Alabama House passes religious protection bill, making church disruption a felony
The Alabama House of Representatives voted 75-27 on Tuesday to approve HB 363, a bill that would make it a felony to disrupt a worship service through riots, unlawful protest, or disorderly conduct. Violators would face a Class C felony charge carrying up to 10 years in prison and a $15,000 fine.
The bill now heads to the Senate. If passed, it takes effect Oct. 1.
Rep. Greg Barnes, R-Curry, sponsored the legislation and defended it on the House floor:
"This is a religious protection bill that protects all religions, not just churches, synagogues, etc. And that's a very narrowly tailored, narrowly scoped bill."
Narrowly tailored is the key phrase. The bill doesn't criminalize disagreement. It doesn't outlaw spirited theological debate in the pews. It targets riots, unlawful protests, and disorderly conduct directed at houses of worship. That distinction matters, no matter how loudly opponents pretend it doesn't exist.
House Democrats Put on a Show
According to Alabama Reflector, the bill drew 40 minutes of debate before House Majority Leader Paul Lee, R-Dothan, moved to end discussion. That motion passed on a party-line vote. What Democrats managed to pack into those 40 minutes was, characteristically, more performance than substance.
Rep. Juandalynn Givan, D-Birmingham, opened with a Fox News conspiracy:
"I want all y'all good Republicans in here to stop watching Fox News. Because y'all have sat out there and literally watched Fox News and then decided to come back here to the great state of Alabama, and to present this bill for sponsorship. And now we are here."
No argument against the bill's text. No legal counterpoint. Just a cable news grievance dressed up as a floor debate.
Rep. Sam Jones, D-Mobile, called the bill "overkill" and tried a different angle:
"I think the absolute worst place that you could take away a person's right to disagree is in the church. I don't understand how you say that."
Jones also offered this gem of criminal justice philosophy: "It seems to me that we think that criminalizing acts change behavior. It doesn't."
An interesting position from a state legislator. If criminalizing acts doesn't change behavior, one wonders what Jones thinks the entire criminal code is for.
Then came Rep. Chris England, D-Tuscaloosa, who reached for the theological card:
"Under this particular piece of legislation, when Jesus went out there and flipped over some tables, he would have been a Class C felon."
It's a clever soundbite. It's also nonsense. Jesus drove money changers out of the temple for desecrating a house of worship. The bill targets people who disrupt worship itself. England's analogy actually argues for the bill, not against it.
The Real Objection
After the vote, Rep. A.J. McCampbell, D-Linden, complained that the debate ended prematurely:
"We have a situation where there are controversial bills that are very significant bills that the people of Alabama need to hear about. I don't think it's fair to the people of the state that all people's voices are not heard."
Forty minutes of floor debate on a bill that passed 75-27 is not a gag order. It's a supermajority exercising its mandate.
Givan went further, warning that the bill threatens journalism itself:
"If this bill passes in both houses in this building, this will set a further case precedent that will say that journalism as we know it is going further and further out the window."
Nothing in the bill's reported language touches journalism. It addresses riots, unlawful protests, and disorderly conduct at worship services. The leap from "don't riot in a church" to "journalism is dying" tells you everything about how Democrats approached this debate.
What This Is Actually About
Americans have watched churches vandalized, worship services interrupted by activists, and faith communities targeted with increasing boldness in recent years. The question isn't whether disrupting a worship service is wrong. Nearly everyone agrees it is. The question is whether the law should reflect that consensus with real consequences.
Alabama's House said yes, by a three-to-one margin.
The Democratic objections boiled down to three claims: the bill is overkill, it criminalizes disagreement, and it somehow endangers the press. None of those claims survived contact with the bill's actual text, which targets specific criminal conduct directed at religious services.
Every one of the Democratic arguments carefully avoided the central scenario the bill addresses: a congregation gathered in prayer, and someone showing up to shut it down through force or chaos. That's the situation 75 Alabama legislators voted to prevent. The 27 who voted no couldn't muster a coherent reason why they shouldn't.
The bill moves to the Senate. If it clears that chamber, Alabama will have put a marker down that few states have: worship is not a protest venue, and those who treat it as one will answer for it.




