A federal court ruled on Monday to protect a Christian student organization that had its official student club status revoked by a Michigan university for requiring its leaders to adhere to its statement of faith. University officials will be held liable for discriminating against the club.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, a student ministry that provides community, Bible studies and important discussions on campus, has been a part of Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan for over 75 years.
Though the club is open to all students, the university deemed InterVarsityโs leadership policies โdiscriminatoryโ for requiring that the groupโs leaders agree with the organizationโs statement of faith.
WSU de-registered the club during a routine club membership reapplication process in October 2017 due to the club’s supposed discrimination against non-Christians. But, the university eventually recalled its decision after InterVarsity filed a lawsuit.
Not being recognized as a club meant InterVarsity could not enjoy certain campus benefits, such as reserving meeting rooms for free, hosting free tables at events or applying for certain campus funding.
Judge Robert H. Cleland of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan ruled that the universityโs actions โstrike at the heartโ of the First Amendment and are โobviously odious to the Constitution.โ
He added that the universityโs โdisparate and discriminatoryโ treatment of the religious group violates the Constitution’s Free Exercise Clause. He said the schoolโs attempts to dictate the clubโs leadership are โcategorically barred by the Constitution.โ
โThe uncontested facts demonstrate that Defendants violated Plaintiffsโ rights to internal management, free speech, freedom of association, freedom of assembly, and free exercise as a matter of law,โ Cleland, a George H.W. Bush appointee, wrote in his decision. โDefendants also violated the Establishment Clause as a matter of law.โ
Byย Emily Wood