A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Is same-sex marriage a threat to religious freedom?

In the argument over same-sex marriage, social conservatives have seen a string of defeats. For all intents and purposes, they have lost the argument based on straightforward morality (“gay sex is wrong”) and the argument based on social harm (“it will undermine straight marriage”). But the last-ditch argument that, in the wake of the California ruling, seems to be getting more play is the religious freedom argument. The idea here is that traditional religious believers will be coerced into compromising their beliefs in order to accomodate gay couples. I’ve even seen some extremely hysterical people (mostly confined to blog comment threads, unsurprisingly) talking about “persecution,” the death of religious freedom in America, and so on.

This post at the Volokh Conspiracy offers a reasoned response to all this. It examines several recent examples where SSM opponents have identified a looming threat to religious freedom and points out that, in nearly all the cases, it was either a question of a religious organization providing a public service and/or the pertinent laws were non-discrimination laws that had nothing to do with marriage per se. In other words, these were not cases of churches being forced to perform marriages between people of the same sex. The issue at hand was generally whether organizations providing public services or accomodations (whether religious or not) are free to flout anti-discrimination laws that cover sexual orientation.

This isn’t to deny that there may at times be a genuine conflict between religious principle and politically enshrined rights. But the angst about gay marriage being the death knell of religious freedom seems to be greatly overdone.

2 responses to “Is same-sex marriage a threat to religious freedom?”

  1. On the other hand, how long did it take for the Mormons to decide black people are really OK and can be church members, contrary to their views and practise since the founding of their religion, after the Civil Rights movement had been rolling for a while?

    Eventually, churches that continue to refuse gays that ultimate symbol of moral acceptance, same sex marriage, will be denied advantages and subject to various disadvantages.

    How quickly will this happen?

    Not very quickly, but eventually.

    How far will it go?

    Eventually, pretty far.

    And all that will be speeded up by any movement of the government toward chipping away at the First Amendment with hate speech laws and maybe even hate group laws.

  2. I don’t think it will prove as clean as the Volokh article suggests. As of now, I have the right to deny marriage in the church on any grounds. I have flat refused to preside at a couple of weddings. Will this right be left to the clergy in the future, since we act as agents of the state when we perform weddings? It is not clear. I can’t see a change any time soon, but I can envision such a time when the issue will be forced into the court system.

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