Jay Michaelson puts it cogently...
11/2/2012 12:41:21 AM
The idea that there are no consequences for ministers or churches is absurd and disingenuous. Forced to perform the ceremony? Not yet.For now, it's just:http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/judge-rules-christian-facility-cannot-ban-same-sex-civil-union-ceremony-onhttp://www.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/2011/12/29/illinois-catholic-charities-close-rather-than-allow-same-sex-couples-adopt-children/Km9RBLkpKzABNLJbUGhvJM/story.htmlhttp://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/gallaudets-mistake/2012/10/13/86dbad96-148e-11e2-bf18-a8a596df4bee_story.htmlhttp://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2006/mar/14/20060314-010603-3657r/http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2012/10/15/1015561/pennsylvania-legislator-introduces-ex-gay-therapy-ban-for-minors/Soon enough it will be:- You can't adopt a kid without affirming your support for gay marriage and homosexuality, because the kid could end up gay and you would not be a fit parent.- Religious colleges and universities getting in trouble for offering housing assistance to some married couples, but not other 'married' couples. Same goes with employment law and not hiring someone based on their 'marital' status.- Religious organizations like the YMCA will be forced to offer 'family' memberships to those defined as such by law.- Counselors, therapists, psychologists, etc. will have licenses revoked for not working with same sex couples, or for giving them the wrong advice if it doesn't affirm them properly.The list goes on and on and on. There is a reason people are fighting hard for gay marriage, and it's not because they just want to have their feelings affirmed by the government, or feel a sense of 'equality.'They want it because they know that there are huge social benefits to that status - benefits that necessarily exist only when institutional and personal freedom to deny them such benefits is prohibited. Any religious person working in any way, shape, or form, with the state will face penalties and censure all over the place, just as people face that now if they had other policies that don't recognize 'equality' where the government has declared it.All these appeals about hospital visitation and everything else necessarily implies an imposition on religious liberty. In that case, a medical facility run by a religious group would be forced to treat you as married, or face consequences. Argue for it all day long on the grounds that it is the right thing to do. But don't be so intellectually dishonest as to say it happens without serious consequences all over religious communities, individuals, and organizations. It just ain't so.*And to answer the one you mention - I could very easily see a state revoking someone's right to solemnize any legal marriages if they refuse to solemnize all legal marriages. Town clerks and justices of the peace have already been fired over this. The step between that and a random minister isn't that far.[Edited on November 2, 2012 at 5:52 AM. Reason : a]
11/2/2012 5:44:45 AM
Can a church today refuse to marry a straight couple?
11/2/2012 7:21:55 AM
good post by tuliplvr
11/2/2012 7:29:35 AM
^ I agree, it is very challenging to defend such a difficult position, and that was spectacular.Nonetheless, the argument still stands that "if we will force a church to marry a black couple against their beliefs, we should for gays too". Do we force churches with racism printed in their holy book (Christianity, etc) to marry couples they don't want to marry? I don't know if we do or not.
11/2/2012 8:10:56 AM
Yeah, slippery slope arguments and bombing a thread with op eds is so spectacular.
11/2/2012 9:22:04 AM
First link: TULIPlover missed that day in church when they talked about how a church isn't made of bricks, its made of people. (and also retreat centers aren't churches)Second link: They chose to close, no one forced them to. If you want state money, you have to follow state requirements for that money.Third link: Private universityFourth link: Again, they are choosing to close because they value bigotry over children. No one is forcing them to close.Fifth link: It prohibits licensed mental health facilities from doing something harmful. It doesn't stop a church from wrongfully trying to convince people they can pray away the gay.The first amendment protection is a shield and not a sword. Your religious institutions do not get to force others to live by your bigoted morals. If a religious organization wants to accept tax credits and state or federal money, they have to live by the laws and freedoms granted by the constitution.
11/2/2012 9:26:03 AM
Lets take a look at this:http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/judge-rules-christian-facility-cannot-ban-same-sex-civil-union-ceremony-on :The ruling was based on the fact the the facility would allow non-Christians access to the use facility for marriage and thus could not use doctrinal limitations as a reasoning in this case. At the time it was also under a local property tax exemption which legally required equal access. http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/2011/12/29/illinois-catholic-charities-close-rather-than-allow-same-sex-couples-adopt-children/Km9RBLkpKzABNLJbUGhvJM/story.htmlState funded Charities chose to close rather then allow same-sex couples to adopt. This is pretty clear, if you are publicly funded you can discriminate. It no differant than when publicly funded groups had to stop denying service to non-whiteshttp://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/gallaudets-mistake/2012/10/13/86dbad96-148e-11e2-bf18-a8a596df4bee_story.htmlThis is just bureacracy at non-work.http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2006/mar/14/20060314-010603-3657r/Charities chose to close rather then allow same-sex couples to adopt. You understand that this is a problem with the 'charities' and not with same-sex couples right. This is almost like blame a black guy for you being racist. (Note: this is a draw a parallel i am not calling anyone racist)http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2012/10/15/1015561/pennsylvania-legislator-introduces-ex-gay-therapy-ban-for-minors/"State legislator introduces ban on fraud to minor"You wanna try a single real issue hereand Mrfrog. Most churches require you to be a member to be married there and everyone seems to be fine with that. A lot of them require pre-marriage counseling with there pastors to get approval to be married at the church.
11/2/2012 9:47:16 AM
11/2/2012 10:17:53 AM
pretty sure that's a typo.
11/2/2012 10:19:39 AM
been more than 30 so*can't Happy now
11/2/2012 10:23:39 AM
Ban all Abrahamic cavemen religions forever
11/2/2012 10:30:57 AM
11/5/2012 3:16:26 AM
Yes, of course they can
11/5/2012 6:41:22 AM
11/5/2012 6:23:31 PM
11/6/2012 9:43:29 PM
Churches aren't forced to marry anyone
11/6/2012 9:57:24 PM
i'm proud to have been one of the 52% of maryland that voted to pass same sex marriage in the state. the elected officials initially passed it into law, people protested, petitions were signed, and a public vote confirmed ita win for equal rights
11/7/2012 12:34:25 AM
http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2012/11/6758/
11/7/2012 1:00:36 AM
that's a lot of teal deer, but judging by your first post in the thread, I'mma gonna go ahead and [Edited on November 7, 2012 at 1:14 AM. Reason : .]
11/7/2012 1:13:50 AM