Despite her love of Christianity, a young Maine girl has been prevented since 2024 from going to church, attending religious holidays, being “exposed” to the Bible or other scriptural literature, and even having Christian friends — all because of a judge’s order in a parental rights case.
The draconian restrictions have been in place for some 18 months as Emily Bickford and her daughter Ava, 13, wait for a decision on an appeal to the state’s Supreme Court eight months ago after Portland District Judge Jennifer Nofsinger issued the shocking ruling in late 2024 as part of a dispute between the girl’s parents.
Not only has the ruling impacted the lifestyle and pursuit of happiness by both mother and daughter, on its face it appears incompatible with the founding principles of the United States.
The right to worship granted by the First Amendment is not in the grip of any judge to grant or abolish, the Portland mother told Breitbart News in an exclusive interview this week.
“That is not theirs to take away,” Bickford said. “It’s in our Declaration of Independence. Our forefathers knew we had inalienable rights given by God. God gave us the freedom to worship him, and there’s no government that can take that away from us.”
The long-awaited decision in the appeal could influence judicial decisions in similar cases across the U.S., says Matt Staver, attorney and founder of Liberty Council, the religious rights advocacy group which has taken on the appeal of the lower court’s decision.
“Liberty Council doesn’t usually get involved in the general domestic dispute kind of case unless there’s a significant religious liberty component,” Staver told Breitbart News exclusively this week. “And this one screamed of having a religious liberty violation that got our attention.”
There are tens of thousands of separated or divorced parents in the U.S. in shared custody arrangements, which sometimes result in differences between parents as they try to “co-parent.”
Staver continued, “If this ruling is allowed to stand, it could set a precedent enabling courts to strip Christian parents of the right to raise their own children in accordance with their faith.”
In making her decision, Staver said, the judge relied on author and “cult expert” Dr. Janja Lalich, a California State University sociologist professor, who described Calvary Chapel of Portland as “cultic” and its pastor of as having a “Moses complex.”
“So, a Moses complex, I guess, is somebody who’s a strong leader, somebody who is confident in their beliefs,” Staver said.
Staver continued:
And what’s what makes it “cultic?” Well, because they believe in heaven and hell. Eternal life. They believe in angels and demons. They believe in salvation through Jesus… The pastor teaches the Bible “verse by verse, chapter by chapter.” And that alone makes this a cult. And so, if that makes this a cult, then every religion, every Christian religion is a cult. Every Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, they’re all cults, because they all have the same thing in common. They all have that similarity of belief.
Calvary Chapel, a fast-growing evangelical denomination, has more than 800 churches in the U.S. and another 200 internationally.
Staver also noted the judge was hostile to monotheistic belief since the complaint by the attorney for the father and the judge’s order wrote “god” in lower case.
God is typically capitalized because as a proper noun it describes the singular supreme being of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.
https://www.breitbart.com/faith/2026/06/06/exclusive-girl-kept-from-church-bible-and-christian-friends-by-portland-judge-awaits-appeals-court-ruling/