
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
When Gerald Groff took his job at the Post Office in 2012, taking Sundays off wasn’t an issue. USPS didn’t deliver on Sundays. Then about a decade ago Amazon decided people simply had to have their gadgets and groceries delivered on Sundays and hired USPS to help. Suddenly Groff had a choice: keep his job or his convictions. He decided to try for both–and the case is still not settled, exactly.
Today on Doubletake, a special legal episode about a mailman, his faith, and the byzantine legal rules that define religious liberty in this country.
Support WORLD News Group at wng.org/donate
5
615615 ratings
When Gerald Groff took his job at the Post Office in 2012, taking Sundays off wasn’t an issue. USPS didn’t deliver on Sundays. Then about a decade ago Amazon decided people simply had to have their gadgets and groceries delivered on Sundays and hired USPS to help. Suddenly Groff had a choice: keep his job or his convictions. He decided to try for both–and the case is still not settled, exactly.
Today on Doubletake, a special legal episode about a mailman, his faith, and the byzantine legal rules that define religious liberty in this country.
Support WORLD News Group at wng.org/donate
3,075 Listeners
8,657 Listeners
984 Listeners
7,092 Listeners
846 Listeners
1,707 Listeners
578 Listeners
5,364 Listeners
1,023 Listeners
621 Listeners
1,410 Listeners
343 Listeners
618 Listeners
138 Listeners
1,511 Listeners