Wisconsin, like many other States, exempts certain religious organizations from paying taxes into the State's unemployment compensation system. One such exemption covers nonprofts “operated primarily for religious purposes” and controlled, supervised, or principally supported by a church. Wis. Stat. § 108.02(15)(h)(2) (2023–2024). Petitioners, Catholic Charities Bureau, Inc., and four of the entities that it operates, claimed that they qualify for the exemption as religious organizations controlled by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Superior, Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Supreme Court disagreed, holding that petitioners are not “operated primarily for religious purposes” because they neither engage in proselytization nor serve only Catholics in their charitable work.
The question here is whether § 108.02(15)(h)(2), as applied to petitioners by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, violates the First Amendment. The Court holds that it does. The First Amendment mandates government neutrality between religions and subjects any state-sponsored denominational preference to strict scrutiny. The Wisconsin Supreme Court's application of § 108.02(15)(h)(2) imposed a denominational preference by differentiating between religions based on et al. by Zachary G. Parks; for the Wisconsin Catholic Conference by Bradley G. Hubbard and Elizabeth A. Kiernan; for World Faith Foundation by James L. Hirsen and Deborah J. Dewart; for Nathan S. Chapman by Jeffrey R. Johnson; and for Christopher C. Lund, pro se. Briefs of amici curiae urging affrmance were fled for American Atheists, Inc., by Geoffrey T. Blackwell; for the Economic Policy Institute et al. by Laurence J. Dupuis, Brenda L. Lewison, and John Philo; for the Freedom From Religion Foundation by Samuel T. Grover; for Religious and Civil-Rights Organizations by Alex J. Luchenitser, Daniel Mach, Heather L. Weaver, and Cecillia D. Wang; and for Service Employees International Union et al. by Scott A. Kronland.
John M. Baker fled a brief for the International Municipal Lawyers Association as amicus curiae.
Page Proof Pending Publication CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N theological lines. Because the law's application does not survive strict scrutiny, it cannot stand.
I
A
Wisconsin has long operated an unemployment compensation program that seeks to mitigate and “more fairly” distribute the “economic burdens resulting from unemployment.”
Wis. Stat. § 108.01(2); see § 108.01 et seq. To achieve that goal, Wisconsin law requires most employers to make regular contributions to the State's unemployment fund through payroll taxes. See §§ 108.17–108.18. Nonproft employers may choose between contributing to that fund and reimbursing the State for benefts paid to their laid-off employees. See § 108.151.
Wisconsin's regime contains an exemption for religious employers. See § 108.02(15)(h). The exemption applies to any “church or convention or association of churches,” without further qualifcation, and to services provided “[b]y a duly ordained, commissioned or licensed minister of a church in the exercise of his or her ministry or by a member of a religious order in the exercise of duties required by such order.” §§ 108.02(15)(h)(1), (3). As relevant here, the exemption also covers nonproft organizations “operated, supervised, controlled, or principally supported by a church or convention or association of churches,” but only if they are “operated primarily for religious purposes.” § 108.02(15)(h)(2). Wisconsin is not alone in exempting religious organizations from unemployment compensation taxes. The Federal Unemployment Tax Act, 26 U. S. C. § 3301 et seq., contains a textually parallel religious-employer exemption. See § 3309(b)(1)(B). Since Congress enacted that law in 1970, over 40 States have adopted similar exemptions.1 1Wisconsin does not cite any decisions interpreting these federal or state laws to require proselytization or exclusively co-religionist service for charitable organizations to qualify for the exemption, as the Wisconsin Supreme Court did here. See infra, at 249–250.
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B
Catholic Charities Bureau, Inc. (Bureau), is a nonproft organization that serves as the social ministry arm of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Superior, Wisconsin. 2024 WI 13, ¶4, 411 Wis. 2d 1, 13, 3 N. W. 3d 666, 672. The Bureau's stated mission is to “carry on the redeeming work of our Lord.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 382a. In aid of that mission, the Bureau “provid[es] services to the poor and disadvantaged” and seeks to “be an effective sign of the charity of Christ.” Id., at 383a. It does not distinguish on the basis of “race, sex, or religion in reference to clients served, staff employed and board members appointed.” Ibid. The Bureau oversees several separately incorporated entities, including four that, together with the Bureau, are the petitioners here: Barron County Development Services, Inc., Black River Industries, Inc., Diversifed Services, Inc., and Headwaters, Inc. 411 Wis. 2d, at 14–16, 3 N. W. 3d, at 672– 673. These entities provide a range of charitable services to local communities across Wisconsin. Barron County Development Services, for instance, helps individuals with disabilities secure employment. See id., at 14, 3 N. W. 3d, at 673. Black River Industries provides daily living services to Wisconsinites with developmental or mental health disabilities, among other charitable services. Id., at 15, 3 N. W. 3d, at 673.
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Superior exercises control over both the Bureau and its subentities. Id., at14, 3N. W. 3d, at 672. The bishop of the Diocese serves as the Bureau's president and appoints its membership, which in turn oversees the Bureau “ `to ensure' ” that it fulflls its mission “ `in compliance with the Principles of Catholic social teaching.' ” Ibid. The Bureau's executive director, who need not be a Catholic priest, supervises the operations of each subentity. Id., at 16, 3 N. W. 3d, at 673; see also 2023 WI App 12, ¶11, 406 Wis. 2d 586, 596, 987 N. W. 2d 778, 783.
Employees of the Bureau and its subentities are not required to adhere to any particular religious faith, and the Page Proof Pending Publication CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N same is true for the recipients of their charitable services. 411 Wis. 2d, at 16, 3 N. W. 3d, at 673; see also App. to Pet. for Cert. 383a. Participants in petitioners' charitable programs do not receive religious training or orientation, and neither the Bureau nor its subentities “tr[ies] to `inculcate' ” participants with the Catholic faith. 411 Wis. 2d, at 16, 3 N. W. 3d, at 673. That rule, petitioners explain, refects religious doctrine prohibiting Catholic bodies from “ `misus[ing] works of charity for purposes of proselytism.' ” Brief for Petitioners 10 (quoting Directory for the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops “Apostolorum Successores” ¶196 (2004)). According to petitioners, Catholic teachings distinguish between “evangelization,” which involves “sharing one's faith,” and “proselytization,” which seeks to “infuence” or “coerc[e]” others into accepting one's religious views. Tr. of Oral Arg. 22–23. The former is permitted, and the latter is not, petitioners say. Id., at 22; see Brief for Petitioners 10.
C
In 2016, petitioners sought from the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development a determination that they qualifed for the religious-employer exemption set forth in Wis. Stat. § 108.02(15)(h)(2). The department denied their request. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 351a. It acknowledged that petitioners are “supervised and controlled by the Roman Catholic Church,” thereby satisfying one of the two criteria for the exemption. Id., at 352a, 356a, 360a, 364a, 368a. The department determined, however, that petitioners are not “operated primarily for religious purposes” within the meaning of the statute. Ibid. Petitioners appealed, and an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) reversed the department's ruling. Id., at 291a–350a.
In the years that followed, petitioners received a series of alternating wins and losses as the parties appealed up through the state administrative and judicial systems. The Wisconsin Labor and Industry Review Commission reversed Page Proof Pending Publication the ALJ's decision and reinstated the department's denials of petitioners' exemption requests. See id., at 212a–290a. After petitioners sought judicial review in state court, the state trial court overrode the commission, holding that petitioners are entitled to the exemption. See id., at 190a. The State Court of Appeals, however, subsequently reversed.
406 Wis. 2d 586, 987 N. W. 2d 778. It reasoned that petitioners are not “operated primarily for religious purposes” because petitioners' “provision of charitable social services . . . are neither inherently or primarily religious activities.” Id., at 627, 629, 987 N. W. 2d, at 798, 799.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court affrmed. The court began by recognizing, as the lower courts had, that petitioners are “without question `operated, supervised, controlled, or principally supported' by the Diocese of Superior.” 411 Wis. 2d, at 22, 3 N. W. 3d, at 676 (quoting § 108.02(15)(h)(2)). The dispositive question, then, was whether petitioners are “operated primarily for religious purposes.” Id., at 22, 3 N. W. 3d, at 676. The court interpreted that statutory phrase to require judicial inquiry into not only an organization's “motivations” but also its “activities.” Id., at 33, 3 N. W. 3d, at 682. To determine whether an organization's activities are “ `primarily' religious in nature,” the court held, courts should “focu[s] on whether an organization participated in worship services, religious outreach, ceremony, or religious education.” Id., at 34–35, 3 N. W. 3d, at 682 (citing United States v. Dykema, 666 F. 2d 1096, 1100 (CA7 1981)). According to the court, that analysis would identify “ `[t]ypical activities of an organization operated for religious purposes,' ” while avoiding “ `any subjective inquiry with respect to religious truth.' ” 411 Wis. 2d, at 32, 3 N. W. 3d, at 681 (quoting Dykema, 666 F. 2d, at 1100; alteration in original).
Applying that standard, the court held that petitioners' activities are “secular in nature,” not religious. 411 Wis. 2d, at 38, 3 N. W. 3d, at 684. Petitioners “neither attempt to imbue program participants with the Catholic faith nor supPage Proof Pending Publication CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N ply any religious materials to program participants or employees,” the court observed. Id., at 35, 3 N. W. 3d, at 682. “Both employment with the organizations and services offered by the organizations are open to all participants regardless of religion,” and the charitable services offered by the subentities could “be provided by organizations of either religious or secular motivations.” Id., at 35–36, 3 N. W. 3d, at 683. Based on that record, the court held that petitioners “are not operated primarily for religious purposes within the meaning of Wis. Stat. § 108.02(15)(h)(2).” Id., at 38, 3 N. W. 3d, at 684.
The court then addressed petitioners' argument that its interpretation of § 108.02(15)(h)(2) violated the First Amendment's Religion Clauses. The court frst held that its interpretation did not transgress church autonomy principles because the exemption “neither regulates internal church governance nor mandates any activity.” Id., at50,3N. W. 3d, at 690. The court also determined that there was no risk of excessive government entanglement with religion because Wisconsin's exemption does not ask whether petitioners' “activities are consistent or inconsistent with Catholic doctrine.” Id., at 45, 3 N. W. 3d, at 687. Finally, the court rejected petitioners' argument that its interpretation contravened First Amendment principles of “ `neutrality among religions' ” by “ `favor[ing] religious groups that require those they serve to adhere to the faith of that group or be subject to proselytization.' ” Id., at 52–53, 3 N. W. 3d, at 691. This argument failed, the court said, because petitioners had not “demonstrate[d] that the statute imposes a constitutionally signifcant burden on their religious practice” in the frst place. Id., at 55, 3 N. W. 3d, at 692.2 Justice Rebecca Grassl Bradley authored a dissent, which Chief Justice Ziegler joined and Justice Hagedorn joined in 2The Court today addresses only the denominational neutrality challenge raised by petitioners and does not reach the further two constitutional arguments considered by the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Page Proof Pending Publication part. Justice Bradley would have held that a nonproft is “operated primarily for religious purposes,” § 108.02(15) (h)(2), when its motivations are religious, irrespective of the nature of its activities. The majority's contrary approach, the dissent warned, “engages in religious discrimination and entangles the state with religion in violation of the First Amendment.” Id., at 92–93, 3 N. W. 3d, at 710–711. While Justice Bradley recognized that “the application of secular criteria that leads to disparate treatment of religions is not religious discrimination,” she reasoned that the majority's approach “necessarily and explicitly discriminates among certain religious faiths and religious practices.” Id., at 105, 3 N. W. 3d, at 717. It did so as applied to petitioners, Justice Bradley explained, by declaring them ineligible for the exemption based on explicitly religious criteria, including their adherence to Catholic teachings forbidding “proselytiz[ation] when conducting charitable acts.” Id., at 106, 3 N. W. 3d, at 717. That denominational discrimination, according to Justice Bradley, triggered strict scrutiny, which the State could not satisfy. See id., at 108–110, 3 N. W. 3d, at 718–719. Justice Hagedorn dissented separately, noting his agreement with Justice Bradley's construction of the statute. Id., at 122, 3 N. W. 3d, at 725.
We granted certiorari to decide whether the Wisconsin Supreme Court's interpretation of § 108.02(15)(h)(2), as applied to petitioners, violates the First Amendment.
U. S. 1064 (2024).
II
A
“The clearest command of the Establishment Clause” is that the government may not “offcially prefe[r]” one religious denomination over another. Larson v. Valente, 456 U. S. 228, 244 (1982). This principle of denominational neutrality bars States from passing laws that “ `aid or oppose' ” particular religions, Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U. S. 97, 106 Page Proof Pending Publication CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N (1968), or interfere in the “competition between sects,” Zor ach v. Clauson, 343 U. S. 306, 314 (1952). The Establishment Clause's “prohibition of denominational preferences is inextricably connected with the continuing vitality of the Free Exercise Clause,” too. Larson, 456 U. S., at 245.
That is because the “ `fullest realization of true religious liberty requires that government' ” refrain from “ `favoritism among sects.' ” Id., at 246 (quoting School Dist. of Abing ton Township v. Schempp, 374 U. S. 203, 305 (1963) (Goldtain religions, the Court has warned, convey to members of other faiths that “ `they are outsiders, not full members of the political community.' ” Santa Fe Independent School Dist. v. Doe, 530 U. S. 290, 309 (2000).
To guard against that serious harm, this Court in Larson v. Valente, 456 U. S. 228, set a demanding standard for the government to justify differential treatment across religions on denominational lines. See id., at 244–246. When a state law establishes a denominational preference, courts must “treat the law as suspect” and apply “strict scrutiny in adjudging its constitutionality.” Id., at 246. The government bears the burden to show that the relevant law, or application thereof, is “closely ftted to further a compelling governmental interest.” Id., at 251 (internal quotation marks omitted).
A law that differentiates between religions along theological lines is textbook denominational discrimination. Take, for instance, a law that treats “a religious service of Jehovah's Witnesses . . . differently than a religious service of other sects” because the former is “less ritualistic, more unorthodox, [and] less formal.” Fowler v. Rhode Island, 345 U. S. 67, 69 (1953). Or consider an exemption that applies only to religious organizations that perform baptisms, engage in monotheistic worship, or hold services on Sunday. Such laws establish a preference for certain religions based on the content of their religious doctrine, namely, how they Page Proof Pending Publication worship, hold services, or initiate members and whether they engage in those practices at all. Such offcial differentiation on theological lines is fundamentally foreign to our constitutional order, for “[t]he law knows no heresy, and is committed to the support of no dogma.” Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. 679, 728 (1872).
This case involves that paradigmatic form of denominational discrimination. In determining whether petitioners qualifed for the tax exemption under § 108.02(15)(h)(2), the Wisconsin Supreme Court acknowledged that petitioners are controlled by a church, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Superior, thereby satisfying one of the exemption's two criteria. 411 Wis. 2d, at 22, 3 N. W. 3d, at 676. The court's inquiry instead turned on whether petitioners are “operated primarily for religious purposes.” Wis. Stat. § 108.02(15)(h)(2); see 411 Wis. 2d, at 22, 3 N. W. 3d, at 676. On that criterion, the court recognized that petitioners' charitable works are religiously motivated. Id.,at34,3N. W. 3d,at682. The court nevertheless deemed petitioners ineligible for the exemption under § 108.02(15)(h)(2) because they do not “attempt to imbue program participants with the Catholic faith,” “supply any religious materials to program participants or employees,” or limit their charitable services to members of the Catholic Church. Id.,at 35,3 N. W. 3d,at 682–683. Put simply, petitioners could qualify for the exemption while providing their current charitable services if they engaged in proselytization or limited their services to fellow Catholics.
Petitioners' Catholic faith, however, bars them from satisfying those criteria. Catholic teaching, petitioners say, forbids “ `misus[ing] works of charity for purposes of proselytism.' ” Brief for Petitioners 10 (quoting Directory for the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops “Apostolorum Successores” ¶196). It also requires provision of charitable services “without making distinctions `by race, sex, or religion.' ” Brief for Petitioners 7 (quoting App. to Pet. for Cert. 431a). Page Proof Pending Publication CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N Many religions apparently impose similar rules prohibiting proselytization or religious differentiation in the provision of charitable services. See Brief for Religious Liberty Scholars as Amici Curiae 12–13 (discussing beliefs in Judaism, Islam, Sikhism, and Hinduism).
Others seemingly have adopted a contrary approach. See id., at 12 (discussing practices of some Protestant denominations).
Wisconsin's exemption, as interpreted by its Supreme Court, thus grants a denominational preference by explicitly differentiating between religions based on theological practices. Indeed, petitioners' eligibility for the exemption ultimately turns on inherently religious choices (namely, whether to proselytize or serve only co-religionists), not “ `secular criteria' ” that “happen to have a `disparate impact' upon different religious organizations.” Larson, 456 U. S., at 247, n. 23. Much like a law exempting only those religious organizations that perform baptisms or worship on Sundays, an exemption that requires proselytization or exclusive service of co-religionists establishes a preference for certain religions based on the commands of their religious doctrine.
In short, as applied to petitioners by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, Wis. Stat. § 108.02(15)(h)(2) imposes a denominational preference by differentiating between religions based on theological choices.
B
The State does not dispute that the government may not prefer one religion over another. See Brief for Respondents 35. Instead, the State argues that, when it comes to “[r]eligious accommodations” afforded by the government, courts should ask whether the accommodation's eligibility criteria are the product of “invidious discrimination” to determine if strict scrutiny applies. Id., at 35, 37; see id., at 42–43. This Court's decision in Gillette v. United States, 401 U. S. 437 (1971), the State contends, lends support to this rule. See Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication Brief for Respondents 36. As the State would have it, Gil lette stands for the premise that whenever a religious “accommodation's line serves `considerations of a pragmatic nature' having `nothing to do with a design to foster or favor any sect, religion, or cluster of religions,' the Establishment Clause is not offended.” Brief for Respondents 36 (quoting Gillette, 401 U. S., at 452–453).
The inquiry set forth in Gillette, however, is inapposite. There, this Court rejected an Establishment Clause challenge to a provision of the Military Selective Service Act of 1967, which afforded a “conscientious objector” status to any person who, “ `by reason of religious training and belief,' ” was “ `conscientiously opposed to participation in war in any form.' ” Gillette, 401 U. S., at 441. Importantly, that exemption “focused on individual conscientious belief, not on sectarian affliation.” Id., at 454. Conscientious objector status was thus “available on an equal basis” to members of all religions under the Military Selective Service Act, as this Court later explained in Larson. 456 U. S., at 247, n. 23 (discussing Gillette). “[O]n its face,” the statute “simply d[id] not discriminate on the basis of religious affliation.” Gil lette, 401 U. S., at 450.
The same is not true here. The Wisconsin Supreme Court's interpretation of § 108.02(h)(15)(2) facially differentiates among religions based on theological choices. After all, an exemption provided only to organizations that engage in proselytization or serve only co-religionists is not, on its face, “available on an equal basis” to all denominations. Larson, 456 U. S., at 247, n. 23. That type of “explicit” distinction between religious practices is what this Court has deemed subject to strict scrutiny, including in the context of religious exemptions. Ibid.; see id., at 246–251.
Next, the State disputes the premise that petitioners were denied coverage “because they do not proselytize or serve only Catholics” in the course of performing charitable work. Brief for Respondents 37. The State insists that, instead, CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N the Wisconsin Supreme Court excluded petitioners because they had “identifed no distinctively religious activity that would create diffculty in resolving unemployment disputes.” Ibid. When pressed at argument as to what would qualify as such “distinctively religious activity” in the context of providing charitable services, however, the State clarifed that it meant “activities that express and inculcate religious doctrine: worship, proselytization, religious education.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 81; see also id., at 84 (“What it comes down to is whether the employees of the organization are expressing and inculcating religious doctrine”).
That understanding of the Wisconsin Supreme Court's ruling, even if assumed correct, cannot save the statute from strict scrutiny. Decisions about whether to “express and inculcate religious doctrine” through worship, proselytization, or religious education when performing charitable work are, again, fundamentally theological choices driven by the content of different religious doctrines. Id., at 81. A statute that excludes religious organizations from an accommodation on such grounds facially favors some denominations over others.
III
Because § 108.02(15)(h)(2) “grants denominational preferences of the sort consistently and frmly deprecated in our precedents,” it “must be invalidated unless it is justifed by a compelling governmental interest” and is “closely ftted to further that interest.” Larson, 456 U. S., at 246–247. The State bears the burden of clearing that high bar, and it has failed to do so here.
Wisconsin justifes its law by reference to two principal interests. First, it argues that the law serves a compelling state interest in “ensuring unemployment coverage for its citizens.” Brief for Respondents 44. Yet the State fails to explain how the theological lines drawn by § 108.02(15)(h)(2) are narrowly tailored to advance that asserted interest, particularly as applied to petitioners. Indeed, petitioners operPage Proof Pending Publication ate their own unemployment compensation system for employees, which provides benefts largely “ `equivalent' ” to the state system. 406 Wis. 2d, at 614, 987 N. W. 2d, at 792.
Furthermore, Wisconsin does not suggest that organizations like Catholic Charities, which decline to proselytize and choose to serve all-comers, are more likely to leave their employees without unemployment benefts. Nor could it: The record is devoid of such evidence.
The distinctions drawn by Wisconsin's regime, moreover, are vastly underinclusive when it comes to ensuring unemployment coverage for its citizens. Wisconsin exempts over 40 forms of “employment” from its unemployment compensation program. See §§108.02(15)(f)–(kt). Notably, those exemptions cover religious entities that provide charitable services in a similar manner to petitioners (that is, without proselytizing or denominational differentiation), but are exempt because the work is done directly by the church itself or its ministers, rather than by a separate nonproft organization controlled by the church. See §§ 108.02(15)(h)(1), (3). That underinclusiveness leaves “ `appreciable damage to [the State's] supposedly vital interest unprohibited' ” and therefore belies the State's claim of narrow tailoring. Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 576 U. S. 155, 172 (2015).
Second, the State argues that the Wisconsin Supreme Court's interpretation of § 108.02(15)(h)(2) is “narrowly tailored to avoid entangling the state with employment decisions touching on religious faith and doctrine.” Brief for Respondents 44. When an organization's employees “express an[d] inculcate religious doctrine through worship, proselytization, and religious education,” the State explains, “misconduct disputes could often force the state to decide whether employees complied with religious doctrine.” Tr.
of Oral Arg. 72. Yet the State again fails to demonstrate that § 108.02(15)(h)(2) is “closely ftted to further” that anti- entanglement interest. Larson, 456 U. S., at 247. To the extent the State seeks to avoid opining on employee compliPage Proof Pending Publication CATHOLIC CHARITIES BUREAU, INC. v. WISCONSIN LABOR & INDUSTRY REVIEW COMM'N ance with religious teachings, it does not explain why it declined to craft an exemption limited to employees who are in fact tasked with inculcating religious doctrine. Instead, the exemption here functions at an organizational level, covering both the janitor and the priest in equal measure. See § 108.02(15)(h)(2).
That overinclusiveness pervades Wisconsin's exemption regime more broadly, too. Recall that Wisconsin exempts from its unemployment compensation system all “church[es] or convention[s] or association[s] of churches” without differentiating between employees actually involved in religious works, for whom the anti-entanglement concern is relevant, and other staff. § 108.02(15)(h)(1). The State itself concedes, as it must, that this regime contains “an element of over-inclusivity.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 87. At bottom, then, the poor ft between the State's asserted anti-entanglement concern and the line it has drawn among religious organizations cannot be described as narrow tailoring. The State has thus failed to carry its burden under strict scrutiny.
* * * It is fundamental to our constitutional order that the government maintain “neutrality between religion and religion.” Epperson, 393 U. S., at 104. There may be hard calls to make in policing that rule, but this is not one. When the government distinguishes among religions based on theological differences in their provision of services, it imposes a denominational preference that must satisfy the highest level of judicial scrutiny. Because Wisconsin has transgressed that principle without the tailoring necessary to survive such scrutiny, the judgment of the Wisconsin Supreme Court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
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