The U.S. Supreme Court 2014 decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby allowed religious, anti-abortion employers to refuse to cover contraception in their employee health insurance. But an extraordinary April 4 appellate court decision in Indiana turned the conservative Supreme Court’s landmark Hobby Lobby decision into a winning argument for abortion rights.
An extraordinary court decision in Indiana turned the conservative Supreme Court’s landmark Hobby Lobby decision into a winning argument for abortion rights.
The unanimous ruling from the three-judge panel, which found that the state’s abortion ban burdens the religious beliefs of those whose faiths permit abortions, signals the possibility of a long overdue shift in the conservative bias of religious freedom jurisprudence. It also signals the emergence of a partial, albeit untested, argument for people needing an abortion in states that have banned it.
The Indiana case was brought in 2022 by five anonymous plaintiffs of faith and the group Jewish Hoosiers for Choice. They’re seeking a religious exemption from the abortion ban Indiana enacted following the U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade that year. They said the ban violates their rights under the state’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which, like the federal law the owners of Hobby Lobby successfully relied on to avoid providing contraception coverage, protects religious objectors from laws that “substantially burden” their “sincerely held” religious beliefs.
The plaintiffs argued that their religious doctrine teaches that a fetus is part of a woman’s body, not an independent being with its own rights. The abortion ban, then, violates their religious freedom to decide whether to have an abortion. This argument, which undergirds similar religious freedom lawsuits across the country, including in Kentucky, Missouri and Florida, is a profound pushback against the Christian right’s attempts to assert their position, that life begins at conception and that a fetus is a person, as the only genuine religious belief.
In defending the abortion ban, the state argued that because seeking an abortion is not a mandatory religious ritual for the plaintiffs, they were not entitled to the protections of the state’s RFRA. But the court rejected this argument out of hand, citing the U.S. Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby ruling as decisive precedent. “The procurement of health insurance is not a mandatory religious ritual, either,” wrote Judge Leanna K. Weissmann (who was appointed to the court by the governor who signed the state’s abortion ban into law). If the owners of Hobby Lobby could engage in religious exercise by refusing to provide coverage for contraceptives they considered abortifacients, the court concluded, then “it stands to reason that a pregnant person can engage in a religious exercise by pursuing an abortion.”
The Indiana Supreme Court will have the final word in the likelihood that the state appeals. Nonetheless, religious liberty scholars see the appellate court decision as an important corrective in a protracted effort to undo the lopsided application of RFRA in favor of Christian conservatives. Elizabeth Sepper, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law and an expert on religious liberty law, told me the decision is “enormously significant,” as it shows “what an even-handed application of religious liberty doctrine looks like.”
Sepper cautioned, though, that even if the state’s high court lets the decision stand, how that decision might be applied is still uncertain. A RFRA-based court injunction against the abortion ban would presumably shield a doctor from being charged with a felony for performing an otherwise illegal abortion. But it is not clear how these scenarios would play out in real life, since doctors would be risking jail, financial penalties and loss of their medical licenses. “There’s a great deal of confusion and concern,” said Sepper, including among doctors who might worry in our current environment about “blowback” and “harassment,” even if the state did not prosecute them.









