The Supreme Court violated principles of religious liberty and women’s rights in last week’s ruling in the Hobby Lobby case, which allowed owners of closely held, for-profit corporations (most companies in America) to impose their religious beliefs on workers by refusing to provide contraception coverage for employees with no co-pay, as required by the Affordable Care Act. But for the court’s male justices, it didn’t seem to go far enough.

On Thursday, those justices approved a temporary order that appears to backtrack from assurances in Justice Samuel Alito Jr.’s majority opinion in the Hobby Lobby case that employees would still be covered for all forms of contraception through a process created by the Obama administration to accommodate religious nonprofit organizations beyond churches, which are categorically exempt.

That process allows religious nonprofits to obtain an exemption by signing a short form certifying its religious objections and sending a copy to its third-party insurance administrator, which then is obligated to provide the coverage separately to employees without charge.

The court’s new action temporarily frees Wheaton College, a small Christian college in Illinois, from having to go through the exemption process. Wheaton filed a lawsuit in 2012 arguing that signing the form would burden its religious exercise rights by making it complicit in providing forms of contraception, like intrauterine devices and morning-after pills, which it objects to.