After the Federal Highway Administration called for the removal of church highway signs larger than 8 square-feet, Oklahoma lawmakers seek to help churches and non-profit groups keep the oversized signs previously approved by a state law passed in 2013.
A bill allowing Colorado school\'s to permit use of medicinal marijuana was fast tracked through the state\'s House and Senate this week in order to pass the measure prior to the close of the state\'s 2015 legislative session. The bill now heads to the governor who has 30 days to sign the bill into ...
A Florida professor with hostile views toward Christianity failed a dual-enrolled high school student for standing up to his ant-Christian world views. The 16-year-old believer now is taking a legal stand with the help of the non-profit legal organization Liberty Counsel.
A D.C. bill adding reproductive health to the District\'s employment discrimination protection went into effect over the weekend despite House efforts to overturn the measure last week. The new law presumably forces faith-based organizations to hire those who might hold ideological differences on ...
South Carolina lawmakers propose to amend the state\'s Constitution and extend human rights to born and pre-born persons from the moment of conception. If such a bill is passed it would be the first to constitutionally protect the born and pre-born.
Senator James Lankford (R-OK) told Homeland Security a civics test for immigrants should list \"freedom of religion\" as a constitutional freedom instead of \"freedom of worship.\" Lankford took issue with the matter after learning study materials for immigrants seeking to become U.S. citizens ...
Christians in China are seeing the fiercest persecution in over a decade according to a new report by China Aid, a human rights organization that exposes injustice and defends religious freedom in the communist country.
Survey results released by the Harvard Institute of Politics Wednesday reveal that Millennials support sending troops to fight the Islamic State and at the same time distrust government.
The U.S. Supreme court struck down a ruling Monday that previously required a Catholic ministry to comply with Obamacare\'s contraception mandate despite a violation of the organization\'s religious beliefs.
A privately owned printshop found judicial favor this week when a Kentucky court ruled against forcing the company to print messages that opposed the owner\'s religious views and violated his religious freedoms.