This is an employment discrimination ease that runs headlong into the Religion Clauses of the First Amendment. The Reverend Anne Scharon, the plaintiff in this cause, appeals from the order of the District Court 1 granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants. We affirm.
I.
The Reverend Anne Scharon, an ordained Episcopal priest, was employed by defendant St. Luke’s Episcopal Presbyterian Hospitals as a Chaplain from June 1978 until October 2, 1987. She worked in the Department of Pastoral Care, under the supervision of defendant The Reverend J. Edwin Heathcock, also an ordained Episcopal priest, who was appointed the Director of the department in December 1986.
According the hospital’s job description, one of the “principle [sic] duties and responsibilities” of a Chaplain is to “[p]ro-vide[ ] a religious ministry of pastoral care, pastoral counseling ... and liturgical services for persons in the hospital.” Appendix at 109. Among the requirements for the position are that a Chaplain have a Master of Divinity degree from an accredited seminary and be ordained and endorsed by a “religious faith group.” Id. As Chaplain, Scharon performed a wide variety of duties, both religious and non-religious. Besides providing counseling for patients, she performed, along with other religious tasks, over 350 religious solemn rites in one nine-month period. Id. at 107.
According to the defendants, Scharon was fired because Heathcock believed that she was violating several canonical laws. Heathcock took this action “with the advice and consent of the Episcopal Bishop.” Appendix at 48. After she was fired, Scharon brought this case alleging that she was discriminatorily terminated on the basis of age and sex in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 630 et seq. (1988), and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (1988). As to Scharon’s ADEA claim, the District Court held that the ADEA does not apply because there is no clear Congressional intent to apply the ADEA to chaplain positions in a church-affiliated hospital. The District Court also held that Scharon’s Title VII claim is precluded, because the resolution of the claim would require excessive entanglement in religious affairs in violation of the First Amendment. Scharon appeals both holdings.
II.
Using the three-part analytical approach developed by the Supreme Court in
N.L.R.B. v. Catholic Bishop of Chicago,
To decide this question, we apply another three-part test set out by the Supreme Court in
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
Scharon argues that St. Luke’s is not a religious institution and that she was a secular employee, not “clergy.” She therefore claims that the application of Title VII and the ADEA would not require excessive government entanglement with religion. Scharon’s assertions, however, are untenable. Based on facts not in dispute, the District Court concluded that St. Luke’s is a church-affiliated hospital, with a “ ‘substantial religious character.’ ”
Scharon,
Similarly, the position of Chaplain at St. Luke’s cannot be characterized as secular. Besides performing the aforementioned duties, Scharon was required to have been ordained by a “religious faith group.” Appendix at 109. Her supervisor, The Reverend Heathcock, was an ordained priest.
Id.
at 47. As a Chaplain, Scharon performed numerous formal religious ceremonies.
Id.
at 107. It is without consequence that she also may have performed many secular duties. She was not a secular employee who happened to perform some religious duties; she was a spiritual employee who also performed some secular duties. Her
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position as Chaplain is primarily a “ministerial” position; the performance of secular activities in that role does not diminish its religious nature.
Cf. Rayburn,
Scharon also argues that excessive entanglement can be avoided in this case because the defendants’ claims that religious issues were the basis for her termination are merely a pretext for the actual motive behind her dismissal. Therefore, she asserts, government involvement with religion can be avoided by focusing solely on the issues of age and sex discrimination. However, as the Supreme Court said in
Catholic Bishop,
It follows that the decision of the District Court based on the “excessive entanglement” test of
Lemon
(an Establishment Clause-type of analysis) must be affirmed. In addition, we believe that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment also prohibits the courts from deciding cases such as this one. Personnel decisions by church-affiliated institutions affecting clergy are
per se
religious matters and cannot be reviewed by civil courts, for to review such decisions would require the courts to determine the meaning of religious doctrine and canonical law and to impose a secular court’s view of whether in the context of the particular case religious doctrine and canonical law support the decision the church authorities have made. This is precisely the kind of judicial second-guessing of decision-making by religious organizations that the Free Exercise Clause forbids.
See Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese for the United States and Canada v. Milivojevich,
We affirm the order of the District Court granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. The opinion of the District Court is published as
Scharon v. St. Luke’s Episcopal Presbyterian Hosps.,
. It is clear that Title VII applies to the employment relationship in question here.
See Rayburn v. General Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists,
. We are mindful of the potential for abuse our holding theoretically may invite; namely, the use of the First Amendment as a pretextual shield to protect otherwise prohibited employment decisions. But we think that saving grace lies in the recognition that courts consistently have subjected the personnel decisions of various religious organizations to statutory scrutiny where the duties of the employees were not of a religious nature.
See Dole v. Shenandoah Baptist Church,
