Does Freedom of Religion and Freedom of the Press Still Matter?
This was written originally for the News and Religion course I am talking at The Religious Freedom Center
A question we are exploring in the News and Religion class I am taking right now is, “Can you have religious freedom without freedom of speech and press? Why or why not?” On the simplest level, the answer would seem pretty obvious: religious freedom requires freedom of speech since part of many religious practices include speaking. To the extent that one’s religion calls one to speak out against injustice and work for reconciliation, a free press may also be required, or at least a free religious press.
On another level, the answer might simply be, does anyone really care? The latest research by the Public Religion Research Institute finds a continuing decrease in the number of people identifying as members of organized religion. Discussions about religious freedom end up being about whether a business owner can discriminate against a group of people whose actions he doesn’t approve of or whether religious freedom laws can be used to fight laws that limit the freedom of women.
When we look to the news media, we see similar concerns: the consolidation of major news outlets, the focus on profits instead of seeking truth, and how all of this contributes to the rise of ‘fake’ news. How relevant is religion or the press today? What is the role of the news media covering religion in our secular multicultural digital age?
We must recognize that our religious identity as a nation has shifted over the years. We have never fully lived up to the image of “A City Upon a Hill”, and that image itself, when examined carefully, has its share of negative aspects. Likewise, the fourth estate has not always guided us towards the truth or our better selves.
The book, Readings on Religion as News, edited by Judith M. Buddenbaum and Debra L. Mason, is
“an anthology of news stories that illustrates both the role of religion in shaping public opinion and the role of media in spreading religious beliefs and opinions through society and in shaping people’s opinions about religion”.
The editors found themselves “inundated with examples of times when religion made a difference … [and] many interesting examples of news coverage that helped shape public opinion”.
It may feel that there is a paucity of such examples today as Americans drift away from religious organizations and the news media because more driven by profit motives. Yet as is noted in chapter 10 of The Oxford Handbook of Religion and the American News Media edited by Diane Winston, blogging and online religious news coverage has the potential to fill an important role as “a venue for religious news and discourse in the public sphere”.
This leads us back to our starting question about freedom of religion and freedom of the press. While we must keep in mind our individual freedoms, we must also keep in mind the constant reshaping of our cultural history and identity. Religion and the press have worked together to constantly draw us back to public discourse, actions, and relationship with the divine for the welfare of our nation. The freedoms of both are deeply interconnected.