The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns marriage and religious freedom. The First Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees religious freedom: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof….”
The principle is stated plainly for all to
read, yet many people do not want to believe it says what it says. Other people
claim that the First Amendment applies only to the federal government. Such
people do not understand that the Fourteenth Amendment made the First Amendment
protection of religion applicable to the states in 1940. Freedom of religion is
well established. Americans are free to practice their religion in public
places and to share their beliefs outside their homes.
The same cannot be said about marriage
because marriage is not even mentioned in the Constitution or any of the Amendments
to it. This brings us to an article posted by Roger Severino stating that senators
should not play games with religious freedom and marriage. He claims that they
are using “fig [leaves], smoke and mirrors, lip service, and bait and switch.”
It’s hard to pick exactly the right way to
describe the attempts by Sens. Mitt Romney, R-Utah; Susan Collins, R-Maine; and
Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., to whitewash (there’s another!) the attacks on people of
faith presented by the same-sex marriage bill being considered by the Senate.
As I and others (particularly Ryan T.
Anderson) have argued for years, marriage is the exclusive, lifelong, conjugal
union between one man and one woman and any departure from that design hurts
the indispensable goal of having every child raised in a stable home by the mom
and dad who conceived them.
The misnamed Respect for Marriage Act,
however, would erase the Defense of Marriage Act, the 1996 law that preserved
man-woman marriage at the state and federal levels before it was rendered
totally inoperative by the Supreme Court’s Obergefell and Windsor decisions.
Congress should not double down on the Supreme
Court’s mistake, especially when the only practical effect of the bill would be
to put a giant target on the backs of people and institutions of faith….
Worse still, the Respect for Marriage Act
would create a roving license for private parties to sue anyone who arguably is
acting “under color of law” when providing government-funded or -regulated
family services such as adoption and foster care.
Indeed, we’ve seen government actors hound
faith-based adoption agencies out of major cities across America because of
their views on marriage. That is, until the Supreme Court in the Fulton case
called that out for what it is: unconstitutional discrimination.
But the House, which passed a version of
the Respect for Marriage Act with no debate July 19, didn’t get that message,
and did nothing to address the undeniable concerns for religious liberty.
Some senators, however – namely Baldwin,
Collins, and Romney – want to prop up this bad bill by offering an amendment
that purports to address some of these concerns.
Severino warned Americans to not be
fooled. He explained that cunning attorneys use excess words to misdirect
attention. “Here, the amendment sponsors recite ‘factual findings,” “rules of
construction,” “religious liberty,” and “respect” all over the place, but in
ways that are meaningless because they either aren’t given any effect or are
limited to irrelevance by other provisions. He then proceeded to “address each
obfuscation in the order” presented.
First: Baldwin, Collins, and Romney would
amend the bill’s findings of fact to say that “Congress affirms” that people
with decent and honorable beliefs about marriage are “due proper respect.” Note
it never says that those beliefs include those once held by Democrat leaders …
namely, that marriage only can be the union of one man and one woman….
Second, the three senators’ amendment
would add a rule of construction saying that no existing protection of
religious freedom would be taken away….
Third, the amendment would allow
faith-based institutions and nonprofits to decline to participate in a “solemnization
or celebration” of a same-sex marriage….
Fourth, the three senators’ amendment
would add a rule of construction saying the bill by itself would not deny
tax-exempt status, licensing, grants, and contracts “not arising from a
marriage.”
Although this amendment finally
acknowledges that the issues with tax-exempt status, licensing, grants, and
contracts we have been talking about are real, the “rule of construction” does
nothing to address them.
Severino accuses the drafters of the
amendments of conjuring up “the illusion of religious freedom while
undercutting it at every turn.” He continued, “Baldwin, Collins, and Romney are
likely keenly aware that the First Amendment Defense Act proposed by Sen. Mike
Lee, R-Utah, would meaningfully address many of the religious liberty defects,
suggesting that they are features, not bugs.”
Now the drafters claim that they
need more time to work on the amendments. Maybe they are working to “sneak
something in during a lame-duck session after the Nov. 8 elections.” Severino
said, “If senators are serious about religious freedom, they should reject the
Baldwin-Collins-Romney amendment out of hand and look to Lee’s proposed
amendment instead.”
However, according to Severino, Lee’s
bill would be less bad than the Baldwin, Collins, and Romney bill, but it would
not be a good bill. “One hopes Congress will drop the whole thing and just get
back to legislating for the public good….”
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