City Insists Permit is Required for a Home Bible Study

imagesbannerscp_120x215Reprinted by permission of the Christian Post

By Katherine T. Phan
Christian Post Reporter
Fri, May. 29 2009 10:16 AM EDT

A San Diego pastor is fighting a citation from the San Diego County that requires him to obtain a permit to host weekly Bible studies at his home.

Pastor David Jones and his wife Mary have been hosting a Bible Study fellowship at their home every Tuesday for the past five years. The meeting, averaging 15 people each week, is usually comprised of dinner, fellowship and Bible study.

The meetings have gone without government interference until recently. Jones told KGTV, an ABC News affiliate in San Diego, that the visitor to a neighbor’s house alerted the County after a Bible study member hit the visitor’s car while leaving.

In April, a County employee visited the Jones’ residence and informed the couple that they were not allowed to hold “religious assembles” in their home unless they obtained a major use permit. The employee warned that the couple would face fines upwards of $1,000 if they failed to comply with the County’s order.

The County later sent the Joneses a written warning ordering them to “cease/stop religious assembly on parcel or obtain major use permit.”

News of the County’s order has re-ignited debate over the interpretation of the First Amendment.

The Joneses and their attorney of The Western Center for Law and Policy, based in Escondido, Calif, said the couple’s rights to hold the Bible studies are protected by the U.S. Constitution.

A home bible study (Credit: Steelman)

A home bible study (Credit: Steelman)

The Administration Citation and Cease and Desist Order violate the “Jones’ right to assemble peaceably and privately in their home for the purpose of religious worship,” stated WCLP president Dean R. Broyles in a letter sent on behalf of the Joneses to the County Tuesday.

The letter alleges the County is discriminating against religious activity because it doesn’t require a permit for secular assemblies such as cub scout meetings, friends gathering each week to watch sports on TV, book clubs, sewing clubs, or poker nights in residential zones.

Donald Wildmon, chairman of the American Family Association, defended the Bible study meeting on Thursday, urging supporters to sign a petition to the San Diego County Board that calls the County’s actions “anti-Christian.”

“I am upset that you would shut down a home Bible study of 15 people and yet allow similar secular events,” reads the petition. “Your actions appear to have an anti-Christian slant and should cease immediately.”

The Joneses and WCLP, according to the letter, are giving the County until early next week to uphold the couple’s right to continue holding the Bible study meeting. If the County refuses to comply, the couple is prepared to consider a lawsuit.

A meeting between the two sides this week was unfruitful, according to KGTV. The next meeting is scheduled for June 9.

Copyright 2009 The Christian Post. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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  • Mary Jones
    Wow- why does the story have attached a file picture of a Jehovah's Witness Bible study? The Witnesses do not have "pastors" so the story is obviously not connected to them. But that yellow book in the picture is a JW Bible study aid entitled "What Does the Bible REALLY Teach?"

    Online version as proof: http://www.watchtower.org/e/bh/article_00.htm
  • I obtained the image from an open license repository to use as a visual representation of what a Bible study might look like. It didn't say anything that I noticed about it being a JW Bible study and I didn't recognize the JW aid. Thanks for pointing that out.
  • DCM
    Good Lord.

    If the people from the County want to live in Communist China, they should just move there.
  • Carrie_K_Hutchens
    I'd say this is discrimination right in the face!
  • I couldn't agree more, DCM. Who would have thought just 20-30 years ago that we would see this kind of un-American behavior from governmental entities within the United States?

    It's what we get for being lazy and apathetic, I guess, but that still doesn't make it a bit more right.
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