The U.S. Supreme Court left major constitutional questions about religion hanging when it declined to review the case of Arlene’s Flowers v. Washington. The High Court announced last week that it would not review the case of Christian florist Barronelle Stutzman. The non-action of the Supreme Court leaves the decision of the Washington court in place. Washington said that Stutzman violated the Washington anti-discrimination law when she refused to design a floral arrangement for the same-sex wedding of Robert Ingersoll and Curt Freed.
According to Fred Lucas, the votes
of at least four of the nine justices are required for the Supreme Court to
hear any case. There were only three conservative justices interested in
hearing the Stutzman case – Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel
Alito. Where were Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh on this
important case. Do they lack the backbone or fortitude to rule in tough cases?
Stutzman was represented by the
Alliance Defending Freedom, a public interest law firm at fights for religious
liberty. Kristen Waggoner, general counsel, made the following statement.
Although the outcome of this case is
tragic, the critical work of protecting the First Amendment freedoms of all
Americans must continue.
No one should be forced to express a
message or celebrate an event they disagree with.
A government that can crush someone like Barronelle,
who kindly served her gay customer for nearly a decade, but simply declined to
create art celebrating one sacred ceremony, can use its power to crush any of
us, regardless of our political ideology or views on important issues like
marriage.
Thankfully, other courts have recognized
that the Constitution does not allow this. Unlike the Washington Supreme Court
in Barronelle’s case, the Arizona Supreme Court and the 8th Circuit
have ruled that the government cannot force creative professionals to create
artistic expression that violates their religious beliefs.
We are confident that the Supreme Court
will eventually join those courts in affirming the constitutionally protected
freedom of creative professionals to live and work consistently with their most
deeply held beliefs.
The Supreme Court has made several
rulings in favor of religious freedom, but they have been narrow ones that did
not set a broad precedent.
·
June
2021: the high court ruled 9-0 in the case of Fulton v. City of Philadelphia.
The ruling gave Catholic social service agency in Philadelphia the right to be
a government-funded foster care program without compromising its beliefs about
marriage.
·
In
2018 the Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission was
being hostile toward cake shop owner Jack Phillips’s Christian’s faith when it
tried to force him to create a wedding cake for a same-sex marriage.
Emilie Kao, director of the DeVos Center
for Religion and Civil Society at The Heritage Foundation noted that “government
authorities around the country [are] punishing people for living according to
[the belief that marriage is between a man and a woman]. They have misused the
law to try and force foster care and adoption agencies, bakers, photographers,
and florists to change their views on marriage.”
The Supreme Court will one day be
forced to make a ruling because the intolerant left continues to force their
way of living upon people who do not care for it. The first settlers to come to
America came for religious liberty, and this is why freedom of religion is the
First Freedom.
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