Summary
In Reynolds, the Supreme Court held in the late nineteenth century that the free exercise of religion required only freedom of thought and opinion, but that the government could restrict acts taken upon religious convictions. Since that time, the Supreme Court had begun requiring “religious accommodations” from generally applicable laws in at least some contexts, thus partially moving away from the thought-act distinction of Reynolds. In 1990, the Supreme Court in Smith reaffirmed the rule of Reynolds, with several of the liberal Justices dissenting. The case involved Native Americans dismissed from their jobs for failing a drug test. They had smoked peyote during a religious ceremony. Because of this drug use—religiously motivated or not—Oregon then denied them unemployment benefits. When the Native Americans challenged this denial under the First Amendment’s Free Exercise Clause, the Court rejected their claim. Today, several conservative Justices have suggested that Smith was wrongly decided.