On a related-note, the biggest issue facing the establishment and free-exercise clauses of the First Amendment, are situations where the government (either local, state, or federal) can infringe upon religious liberty in certain circumstances
I will argue that precedent set forth in previous decades essentially nullifies the free-exercise clause --which is a big problem
During the pandemic, states reacted with various laws, orders, and statutes designed to limit religious gatherings, or close all churches. Maryland explicitly ordered churches to close, while states like Texas made a distinction between "essential" and "non-essential" services, and ultimately declared churches essential, thus giving them some ability to operate. Nevertheless, churches nationwide were shuttered in early 2020
The justification for these actions were based on some SCOTUS rulings in previous decades, and specifically the statement by the court "Subsequent decisions have consistently held that the right of free exercise does not relieve an individual of the obligation to comply with a "valid and neutral law of general applicability on the ground that the law proscribes (or prescribes) conduct that his religion prescribes (or proscribes)."
this idea of a neutral law that applies evenly can supersede the free-exercise clause is highly problematic
another avenue state authorities took was declaring emergency action in order to free themselves from Constitutional requirements
both of these justifications are legally wrong, based on:
1. The supremacy clause of the Constitution (Article VI). A state cannot arbitrarily pass a law that infringes om the Constitution, Bill of Rights, etc.
2. There is no concept of neutrality in the Bill of Rights. A state cannot pass a law that removes the right to trial for all citizens of Maryland, based on some frivolous foundation, and declare that it is a valid law because it applies to everyone --that is complete nonsense.
3. A state emergency is not a national emergency --and even though a national emergency was declared during the early days of the pandemic, the president did not suspend the Constitution and assume emergency powers. A state cannot declare an emergency and circumvent the Constitution (see #1)
Either the First Amendment means what it says, or it doesn't. If a virus with a 99% survival rate can lead to actions by states that circumvent the free-exercise clause, states effectively shutter houses of worship for virtually any reason, and at any time