followers, Anton LaVey began the road to High Priesthood of the Church of Satan when he was only 16 years old and an organ player in a carnival: “On Saturday night I would see men lusting after half‐naked girls dancing at the carnival, and on Sunday morning when I was playing the organ for tent‐show evangelists at the other end of the carnival lot, I would see these same men sitting in the pews with their wives and children, asking God to forgive them and purge them of carnal desires. And the next Saturday night they’d be back at the carnival or some other place of indulgence. “I knew then that the Christian Church thrives on hypocrisy, and that man’s carnal nature will out!” From that time early in his life his path was clear. Finally, on the last night of April, 1966– Walpurgisnacht, the most important festival of the believers in witchcraft–LaVey shaved his head in the tradition of ancient executioners and announced the formation of The Church Of Satan. He had seen the need for a church that would recapture man’s body and his carnal desires as objects of celebration. “Since worship of fleshly things produces pleasure,” he said, “there would then be a temple of glorious indulgence. .” The Satanic Bible Anton Szandor LaVey For Diane Dedications To: Bernadino Logara, who knew the value of money Karl Haushofer, a teacher without a classroom Rasputin, who knew the magic of a child Sir Basil Zaharoff, a gentleman Cagliostro, a rogue Barnabas Saul, the link with Mount Lalesh Ragnar Redbeard, whose might is right William Mortensen, who looked .
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  • After School Satan: Mimicry and Counteridentity As Strategies for Religious Resistance Lacey Corey Brown Southern Illinois University Carbondale
    Kaleidoscope: A Graduate Journal of Qualitative Communication Research Volume 17 Article 6 2018 After School Satan: Mimicry and Counteridentity as Strategies for Religious Resistance Lacey Corey Brown Southern Illinois University Carbondale Follow this and additional works at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/kaleidoscope Recommended Citation Brown, Lacey Corey (2018) "After School Satan: Mimicry and Counteridentity as Strategies for Religious Resistance," Kaleidoscope: A Graduate Journal of Qualitative Communication Research: Vol. 17 , Article 6. Available at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/kaleidoscope/vol17/iss1/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Kaleidoscope: A Graduate Journal of Qualitative Communication Research by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. After School Satan: Mimicry and Counteridentity as Strategies for Religious Resistance Cover Page Footnote Lacey Corey Brown is currently a PhD candidate in the Communication Studies Department at Southern Illinois University. This paper was previously present at the 2017 National Communication Association convention, Dallas, TX. The uthora would like to thank Michael Forst, and the reviewers for their critiques and recommendations. This article is available in Kaleidoscope: A Graduate Journal of Qualitative Communication Research: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/ kaleidoscope/vol17/iss1/6 After School Satan: Mimicry and Counteridentity as Strategies for Religious Resistance Lacey Corey Brown Southern Illinois University Carbondale The Satanic Temple strategically constructs their identity using counteridentifying symbols, such as Satan, to metaphorically resist Christian dogma in the context of U.S. American law and popular opinion. Through mimicry, they use faith as a tool of resistance to challenge the presence of The Good News Club, an Evangelical student program, in public schools.
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  • The Devil's Music
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  • Download Wells's Thesis
    Confronting the Constitutional Order: Reconciling Satan and the Free Exercise of Religion Julia Wells Honors Defense Date: May 8, 2020 Thesis Advisor: Professor Jenna Reinbold Defense Committee: Professor Christopher Vecsey Professor Benjamin Stahlberg 1 In defending the separation of church and state, James Madison wrote, “The Religion…of every man must be left to the conviction and conscience of every man; and it is the right of every man to exercise it as these may dictate.”1 The crux of Madison’s argument was that if the government were allowed to interfere in people’s religious choices, the government would be able to choose or remove people’s religious practices at will. In Madison's conception, one's freedom of conscience precedes one's commitment to the government, and therefore shouldn't be within the power of government to regulate. Since the founding of the United States, religious freedom has been one of the most venerated values, but determining which religions are afforded religious freedom has historically been very contentious. This principle of freedom of conscience was translated into the U.S. Constitution in the form of the very first words of the First Amendment: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”2 The establishment clause prevents the government from creating a state church, while the free exercise clause limits the government’s ability to force people to act in violation of their religion. Limiting government engagement with religion is difficult everywhere, but it is especially difficult for the U.S.
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  • United States District Court District of Massachusetts
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  • Mary Doe Ex Rel. Satan?: Parody, Religious Liberty, & Reproductive Rights
    46 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF GENDER AND LAW 40.1 MARY DOE EX REL. SATAN?: PARODY, RELIGIOUS LIBERTY, & REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS CHRISTEN E. HAMMOCK* Abstract In 2015, a woman known as “Mary Doe” challenged a Missouri abortion restriction requiring her to wait seventy-two hours after receiving certain “informed consent” materials before she could obtain an abortion. Mary Doe challenged the restrictions in federal and state court on religious grounds as a member of the Satanic Temple. This paper examines the Satanic Temple’s litigation through the lens of parody—a literary technique that involves repeating another text’s form or content in order to critique it. Mary Doe’s litigation mirrored that of Hobby Lobby v. Burwell, in which a for-profit corporation claimed a religious accommodation from the ACA’s contraceptive mandate. The litigation forces two comparisons—between mainstream religious beliefs and other strongly held matters of conscience, and between abortion and other constitutional claims—and illuminates the “distortions” that often appear in reproductive rights litigation. INTRODUCTION In 2015, a woman known as Mary Doe challenged an amendment to Missouri’s statute governing informed consent for abortion. The amendment instituted a seventy- two-hour waiting period and required providers to distribute printed materials stating that “the life of each human being begins at conception. Abortion will terminate the life of a separate, unique, living human being.”1 Doe’s lawsuit took a unique approach to challenging Missouri’s abortion restrictions. Instead of alleging that the law violated Equal Protection or constituted an “undue burden” under Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v.
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  • Not Today, Satan: Re-Examining Viewpoint Discrimination in the Limited Public Forum
    William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal Volume 26 (2017-2018) Issue 4 Article 9 May 2018 Not Today, Satan: Re-examining Viewpoint Discrimination in the Limited Public Forum Daniel Cutler Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj Part of the Constitutional Law Commons, and the First Amendment Commons Repository Citation Daniel Cutler, Not Today, Satan: Re-examining Viewpoint Discrimination in the Limited Public Forum, 26 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. 1241 (2018), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol26/ iss4/9 Copyright c 2018 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj NOT TODAY, SATAN: RE-EXAMINING VIEWPOINT DISCRIMINATION IN THE LIMITED PUBLIC FORUM Daniel Cutler* INTRODUCTION ................................................1241 I. SATANISM .................................................1245 A. The Satanic Temple ......................................1246 B. After School Satan .......................................1248 II. LEGAL BACKGROUND ........................................1250 A. Viewpoint Discrimination in Limited Public Forums.............1250 B. Good News Club v. Milford Central School...................1252 III. THE FIRST AMENDMENT AS APPLIED TO AFTER SCHOOL SATAN .......1255 A. Prohibiting After School Satan in Public Schools Is Unconstitutional Based on the Good News Club Precedent .....................1255 B. After School Satan as an Opportunity to Re-examine Viewpoint Discrimination in Limited Public Forums .....................1259 1. Abandoning Public Forum Analysis for Public Schools .......1262 2. Public Schools as Limited Public Forums with Added Deference Granted to Public School Administrators ..................1263 CONCLUSION ..................................................1265 INTRODUCTION In 2016, the Satanic Temple (the “Temple”) announced an after-school program1 that was sure to disturb the parents of public school students across the United States.
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  • Sacred & Profane Season 3, Episode 3 the Devil's Advocates
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  • The Devils Creamerie
    THE DEVILS CREAMERIE REVOLT OF THE ANGELS EDUCATIONAL ASSET — OREGON — LA RÉVOLTE DES ANGES MATÉRIEL PÉDAGOGIQUE — OREGON — Copyright © 2020 Friends of the Satanic Temple Oregon Front Cover by Lor Ipsum Back cover art by Luke Fomley Layout by Lor Ipsum Excerpt from Revolt of the Angels by Anatole France All rights reserved. This project was originally imagined to satisfy a requirement to become an official chapter in The Satanic Temple. However, it quickly grew into more than that for those involved. In these pages, you will find a wide spectrum of topics, perspectives, and even mediums. The only thing we asked of our members was that they allowed themselves to become inspired by the book – other than that, anything goes. It is our hope that because of this approach, there is at least one thing within these pages that will resonate with every TST Satanist. It is also our hope that our project will inspire those who have not yet read Revolt, to finally read it. We do not speak for The Satanic Temple. These are only the thoughts, reflections, and creative endeavors of our “Friends of” group, Friends of TST Oregon. INFERNAL THANKS Siri Sanguine, Dex Desjardins, Damion Luciano, Brady Bonney, Lauren “LURN” Appel, Jesse Bee, Lilith Starr, and Viktor LaMent. We wouldn’t be here without your help and inspiration. CONTENTS France’s Revolving Revolutions Timeline – Alse Libertas ������������������� 2 Angelic Hierarchy – Elysa Elmore ������������������������������������������������������� 7 Family Tree – Elysa Elmore ���������������������������������������������������������������
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