Religion..
 Searching the FFL archive for, 'Federal District Court'..
 
 turns up these link:
 

 


 Here are links to a five-part post made to alt.m.t
in 1996 containing the text of the appeals court
decision and Judge Adams's concurrence;
 1 of 5
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/a175a1217c214306
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/a175a1217c214306

http://tinyurl.com/dcudhy http://tinyurl.com/dcudhy

2 of 5
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/f8dd186604b5feb5
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/f8dd186604b5feb5

http://tinyurl.com/d3c8lt http://tinyurl.com/d3c8lt

3 of 5
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/9e0cc2271692d7a8
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/9e0cc2271692d7a8

http://tinyurl.com/dnhtbp http://tinyurl.com/dnhtbp

4 of 5
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/f5b05e15a264beb9
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/f5b05e15a264beb9

http://tinyurl.com/5vapbt http://tinyurl.com/5vapbt

5 of 5
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/a2721a415e324740
 
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.meditation.transcendental/msg/a2721a415e324740

http://tinyurl.com/covb7y http://tinyurl.com/covb7y
 
 


 

 

 TM Appeals Court Decision, 
 ============================== ============================== ======
MALNAK, Alan B. and EDWINA K. MALNAK; HARRY C. BOONE and EVELYN
M. BOONE; HARRY C. BOONE and EVELYN M. BOONE as Guardians ad
litem for their infant son David; WILLIAM E. GURY and MARGARET M.
GURY; WILLIAM E. GURY and MARGARET M. GURY, as Guardians ad litem
for their infant daughter Laura Jean; JOSEPH G. LERNER; JOSEPH M.
DUFFY; REV. DR. SAMUEL A. JEANES; AMERICANS UNITED FOR SEPARATION
OF CHURCH AND STATE, a non-profit corporation; SPIRITUAL
COUNTERFEIT PROJECT, INC., a non-profit corporation; COALITION
FOR RELIGIOUS INTEGRITY, an unincorporated association v. YOGI,
Maharishi Mahesh; SPIRITUAL REGENERATION MOVEMENT FOUNDATION;
WORLD PLAN EXECUTIVE COUNCIL - UNITED STATES AMERICAN FOUNDATION
FOR CREATIVE INTELLIGENCE; MAHARISHI INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY;
CHARLES F. LUTES; JEROME W. JARVIS; ROBERT B. KORY; JANET AARON;
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF MAPLEWOOD - SOUTH ORANGE, NEW JERSEY SCHOOL
DISTRICT; BOARD OF EDUCATION OF GLEN RIDGE, NEW JERSEY SCHOOL
DISTRICT; BOARD OF EDUCATION OF WEST NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY SCHOOL
DISTRICT; BOARD OF EDUCATION OF UNION CITY, NEW JERSEY SCHOOL
DISTRICT; NEW JERSEY STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION; NEW JERSEY
STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION; FRED G. BURKE, as New Jersey
Commissioner of Education; CHARLES WILSON; STATE OF NEW JERSEY;
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION AND WELFARE; and
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; DAVID MATHEWS, SECRETARY OF THE UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE, WORLD PLAN
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL - UNITED STATES, JEROME W. JARVIS, ROBERT B.
KORY, and JANET AARON, Appellants.
 MALNAK v. YOGI
Nos.  78-1568, 78-1882
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD CIRCUIT
592 F.2d 197
December 11, 1978, Argued
February 2, 1979, Decided
 PRIOR HISTORY:
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY
(D.C. Civil Action No. 76-0341)
 COUNSEL: Steven M. Druker, Fairfield, Iowa, Peter R. Sterling, Morristown, N.
J., for appellants, McCarter & English, Newark, N. J., of counsel.
   Julius B. Poppinga, on brief, Geoffrey M. Johnson, Newark, N. J., for
appellees.
 JUDGES: Before ALDISERT, ADAMS and HUNTER, Circuit Judges.
 OPINION BY: PER CURIAM
OPINION:    [*197]
OPINION OF THE COURT
 This appeal requires us to decide whether the district court
erred in determining that the teaching of a course called the
Science of Creative Intelligence Transcendental Meditation
(SCI/TM) in the New Jersey public high schools, under the
circumstances presented in the record, constituted an
establishment   [*198]   of religion in violation of the first
amendment of the United States Constitution. Plaintiffs sought
injunctive and declaratory relief and, after defendants had filed
numerous depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions, and
other affidavits, the district court granted summary judgment in
favor of plaintiffs. The court held that SCI/TM was religious
activity for purposes of the establishment clause and that the
teaching of SCI/TM in public schools is prohibited by the first
amendment. The World Plan Executive Council United States and
certain individual defendants have appealed. We affirm,
essentially for the reasons set forth by Judge H. Curtis Meanor
in Malnak v. Yogi, 440 F. Supp. 1284 (D.N.J.1977).
 The course under examination here was offered as an elective at
five high schools during the 1975-76 academic year and was taught
four or five days a week by teachers specially trained by the
World Plan Executive Council United States, an organization whose
objective is to disseminate the teachings of SCI/TM throughout
the United States. The textbook used was developed by Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi, the founder of the Science of Creative Intelligence.
It teaches that "pure creative intelligence" is the basis of
life, and that through the process of Transcendental Meditation
students can perceive the full potential of their lives. n1
 Essential to the practice of Transcendental Meditation is the
"mantra"; a mantra is the sound aid used while meditating. Each
meditator has his own personal mantra which is never to be
revealed to any other person. It is by concentrating on the
mantra that one receives the beneficial effects said to result
from Transcendental Meditation.
 To acquire his mantra, a meditator must attend a ceremony called
a "puja." Every student who participated in the SCI/TM course was
required to attend a puja as part of the course. A puja was
performed by the teacher for each student individually; it was
conducted off school premises on a Sunday; and the student was
required to bring some fruit, flowers and a white handkerchief.
During the puja the student stood or sat in front of a table
while the teacher sang a chant and made offerings to a deified
"Guru Dev." Each puja lasted between one and two hours. n2
 [*199]   The district court found that the SCI/TM course
constituted a religious activity under the first amendment. In
its exhaustive and well-reasoned opinion, the court concluded its
analysis by stating:
   When courts are faced with . . . forms of "religion" unknown in
  prior decisional law, they must look to the prior interpretations
  of the constitutional provisions for guidance as to the
  substantive characteristics of theories or practices which have
  been found to constitute "religion" under the first amendment.
  The Supreme Court has interpreted the religion clauses of the
  first amendment several times in its recent history. E. g.,
 
  Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, 413 U.S. 756, 93 S.

   Ct. 2955, 37 L. Ed. 2d 948 (1973); Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U.S.
  97, 89 S. Ct. 266, 21 L. Ed. 2d 228 (1968); Abington School
  District v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203, 83 S. Ct. 1560, 10 L. Ed. 2d
  844 (1963); Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421, 82 S. Ct. 1261, 8 L.
  Ed. 2d 601 (1963); Torcaso v. Watkins, 367 U.S. 488, 81 S. Ct.
  1680, 6 L. Ed. 2d 982 (1961); Everson v. Board of Education, 330
  U.S. 1, 67 S. Ct. 504, 91 L. Ed. 711 (1947); Cantwell v.
  Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296, 60 S. Ct. 900, 84 L. Ed. 1213 (1940).
  The historical development and purpose of the religion clauses
  have been elaborated in a number of these cases, especially in
  Engel and in Everson. Religion, as comprehended by the first
  amendment now includes mere affirmation of belief in a supreme
  being, Torcaso, supra, invocation of a supreme being in a public
  school, Engel, supra, and reading verses from the Bible without
  comment, Schempp, supra.
   Defendants argue that all of the above-discussed decisions are
  inapposite to the issues in this suit because the activity in
  question in each of the prior cases was represented or conceded
  to be religious in nature whereas defendants in the instant
  action assert that the activities are not religious in nature.
  The court notes the distinction but cannot accept defendants'
  conclusion that the decisions are not relevant. The cases, at the
  very least, reveal the types of activity and belief that have
  been considered religious under the first amendment.
 Malnak v. Yogi, 440 F. Supp. at 1315.
 We agree with the district court's finding that the SCI/TM course
was religious in nature. Careful examination of the textbook, the
expert testimony elicited, and the uncontested facts concerning
the puja convince us that religious activity was involved and
that there was no reversible error in the district court's
determination.
 A recognition of the religious nature of the teachings and
activities questioned here is largely determinative of this
appeal because of the apparent governmental action which is
involved. Under the most recent Supreme Court pronouncement in
this area, Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, 413 U.S.
756, 773, 93 S. Ct. 2955, 37 L. Ed. 2d 948 (1973), the Court
reiterated the three criteria within which to scrutinize the
involved governmental action. To pass muster, the action in
question must: (1) reflect a clearly secular legislative purpose;
(2) have a primary effect that neither advances nor inhibits
religion; and (3) avoid excessive government entanglement with
religion. The district court applied the Nyquist test and
determined that the SCI/TM course has a primary effect of
advancing religion and religious concepts, School District of
Abington Township v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203, 83 S. Ct. 1560, 10 L.
Ed. 2d 844 (1963); Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421, 82 S. Ct. 1261,
8 L. Ed. 2d 601 (1962), and that the government aid given to
teach the course and the use of public school facilities
constituted excessive governmental entanglement with religion.
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602, 91 S. Ct. 2105, 29 L. Ed. 2d 745
(1971).
 [*200]   Appellants urge that even if the SCI/TM course and the
puja are clearly religious, the district court erred in applying
the controlling legal precept because the religious effect of the
course and the puja was not significant. In advancing this
argument, appellants rely on Grossberg v. Deusebio, 380 F. Supp.
285 (E.D.Va.1974); Wood v. Mt. Lebanon Township School District,
342 F. Supp. 1293 (W.D.Pa.1972); and Wiest v. Mt. Lebanon School
District, 457 Pa. 166, 320 A.2d 362 (1974), for the proposition
that religious effect must be substantial in order to be
unconstitutional. Grossberg, Wood, and Wiest upheld as
constitutional the delivery of invocations and benedictions at
high school graduation ceremonies. n3 We are not persuaded that
the reasoning employed in those cases requires reversal in this
case because of the factual differences between a benediction at
a non-instructional high school commencement exercise open to the
public and the teaching of SCI/TM which includes ceremonial
student offerings to deities as part of a regularly scheduled
course in the schools' educational programs.
 The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
 

 

 CONCURBY: ADAMS
 CONCUR: ADAMS, Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
 I concur in the judgment of the Court that the teaching of a
course in the Science of Creative Intelligence, which was offered
as an elective in certain New Jersey public schools, and was
funded, in part, by a grant from a federal agency, constitutes an
establishment of religion proscribed by the first amendment. In
contrast to the majority, however, I am convinced that this
appeal presents a novel and important question that may not be
disposed of simply on the basis of past precedent. Rather, as I
see it, the result reached today is largely based upon a newer,
more expansive reading of "religion" that has been developed in
the last two decades in the context of free exercise and
selective service cases but not, until today, applied by an
appellate court to invalidate a government program under the
establishment clause. Moreover, this is the first appellate court
decision, to my knowledge, that has concluded that a set of ideas
constitutes a religion over the objection and protestations of
secularity by those espousing those ideas. Under these
circumstances, and recalling Justice Frankfurter's admonition
that an individual expression of opinion is useful when the way a
result is reached may be important to results hereafter to be
reached, n1 I am impelled to state my views separately.
 I EXISTING PRECEDENT
 The district court, while conceding that the decisions of the
Supreme Court have avoided the creation of explicit criteria in
determining what is a religion under the first amendment, n2
nonetheless bases its result on those very decisions:
   The (district) court finds it unnecessary to improvise an
  unprecedented definition of religion under the first amendment
  because it appears that this case is governed by the teachings of
  prior Supreme Court decisions. Careful inspection of the facts in
  this suit reveal that the novel   [*201]   aspects of the case
  are more apparent than real. n3
 It is my view that the teachings of those cases cited by the
district court do indeed suggest the result reached by that court
and affirmed today. But, as Judge Meanor's opinion amply
illustrates, those opinions involve substantially different facts
and problems than are presented here. And although the
application of such cases to the factual situation here may be
warranted, such an application is an extension of existing case
law, and thus calls for both an explanation and a justification.
 For purposes of the issues posed by this controversy, the
arguably relevant decisional law may be divided into four
principal groupings: cases announcing the traditional definition
of religion, cases dealing with prayers recited in school, cases
involving the conscientious objector exemption to the selective
service laws, and cases touching on the newer constitutional
definition of religion. Although the district court, and
apparently the majority of this Court, consider these decisions
to be controlling on the question raised here, careful reflection
reveals as many differences as similarities.
 A. The Traditional Definition of Religion
 The original definition of religion prevalent in this country was
closely tied to a belief in God. James Madison called religion
"the duty which we owe to our creator, and the manner of
discharging it." n4 Basically, this was the position of the
Supreme Court at the end of the nineteenth century. In Davis v.
Beason, 133 U.S. 333, 10 S. Ct. 299, 33 L. Ed. 637 (1890), the
Court declared:
   (T)he term "religion" has reference to one's views of his
  relations to his Creator, and to the obligations they impose of
  reverence for his being and character, and of obedience to his
  will. n5
 This attitude remained unchallenged for many years. Chief Justice
Hughes, writing a dissent in 1931, could conclude without concern
that
   (t)he essence of religion is belief in a relation to God
 
  involving duties superior to those arising from any human

   relation. n6
 Thus, the traditional definition was grounded upon a Theistic
perception of religion. It is not clear, however, given the
absence of any concentration in SCI/TM on a "Supreme Being," that
it may be considered a religion under this traditional
formulation.
 B. The School Prayer Cases
 Facially, the Supreme Court decisions arguably most pertinent to
this case are those involving school prayer. This is so, as I
read the opinions of the district court and the majority of this
Court, because an integral part of the preparation of the
students for the practice of TM is the performance in Sanskrit of
a chant, called the Puja. Accordingly, we are urged to engage in
a "textual analysis" of the Puja, and then to compare that
analysis to the prayers outlawed in the school prayer cases. In
that the English translation of the Puja sounds at least as
"religious" as the New York Regents prayer invalidated in Engel
v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421, 82 S. Ct. 1261, 8 L. Ed. 2d 601 (1962),
for instance, it is suggested that this case may be properly
disposed of under that rubric.
 I am not convinced, however, that the school prayer opinions
provide particularly persuasive precedents for the resolution of
[*202]   the question presented here. n7 Engel concerned a prayer
n8 composed by the New York Board of Regents that had to be said
aloud in every public school classroom by order of the local
board of education, acting in its official capacity under state
law. Students could be excused from attendance in a classroom
where the prayer was said, but they needed the written request of
a parent or guardian, and, of course, would have to take the
initiative, and possible social consequences, if they chose to
leave their classrooms during the recital of the prayer. That the
prayer itself was religious in nature was not questioned. Indeed,
it was specifically recommended by the Regents as an aid in
"spiritual training" in the schools.
 

 TM Appeals Court Decision, part two of five
 Similar to Engel is Abington School District v. Schempp, 374 U.S.
203, 83 S. Ct. 1560, 10 L. Ed. 2d 844 (1963). There, the Court
invalidated a Pennsylvania statute that required the reading of
at least ten verses of the Bible, without comment, at the opening
of each school day. As in Engel, participation was voluntary in
the sense that a child could be excused from the exercise,
although Mr. Schempp had declined to have his children excused
because he feared they would suffer social ostracism by their
teachers and classmates.  n9 That the reading of the verses of
the Bible was religious in nature does not seem to have been
questioned by any of the parties or Justices who heard the
appeal, although it was argued that a secular as well as a
religious purpose was served by the readings. n10
 The constitutional problems in Engel and Schempp are relatively
straightforward. First, it is clear that the State, through the
edict of a state agency or by statute, may not seek to require
that school districts engage in a particular form of obviously
religious activity. Such religious partisanship, even though
nonsectarian, is forbidden by the establishment clause. Second,
the general nature of the activities raised serious free exercise
questions because they were "voluntary" only in form, not in
practice. n11 In order to avoid the official exercises,
individual students had to take specific steps that were almost
certain to draw attention to them, attention that was unlikely to
be desirable, given the majority orientation of the religious
practices. In neither case was the "wording" of the exercises of
particular importance in resolving the constitutional problem.
 Lower court decisions deflecting efforts to introduce prayers
into public schools have expanded the teachings of Engel and
Schempp to reach almost any prayer recited as such on school
grounds, n12 but none has   [*203]   sought to label as
"religious" that which was presented as "nonreligious." n13
 In contrast, appellants here unwaveringly insist that the Puja
chant has no religious meaning whatsoever and is, in fact, a
"secular Puja," quite common in Eastern cultures. And, even if we
reject this claim, we are still substantially removed from the
facts of Engel and Schempp: (a) the Puja was never performed in a
school classroom, or even on government property; (b) it was
never performed during school hours, but only on a Sunday; (c) it
was performed only once in the case of each student; (d) it was
entirely in Sanskrit, with neither the student nor, apparently,
the teacher who chanted it, knowing what the foreign words meant.
 Moreover, the elements of involuntariness present in Engel and
Schempp are wholly absent here. The SCI/TM course was an
elective. No student in this case had to abandon his home
classroom at the start of each school day or in any way risk
notoriety for conscience sake. Only those students who sought a
course in SCI/TM had any contact with the chant; they were
specifically told that the chant had no religious meaning; and
they stated in affidavits that they did not understand it to have
such meaning. n14
 Most important for our purposes, however a court might resolve a
challenge to the Puja under the school prayer cases, those cases
provide few insights regarding the constitutional definition of
religion. Both the prayer in Engel and the Bible readings in
Schempp are unquestionably and uncompromisingly Theist. Even
under the most narrow and traditional definition of religion,
prayers to a Supreme Being and readings from the Bible would be
considered "religious." n15 But the important question presented
by the present litigation is how far the constitutional
definition of religion extends beyond the Theistic formulation;
that it comprehends all Theistic faiths has, to my knowledge, not
been questioned. The school prayer cases, then, cannot be said to
control, or, it would seem, even to address the question whether
a particular belief-system should be considered a religion for
first amendment purposes.
 C. The Conscientious Objector Cases
 In contradistinction to the school prayer cases, United States v.
Seeger, 380 U.S. 163, 85 S. Ct. 850, 13 L. Ed. 2d 733 (1965) and
Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S. 333, 90   [*204]   S. Ct. 1792,
26 L. Ed. 2d 308 (1970), the leading selective service decisions
bespeak a broader definition of religion. Seeger and Welsh, of
course, are not constitutional cases but rather concern the
proper interpretation of section 6(j) of the Universal Military
Service and Training Act. n16 This provision allowed for
conscientious objector status for those who, "by reason of
religious training and belief," were "opposed to participation in
war in any form." The statute went on to define "religious
training or belief" in Theistic terms. n17
 The Supreme Court, in what has been characterized as "a
remarkable feat of linguistic transmutation," n18 recast the
language of section 6(j) in order to give the exemption a much
broader scope. Thus Seeger was granted C.O. status
notwithstanding his refusal to affirm his faith in a Supreme
Being because the Court concluded that "religious training and
belief" encompass non-Theist faiths provided that they are
"sincere religious beliefs which (are) based upon a power or
being, or upon a faith, to which all else is subordinate or upon
which all else is ultimately dependent." n19 Welsh was similarly
favored despite his assertion of only "moral" opposition to war,
but in his case the Court was sharply divided.
 Although Seeger and Welsh turned on statutory interpretation, and
despite some indication that the Court has, to some degree, drawn
back from the broadest possible reading of these cases, n20 they
remain constitutionally significant. As a matter of logic and
language, if the Court is willing to read "religious belief" so
as to comprehend beliefs based upon pantheistic and ethical
views, it might be presumed to favor a similar inclusive
definition of "religion" as that term appears in the first
amendment. Such logical conclusion has considerably more force
when one considers the varying contexts of the language in
question. As the district judge perceptively observed: "the Court
defined the phrase broadly in an exercise of statutory
construction, an area in which the Court is far more
circumscribed in defining terms than it is in the area of
constitutional interpretation." n21 It can hardly be denied that
the Supreme Court's reading of the statutory language was
strained at best. The Court's willingness to depart so
drastically from the plain language of a statute in order to
produce an expansive definition almost certainly unintended
[*205] by Congress, implies, as Justice Harlan observed in Welsh,
a "distortion to avert an inevitable constitutional collision." n22
 Most importantly, the constitutional values prompting such a
statutory construction can only be taken to suggest a broad
definition of religion. Only four Justices explicitly discussed
their constitutional concerns in Welsh. Justice Harlan was
forthright in stating the problem:
   The constitutional question that must be faced in this case is
  whether a statute that defers to the individual's conscience only
  when his views emanate from adherence to theistic religious
  beliefs is within the power of Congress. Congress, . . . having
  chosen to exempt, . . . cannot draw the line between theistic or
  non-theistic religious beliefs on the one hand and secular
  beliefs on the other. Any such distinctions are not, in my view,
  compatible with the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. n23
 Justice Harlan found @ 6(j) constitutionally deficient for two
reasons. First, the subsection appeared to prefer the religious
over the secular. Second, despite what the Court had said in
Seeger, Justice Harlan also argued that on its face the statute
favored Theistic religions over non-Theistic beliefs and,
therefore, "disadvantages adherents of religions that do not
worship a Supreme Being." n24 Thus Justice Harlan explicitly
recognized as "religions" various non-Theistic belief systems. n25
 The three dissenters, speaking through Justice White, were
unprepared to extend @ 6(j) to those professing no more than a
philosophical or moral view. To Justice Harlan's assertion that
such a result favors the religious over the secular, they replied
that this was permissible as an accommodation of free exercise
clause values. They dissented, then, because they were willing to
read this accommodation as extending only to those with genuinely
religious views, whether Theistic or non-Theistic and not to
those with purely secular ideas to whom the free exercise clause
offered "no protection whatsoever." n26 Justice White's implicit
definition of religion, therefore, included non-Theists but
excluded economic, philosophical or merely personal opinions,
however sincerely held.
 In sum, then, all four Justices who addressed the constitutional
issue concluded that "religion" should not be confined to a
Theistic definition. Although four other Justices rested on
statutory grounds and no exact definition was forthcoming in any
event, Seeger and Welsh point to a definition at least somewhat
broader than that advanced in the earlier decisions of the
Supreme Court.
 D. Cases Suggesting a New Constitutional Definition
 Seeger and Welsh, however, are not the only cases presaging a
broader reading of "religion" for first amendment purposes. The
district court notes other cases more directly on point in that
they concern constitutional, not statutory challenges.
 The most important of these, and the only Supreme Court cases
among them, is Torcaso v. Watkins, 367 U.S. 488, 81 S. Ct. 1680,
6 L. Ed. 2d 982 (1961). Torcaso involved a direct constitutional
challenge to a Maryland provision that required an official to
declare a belief in God in order to hold office in that state. A
unanimous Court rejected this requirement, both as a matter of
establishment clause values (the state may not favor Theism over
pantheism or atheism) and free exercise clause values (an
[*206]   individual may not be barred from holding public office
on the basis of his beliefs). In striking down the Maryland law,
the Court specifically observed that neither the state nor the
federal government "can aid those religions based on a belief in
the existence of God as against those religions founded on
different beliefs." n27 The Court then added an instructive
footnote:
   Among religions in this country which do not teach what would
  generally be considered a belief in the existence of God are
  Buddhism, Taoism, Ethical Culture, Secular Humanism and others.
  See Washington Ethical Society v. District of Columbia, 101
  U.S.App.D.C. 371, 249 F.2d 127; Fellowship of Humanity v. County
  of Alameda, 153 Cal.App.2d 673, 315 P.2d 394; II Encyclopaedia of
  the Social Sciences 293; 4 Encyclopaedia Britannica (1957 ed.)
  325-327; 21 Id., at 797; Archer, Faiths Men Live By (2d ed.
  revised by Purinton), 120-138, 254-313; 1961 World Almanac 695,
  712; Year Book of American Churches for 1961, at 29, 47. n28
 This note, although dictum, represents a rejection of the view
that religion may, consonant with first amendment values, be
defined solely in terms of a Supreme Being. Buddhism and Taoism
are, of course, recognized Eastern religions. The other two
examples given by the Court refer to explicitly non-Theist
organized groups, discussed in cases cited in the footnote, that
were found to be religious for tax exemption purposes primarily
because of their organizational similarity to traditional
American church groups. "Ethical Culture" is a reference to the
organization in Washington Ethical Society v. District of
Columbia, 101 U.S.App.D.C. 371, 249 F.2d 127 (1957), which held
regular Sunday services and espoused a group of defined moral
precepts. Similarly, "Secular Humanism," however broad the term
may sound, appears to be no more than a reference to the group
seeking an exemption in Fellowship of Humanity v. County of
Alameda, 153 Cal.App.2d 673, 315 P.2d 394 (1957) which, although
non-Theist in belief, also met weekly on Sundays and functioned
much like a church. In any event, the Court was willing to
concede that these groups, "and others," were religious for
constitutional purposes.
 The broad reading of "religion" in Torcaso was drawn upon in
Founding Church of Scientology v. United States, 133 U.S.App.D.C.
229, 409 F.2d 1146, Cert. denied, 396 U.S. 963, 90 S. Ct. 434, 24
L. Ed. 2d 427 (1969). There, Scientology, a belief system
providing a "general account of man and his nature comparable in
scope, if not in content, to those of some organized religions,"
was found to be a religion for purposes of the free exercise
clause. n29 Judge Wright was willing to accept, as religious,
ideas that are sufficiently comprehensive to be comparable to
traditional religions in terms of content and subject matter. But
it must be added that he did so only after observing that the
government did not contest Scientology's religious nature, or
rebut the prima facie case for religious classification made by
its supporters. n30
 [*207]   It would thus appear that the constitutional cases that
have actually alluded to the definitional problem, like the
selective service cases, strongly support a definition for
religion broader than the Theistic formulation of the earlier
Supreme Court cases. What this definition is, or should be, has
not yet been made entirely clear.
 

 TM Appeals Court Decision, part three of five
 II THE MODERN DEFINITION OF RELIGION
 It seems unavoidable, from Seeger, Welsh, and Torcaso, that the
Theistic formulation presumed to be applicable in the late
nineteenth century cases is no longer sustainable. Under the
modern view, "religion" is not confined to the relationship of
man with his Creator, either as a matter of law or as a matter of
theology. Even theologians of traditionally recognized faiths
have moved away from a strictly Theistic approach in explaining
their own religions.  n31 Such movement, when coupled with the
growth in the United States, of many Eastern and non-traditional
belief systems, suggests that the older, limited definition would
deny "religious" identification to faiths now adhered to by
millions of Americans. The Court's more recent cases reject such
a result.
 If the old definition has been repudiated, however, the new
definition remains not yet fully formed. It would appear to be
properly described as a definition by analogy. The Seeger court
advertently declined to distinguish beliefs holding "parallel
positions in the lives of their respective holders." n32
Presumably beliefs holding the same important position for
members of one of the new religions as the traditional faith
holds for more orthodox believers are entitled to the same
treatment as the traditional beliefs. The tax exemption cases
referred to in Torcaso also rely primarily on the common elements
present in the new challenged groups the Ethical Society and the
Fellowship of Humanity as well as in the older unchallenged
groups and churches. In like fashion, Judge Wright reasoned by
analogy in crediting the prima facie claim made out for
Scientology in Founding Church of Scientology, supra. n33 The
modern approach thus looks to the familiar religions as models in
order to ascertain, by comparison, whether the new set of ideas
or beliefs is confronting the same concerns, or serving the same
purposes, as unquestioned and accepted "religions."
 But it is one thing to conclude "by analogy" that a particular
group or cluster of ideas is religious; it is quite another to
explain exactly what indicia are to be looked to in making such
an analogy and justifying it. There appear to be three   [*208]
useful indicia that are basic to our traditional religions and
that are themselves related to the values that undergird the
first amendment.
 The first and most important of these indicia is the nature of
the ideas in question. This means that a court must, at least to
a degree, examine the content of the supposed religion, not to
determine its truth or falsity, or whether it is schismatic or
orthodox, but to determine whether the subject matter it
comprehends is consistent with the assertion that it is, or is
not, a religion. n34 Thus the court was able to remark in
Founding Church of Scientology:
 
   It might be possible to show that a self-proclaimed religion was

   merely a commercial enterprise, Without the underlying theories
 
  of man's nature or his place in the Universe which characterize

   recognized religions. n35
 Similarly, one of the conscientious objectors whose appeal was
coupled with Seeger, submitted a long memorandum, noted by the
Court, in which he defined religion as the "Sum and essence of
one's basic attitudes to the fundamental problems of human
existence." n36
 Expectation that religious ideas should address fundamental
questions is in some ways comparable to the reasoning of the
Protestant theologian Dr. Paul Tillich, who expressed his view on
the essence of religion in the phrase "ultimate concern." n37
Tillich perceived religion as intimately connected to concepts
that are of the greatest depth and utmost importance. His
thoughts have been influential both with courts and commentators.
n38 Nor is it difficult to see why this philosophy would prove
attractive in the American constitutional framework. One's views,
be they orthodox or novel, on the deeper and more imponderable
questions the meaning of life and death, man's role in the
Universe, the proper moral code of right and wrong are those
likely to be the most "intensely personal" n39 and important to
the believer. They are his ultimate concerns. As such, they are
to be carefully guarded from governmental interference, and never
converted into official government doctrine. The first amendment
demonstrates a specific solicitude for religion because religious
ideas are in many ways more important than other ideas. New and
different ways of meeting those concerns are entitled to the same
sort of treatment as the traditional forms.
 Thus, the "ultimate" nature of the ideas presented is the most
important and convincing evidence that they should be treated as
religious. n40 Certain isolated answers   [*209]   to "ultimate"
questions, however, are not necessarily "religious" answers,
because they lack the element of comprehensiveness, the second of
the three indicia. A religion is not generally confined to one
question or one moral teaching; it has a broader scope. It lays
claim to an ultimate and comprehensive "truth." Thus the
so-called "Big Bang" theory, an astronomical interpretation of
the creation of the universe, may be said to answer an "ultimate"
question, but it is not, by itself, a "religious" idea. Likewise,
moral or patriotic views are not by themselves "religious," but
if they are pressed as divine law or a part of a comprehensive
belief-system that presents them as "truth," they might well rise
to the religious level.
 The component of comprehensiveness is particularly relevant in
the context of state education. A science course may touch on
many ultimate concerns, n41 but it is unlikely to proffer a
systematic series of answers to them that might begin to resemble
a religion. St. Thomas Aquinas once defined theology by
asserting,  . . . this science commands all the other sciences as
the ruling science. . . . This science uses for its service all
the other sciences, as though its vassals, . . . . n42
 The teaching of isolated theories that might be thought to
address "ultimate" questions is not the teaching of such a
"ruling science." When these theories are combined into a
comprehensive belief system, however, the result may well become
such a "ruling science" that overflows into other academic
disciplines as the guiding idea of the student's pursuits. It is
just such a "ruling science" that the establishment clause guards
against.
 A third element to consider in ascertaining whether a set of
ideas should be classified as a religion is any formal, external,
or surface signs that may be analogized to accepted religions.
Such signs might include formal services, ceremonial functions,
the existence of clergy, structure and organization, efforts at
propagation, observation of holidays and other similar
manifestations associated with the traditional religions. Of
course, a religion may exist without any of these signs, n43 so
they are not determinative, at least by their absence, in
resolving a question of definition. But they can be helpful in
supporting a conclusion of religious status given the important
role such ceremonies play in religious life. n44   [*210]   These
formal signs of religion were found to be persuasive proofs of
religious character for tax exemption purposes in Washington
Ethical Society and Fellowship of Humanity, discussed Supra. They
are noted as well in Founding Church of Scientology supra. Thus,
even if it is true that a religion can exist without rituals and
structure, they may nonetheless be useful signs that a group or
belief system is religious.
 Although these indicia will be helpful, they should not be
thought of as a final "test" for religion. Defining religion is a
sensitive and important legal duty. n45 Flexibility and careful
consideration of each belief system are needed. Still, it is
important to have some objective guidelines in order to avoid Ad
hoc justice.
 Before applying these guidelines to SCI/TM, however, a separate
question must first be examined. Even conceding the propriety of
the modern approach in certain contexts, the Court is urged to
adopt the position that a less expansive definition is required
in establishment clause cases. The broader definition has up
until now been exclusively applied in response to free exercise
clause values. Appellants contend that such broader definition is
inappropriate in the context of the establishment clause.
 III A UNITARY DEFINITION FOR BOTH RELIGION CLAUSES
 There has been considerable speculation whether the broader
definition of religion developed in the free exercise cases
should be applied under the establishment clause. Professor Tribe
of Harvard has advanced the argument that the free exercise
clause should be read broadly to include anything "arguably
religious," but that the establishment clause should not be
construed to encompass anything "arguably non-religious." In so
doing, he has summarized the position of those favoring a dual
definition:
   Clearly, the notion of religion in the free exercise clause must
  be expanded beyond the closely bounded limits of theism to
  account for the multiplying forms of recognizably legitimate
  religious exercise. It is equally clear, however, that in the age
  of the affirmative and increasingly pervasive state, a less
  expansive notion of religion was required for establishment
  clause purposes lest all "humane" programs of government be
  deemed constitutionally suspect. Such a twofold definition of
  religion expansive for the free exercise clause, less so for the
  establishment clause may be necessary to avoid confronting the
  state with increasingly difficult choices that the theory of
  permissible accommodation . . . could not indefinitely resolve. n46
 [*211]   Another commentator has come to the same conclusion,
apparently for the same underlying reasons:
   To borrow the ultimate concern test from the free exercise
  context and use it with present establishment clause doctrines
  would be to invite attack on all programs that further the
  ultimate concerns of individuals or entangle the government with
  such concerns. Doctrinal chaos might well result, and with it
  might come the wholesale invalidation of programs which, if
  analyzed in light of the values underlying the establishment
  clause, would be found benign. n47
 This view is not without other academic n48 and some judicial n49
support, and appellants here urge upon us a modified version of
it. n50
 Despite the distinguished scholars who advocate this approach, a
stronger argument can be made for a unitary definition to prevail
for both clauses. This would seem to be the preferable choice for
several reasons. First, it is virtually required by the language
of the first amendment. As Justice Rutledge put it over thirty
years ago:
   "Religion" appears only once in the Amendment. But the word
  governs two prohibitions and governs them alike. It does not have
  two meanings, one narrow to forbid "an establishment" and
  another, much broader, for securing "the free exercise thereof."
  "Thereof" brings down "religion" with its entire and exact
  content, no more and no less, from the first into the second
  guaranty, so that Congress and now the states are as broadly
  restricted concerning the one as they are regarding the other. n51
 Although the Constitution has often been subject to a broad
construction, it remains a written document. It is difficult to
justify a reading of the first amendment so as to   [*212]
support a dual definition of religion, nor has our attention been
drawn to any support for such a view in the conventional sources
that have been thought to reveal the intention of the framers.
Moreover, the policy reasons put forward by the supporters of a
dual definition, in my view at least, are unpersuasive.
 The advocates of a dual definition appear to be motivated
primarily by an anxiety that too extensive a definition under the
establishment clause will lead to "wholesale invalidation" of
government programs. Behind this fear lurks, I believe, too broad
a reading of the teachings of Seeger, Welsh, and Torcaso. The
selective service case did not hold that Seeger, Welsh and the
other conscientious objectors were advancing views sufficient to
qualify as a religion or religions, only that their views were
based on religious belief. Were a school, or government agency,
to advance the cause of peace, or opposition to war, such an
official position would not qualify as a "religion" even though
some citizens might come to adopt that very view because of their
own religious beliefs. All programs or positions that entangle
the government with issues and problems that might be classified
as "ultimate concerns" do not, because of that, become
"religious" programs or positions. Only if the government favors
a comprehensive belief system and advances its teachings does it
establish a religion. It does not do so by endorsing isolated
moral precepts or by enacting humanitarian economic programs.
 In this regard it should be noted that the modern definition of
religion does not extend so far as to include those who hold
beliefs however passionately regarding the utility of Keynesian
economics, Social Democracy or, for that matter, Sociobiology.
These ideas may in some instances touch on "ultimate concerns,"
but they are less analogous to religious views than they are to
the political or sociological ideas that they are. Thus Torcaso
does not stand for the proposition that "humanism" is a religion,
although an organized group of "Secular Humanists" may be. An
undefined belief in humanitarianism, or good intentions, is still
far removed from a comprehensive belief system laying a claim to
ultimate truth and supported by a formal group with religious
trappings. n52
 Moreover, the establishment clause does not forbid government
activity encouraged by the supporters of even the most orthodox
of religions if that activity is itself not unconstitutional. The
Biblical and clerical endorsement of laws against stealing and
murder do not make such laws establishments of religion.
Similarly, agitation for social welfare programs by progressive
churchmen, even if motivated by the most orthodox of theological
reasons, does not make those programs religious. The Constitution
has not been interpreted to forbid those inspired by religious
principle or conscience from participation in this nation's
political, social and economic life. n53
 Finally, in addition to these doubts whether "doctrinal chaos"
would in fact result from resort to the new definition in the
establishment clause context, the practical result of a dual
definition is itself troubling. Such an approach would create a
three-tiered system of ideas: those that are unquestionably
religious and thus both free from government interference and
barred from receiving government support; those that are
unquestionably non-religious and thus subject to government
regulation and eligible to receive government support; and those
that are only religious under the newer approach and thus free
from governmental regulation but open to receipt of government
support. That belief systems classified   [*213]   in the third
grouping are the most advantageously positioned is obvious. No
reason has been advanced, however, for favoring the newer belief
systems over the older ones. If a Roman Catholic is barred from
receiving aid from the government, so too should be a
Transcendental Meditator or a Scientologist if those two are to
enjoy the preferred position guaranteed to them by the free
exercise clause. It may be, of course, that they are not entitled
to such a preferred position, but they are clearly not entitled
to the advantages given by the first amendment while avoiding the
apparent disadvantages. The rose cannot be had without the thorn.
 For these reasons, then, I think it is correct to read religion
broadly in both clauses and agree that the precedents developed
in the free exercise context are properly relied upon here.
Having reached this conclusion, two final questions remain: Does
SCI/TM qualify as a religion under the criteria discussed above
and, if it does, does the teaching and funding of this course
constitute an establishment of that religion.
 

 

 

 



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