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Home/Featured/Louisiana Supreme Court Dismisses Louisiana College Suit

Louisiana Supreme Court Dismisses Louisiana College Suit

A 9-year-old lawsuit alleging violations of academic freedom at a Baptist school has ended with a decision that secular courts cannot decide which side is right in a dispute involving church doctrine.

Written by Bob Allen | Sunday, May 18, 2014

The 9th Judicial District Court dismissed the case in March 2012, saying issues involved “will necessarily turn upon competing interpretations of religion, thus resulting in the court becoming entangled in an ecclesiastical dispute.” The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals upheld that ruling in November 2013, finding the dispute “centers on the nature of Baptist theology and church governance over how theology is taught at Louisiana College and would, thus, require the court to impermissibly entangle itself in deciding ecclesiastical matters.”

 

The Supreme Court of Louisiana has upheld lower court rulings that judges cannot resolve a lawsuit alleging academic freedom violations at a Baptist school without delving into issues of theology and church governance, an unconstitutional violation of the separation of church and state.

Louisiana College issued a news release announcing the high court’s recent refusal to hear arguments by four former professors at the Louisiana Baptist Convention institution who filed a lawsuit in 2005 claiming administrators violated the school’s academic freedom policy and broke conditions of an earlier defamation lawsuit settled out of court in 1997.

The lawsuit filed by former faculty members Carlton Winbery, Fredrick Downing, James Heath and Connie Douglas stemmed from a dispute that began shortly after Joe Aguillard became president of Louisiana College in 2005.

According to media reports at the time, The Road Less Traveled, a book on psychology and spirituality by psychiatrist M. Scott Peck, had been used for years in a Christian values class at Louisiana College. Peck, who died in 2005, considered himself a non-denominational Christian, but Aguillard said he would allow the book to be taught only if it was labeled as Buddhist. Faculty members filed a grievance that eventually grew into the lawsuit.

The 9th Judicial District Court dismissed the case in March 2012, saying issues involved “will necessarily turn upon competing interpretations of religion, thus resulting in the court becoming entangled in an ecclesiastical dispute.”

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