Thursday, April 16, 2026

Forced religion at work is a very bad idea

It started with an Easter email sent agency-wide from the top: "He has risen!" The message praised Christianity as "the foundation of our faith." Some employees were stunned. Others were offended. Many chose to stay quiet, worried about what might happen if they spoke up.

But it didn't stop there. Prayer services began appearing in government buildings. Invitations circulated. Policies allowed employees to "persuade" coworkers of their religious views. Leadership messaging leaned into a single faith tradition. And with that, the atmosphere changed. Employees described a growing sense of discomfort, pressure, and division—even when everything was labeled "voluntary."

That shift isn't surprising. When religion enters the workplace through leadership, it stops being personal and becomes institutional. This isn't about hostility to religion. Employees have every right to their beliefs, and Title VII protects those rights. Employers must accommodate sincerely held religious practices. People can pray, observe holidays, and express their faith within reasonable limits. None of that is controversial.

The problem arises when the employer becomes the messenger. Power changes everything. When a coworker shares their beliefs, you can disengage. When your boss—or your agency head—does it, the message carries weight. It signals expectation, even if none is explicitly stated. "Optional" starts to feel like a test. "Voluntary" starts to feel like a signal. And silence begins to feel safer than honesty. That's not inclusion; it's pressure.

That's why neutrality matters. Workplaces are not houses of worship; they are shared environments for people of different faiths and no faith at all. The only way that works is if the employer stays out of the religion business. Not anti-religion. Not pro-religion. Neutral. Because once leadership elevates one belief system, others inevitably feel like they don't quite belong.

There are legal risks, of course—religious harassment, hostile work environment, retaliation, and for public employers, constitutional concerns. But the more immediate damage is cultural. Trust erodes. Division grows. Employees who should feel safe speaking up instead stay silent.

Employers need to stay in their lane. Protect religious expression and accommodate it when required. But don't promote it, don't organize it, and don't wrap it in your institutional voice. Once that line is blurred, the consequences are no longer within your control.