By Douglas W. Kmiec, a professor of constitutional law at Pepperdine University School of Law
Published May 26, 2006
The Feingold-Specter tiff illustrates the intensity of feeling about adding to the text of the Constitution what the founders surely thought was obvious: "Marriage in the United States shall consist only of the union of a man and a woman." The need to reaffirm the self-evident was prompted by Massachusetts' judicial recognition of same-sex marriage, which motivated more than a dozen states to overwhelmingly proclaim otherwise.
With the states being so vigilant in defense of traditional marriage, is there really a need for the people to act? Yes. Activists are deployed across the country challenging traditional marriage, and it is more than likely that some additional judges will compound the Massachusetts mistake. This increased judicial approval of same-sex marriage will metastasize into the larger culture. Indeed, an insidious, but less recognized, consequence will be a push to demonize--and then punish--faith communities that refuse to bless homosexual unions.
While it may be inconceivable for many to imagine America treating churches that oppose gay marriage the same as racists who opposed interracial marriage in the 1960s, just consider the fate of the Boy Scouts. The Scouts have paid dearly for asserting their 1st Amendment right not to be forced to accept gay scoutmasters. In retaliation, the Scouts have been denied access to public parks and boat slips, charitable donation campaigns and other government benefits. The endgame of gay activists is to strip the Boy Scouts (and by extension, any other organization that morally opposes gay marriage) of its tax-exempt status under both federal and state law.
For technical legal reasons, it is difficult to challenge a religious group's non-profit status in federal court, but state court is more open. There, judicial decisions approving same-sex marriage or even state laws barring discrimination can be used to pronounce any opposing moral or religious doctrine to be "contrary to public policy." So declared, it would be short work for a state attorney general's opinion to deny the tax-exempt status of charities and most orthodox Jewish, Christian and Islamic religious bodies. If enough state lawyers do this, expect the IRS to chime in.
Punishing religious organizations for their moral beliefs might be thought contrary to the protections of the Constitution. Unfortunately, the Boy Scouts have had little success defending these bedrock precepts. Penalizing the Scouts for observing their own handbook, say lower courts, merely avoids the immediate harm of discrimination, even as the bald-faced assertion that moral belief is a "harm" is anomalous.
For the moment, same-sex marriage is confined to a single state, but litigation is ongoing in 10 states from New York to California. Three years ago, the Supreme Court came close to endorsing gay and lesbian marriage when it declared that morality alone was no basis for lawmaking. The court is under new management and is acting more restrained. But the political lobbying and litigating are unrelenting, and the targeting of the Scouts reveals that same-sex success can come by indirection.
That churches can be made the collateral casualties of the same-sex marriage campaign is important to grasp. At a minimum it gives partial answer to the view of indifference that asks how gay marriage hurts anyone. When judges treat your religious community, its schools and its charities on par with the purveyors of racial hatred, it will no longer be necessary to ask. But then, it will also be too late.
Many share the view, as I do, that marriage is a moral reality incapable of redefinition by court edict. Others disagree. Sending the federal marriage amendment to the states allows for an honest and civil debate, which is far better than back-door vengeance against moral dissenters--or is it a moral majority?
I am not quite sure where Prof. Kmiec stands here... but it is scary to be reminded that, according to him, "Three years ago, the Supreme Court came close to endorsing gay and lesbian marriage when it declared that morality alone was no basis for lawmaking." What confuses and worries me is what he states in his last paragraph when he writes that "Sending the federal marriage amendment to the states allows for an honest and civil debate." Hmmm. If this is allowed, I am thinking about what will happen in Vermont, California, New York, and other ultra-liberal outposts... will they then become legal retreats for abomination?
Posted by: Ernie | May 30, 2006 at 06:09 PM
Well it seems that Ernie's fears may be realized. The argument over Marriage has been defeated at the federal level. Now what will happen in those states who have inbedded themselves in the Culture of Death?
Europe has a negative birth rate. Why? Not because of the use of contraception, but the contraceptive mentality. These issues: Gay Marriage, contraception, abortion, can be looked at in a realm of moral law that is not religious. Natural Law says that if you do not reproduce, your species dies. Example: Any endangered species. The free choice to live in a culture of death is humanities free choice to put itself on the Endangered Species List.
Once again, America is wrapping itself up in the culture of death, it is unfortunate that the many cultures of those who have come to our great nation are being killed by the culture of death in the name of pluralism and freedom. When true freedom is in the acceptance of Truth and Love. Our American culture will be lost if this nation accepts yet another aspect of the culture of death. Don't tolerate that which blurs us from the Truth.
Posted by: Philip-Michael F. Tangorra | June 08, 2006 at 03:54 AM