A federal district court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania delivered a startling ruling on August 14, 2025, siding with New Jersey and Pennsylvania in a long-standing legal battle against the Little Sisters of the Poor—a Roman Catholic order of nuns serving the elderly poor. Judge Wendy Beetlestone, appointed by former President Barack Obama, declared that the Trump-era religious and moral exemptions to the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate were “vacated in their entirety,” branding them “arbitrary and capricious” under the Administrative Procedure Act. This decision threatens the order with millions of dollars in fines unless they comply with coverage that violates their deeply held religious convictions.
This ruling stands in stark contrast to the U.S. Supreme Court’s rulings in 2020. In Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter and Paul Home v. Pennsylvania, the High Court, in a 7–2 decision, affirmed that the federal departments possessed the authority to promulgate those very exemptions and that the process complied with the APA. Tenacious and justified, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutional and legislative validity of the Sisters’ conscience-based protections—only for this lower ruling to now abruptly undermine that judicial affirmation.
The injustice is vivid: after nearly a decade of litigation and two Supreme Court victories, the Little Sisters now face renewed legal peril of their religious liberty because one judge asserts administrative overreach, despite the Supreme Court granting them the authority and procedural legitimacy they deserve. The Court’s rulings were not hypothetical—they were definitive, vested, and ought to shield the Sisters from further punishment. Yet the district court has essentially struck down nationwide exemptions that the Supreme Court explicitly upheld.
Mark Rienzi, president of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty and lead counsel for the Little Sisters, rightfully lambasted the district court’s judgment, calling it an overreaching “out‑of‑control effort by Pennsylvania and New Jersey to attack the Little Sisters and religious liberty.” He lamented how the court sidestepped the obvious constitutional questions, and how it denied the Sisters due process after five long years without even granting a hearing. It’s manifestly unjust to compel these devoted women—who have dedicated their lives to caring for society’s most vulnerable—to participate in a mandate they’ve consistently—and successfully in the highest court—opposed on conscience grounds.
Despite this grievous blow, the Little Sisters have pledged to appeal. As they affirmed in their own words: “We will fight as far as we need to fight to protect the Little Sisters’ right to care for the elderly in peace.” Mother Loraine Marie Maguire underscored their mission: “We dedicate our lives to caring for the elderly poor until God calls them home,” and they “pray Pennsylvania and New Jersey will end this needless harassment”. Their resilience in the face of this renewed assault on religious freedom is as righteous as it is necessary.