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Michigan Law Is Threatening a Christian Medical Nonprofit for Following Its Christian Beliefs

Religious organizations such as Christian Healthcare Centers in Michigan should be free to operate and serve the community according to their beliefs.
Alliance Defending Freedom
Published
Revised
Christian Healthcare Centers provides high-quality primary medical care in Western Michigan.

Choosing a doctor is about more than just location and convenience. Many people want to find a provider who shares their beliefs, who will take time to understand their situation, and who will consider not just their physical health, but their emotional and even spiritual needs, as well.

For many Michigan residents, Christian Healthcare Centers fits the bill.

Based in the western part of the state, Christian Healthcare is a faith-based organization that focuses on serving the community, including those who cannot afford medical care.

But now, thanks to a Michigan state law and a pair of recent court rulings, Christian Healthcare’s ability to operate as a faith-based medical organization is in jeopardy.

Read more about this case below.

What is Christian Healthcare Centers?

Christian Healthcare was founded to provide a distinctly Christian alternative to traditional primary care.

Christian Healthcare isn’t just for Christians. Its patients come from many faiths, or no faith at all. But Christian Healthcare does operate according to the dictates of the Christian faith. That’s exactly why Christian Healthcare provides subsidized medical care to the needy so that they can obtain care they normally cannot afford. As a public religious ministry, Christian Healthcare’s beliefs shape its purpose, mission, and activities.

At Christian Healthcare, the focus is always on the patients. Doctors there regularly spend over half an hour with patients during appointments—double the time of the average consultation in traditional practices.

The ministry serves everyone regardless of characteristics like sexual orientation and gender identity. In fact, Christian Healthcare has served and continues to serve patients who identify as transgender.

But while Christian Healthcare offers care to anyone, it cannot speak or provide treatment that conflicts with its religious beliefs to anyone.

That means Christian Healthcare cannot prescribe cross-sex hormones to facilitate efforts to change someone’s sex, and it cannot refer to patients using pronouns that do not match their biological sex. To do so would be to violate its belief that God made human beings male and female.

Christian Healthcare also requires its employees to affirm and abide by its religious beliefs—a standard practice among religious ministries that is permitted by federal law and in almost every state across the country.

And those facts—Christian Healthcare’s beliefs, its expression, and its hiring practices—are what put it at odds with the state of Michigan.

Christian Healthcare Centers has provided high-quality primary medical care to the people of Western Michigan since 2017.

Christian Healthcare Centers v. Nessel

The civil-rights law in the state of Michigan prohibits discrimination because of sex—a standard stipulation that should not be controversial. But in 2018, the Michigan Civil Rights Commission reinterpreted “sex” to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

In the years following, two state court rulings affirmed the commission’s redefining of sex. In 2020, a state court held that “sex” includes gender identity but not sexual orientation. Then in July 2022, the Michigan Supreme Court expanded the definition further, ruling that “discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation necessarily involves discrimination because of sex.” And in 2023, the Michigan legislature explicitly added sexual orientation and gender identity to the list of characteristics protected by the state law.

When Christian Healthcare began to learn about these court decisions, it realized that its ability to serve the community and partner with fellow Christians consistent with its religious beliefs about biology and other topics would be threatened.

That may sound abstract, but the implications are concrete: Christian Healthcare needs to hire people who agree with its mission. It regularly has job openings that it should be able to post and publicize to encourage applications. The ministry needs to address its patients and the public in a way that doesn’t contradict its core religious convictions. And it should be able to operate without worrying about investigations, prosecutions, and steep penalties. 

But it cannot do any of these things because of current state law.

That’s why ADF attorneys have asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit to stop Michigan from using its law to target people of faith.

What’s at stake?

Christian Healthcare is seeking to protect its right—and that of other religious organizations—to serve the community and operate as a religious ministry.

Michigan’s civil-rights law threatens some of Christian Healthcare’s most fundamental rights. The First Amendment protects the right of religious ministries like Christian Healthcare to operate according to their beliefs, and to join with others of the same faith to achieve the ministry’s mission.

Michigan law could subject Christian Healthcare to steep penalties, including fines of $50,000, loss of medical license, and even possible jail time for employees.

Ministries like Christian Healthcare should not have to choose between helping the hurting and following their faith.

Simply put: Christian Healthcare’s religious freedom and freedom of speech are at stake.

Case timeline

  • July 2022: The Michigan Supreme Court ruled that “discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation necessarily involves discrimination because of sex.” A lower state court had already ruled that “sex” includes gender identity.
  • August 2022: ADF attorneys representing Christian HealthCare Centers filed a lawsuit against Attorney General Nessel.
  • May 2023: The Michigan governor signed legislation codifying addition of sexual orientation and gender identity to Michigan civil rights law.
  • August 2023: ADF attorneys filed a notice of appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit.

The bottom line

Religious organizations should be free to operate and serve the community according to their beliefs.