Christian Post 
A Gavel Falls on Marriage: The Proposition 8 Decision
Yesterday, a very important gavel fell on marriage. The  central 
institution of human civilization suffered a direct hit, and its future  hangs 
in the 
balance. 
Thu, Aug. 05, 2010 Posted: 10:05 AM EDT  
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The importance of the decision handed down yesterday by U. S. District 
Judge  Vaughn R. Walker in California’s Proposition 8 trial will be difficult 
to 
 exaggerate. Proponents of same-sex marriage immediately declared a major 
victory  - and for good reason. The editorial board of The New York Times 
declared the  verdict “an instant landmark in American legal history,” and so 
it is, even if  later reversed upon appeal. 
Judge Walker’s decision is sweeping and comprehensive, basically affirming  
every argument and claim put forth by those demanding that California’s  
Proposition 8 be declared unconstitutional. That proposition, affirmed by a  
clear majority of California voters, amended the state’s constitution to 
define  marriage as the union of a man and a woman. In one brazen act of 
judicial  energy, California’s voters were told that they had no right to 
define 
marriage,  and thousands of years of human wisdom were discarded as 
irrational. 
Even as the case is immediately appealed, the reality is that a Federal 
court  has now declared that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to 
marry.  Pressing beyond this verdict, Judge Walker also released a set of “
findings”  that include some of the most radical statements about marriage yet  
encountered. 
In rendering his verdict, Judge Walker declared that California’s 
Proposition  8 violates both the equal protection and due process rights of 
homosexual  citizens. The proposition, he concluded, “fails to advance any 
rational 
basis in  singling out gay men and lesbians for denial of a marriage license.”
 He  continued: “Indeed, the evidence shows Proposition 8 does nothing more 
than  enshrine in the California constitution the notion that opposite-sex 
couples are  superior to same-sex couples.” 
In order to reach this conclusion, Judge Walker provided more than 100 
pages  of legal reasoning, based on the evidence that he allowed or accepted. 
On 
page  after page, Judge Walker arbitrarily accept the claims put forth by 
proponents  of same-sex marriage as rational, and declares the evidence and 
arguments put  forth by the defenders of Proposition 8 as lacking in any 
rational basis. 
The decision handed down Wednesday in San Francisco comes with virtually no 
 surprise. Judge Walker’s statements and rulings in the course of the trial 
 proceedings pointed directly to the decision released yesterday. 
This decision, whatever its final resolution, serves as an undeniable  
reminder of the power of Federal judges. A single unelected judge nullified the 
 
will of the voters of California as expressed through the electoral 
process.  Those who have been arguing that judicial activism is a fiction will 
have 
to  look this decision in the face. The New York Times celebrated Judge 
Walker’s  usurpation of the political process, arguing that “there are times 
when legal  opinions help lead public opinions.” The paper and the proponents 
of same-sex  marriage clearly hope that this is one of those times. 
That is clearly the most significant dimension of the verdict. Judge Walker’
s  decision, bearing the full force of a Federal court, adds to the sense 
of  inevitability that the proponents of same-sex marriage have been so 
carefully  constructing in recent years. Defenders of marriage as a 
heterosexual  
institution should resist the temptation to minimize the significance of 
this  decision, even as the verdict is vigorously appealed. Yesterday’s ruling 
is a  huge win for the homosexual community, and a significant step toward 
the full  normalization of homosexuality within the culture. 
Anyone who reads Judge Walker’s decision will see that the normalization of 
 homosexuality was one of his major concerns. Any belief that heterosexual  
relations are morally superior to homosexual relations “is not a proper 
basis on  which to legislate,” he asserted. Proposition 8, he insisted, “was 
premised on  the belief that same-sex couples simply are not as good as 
opposite-sex  couples.” The judge claimed to have “uncloaked” the real reason 
California’s  voters adopted Proposition 8 - “a desire to advance the belief 
that opposite-sex  couples are morally superior to same-sex couples.” 
The judge released enumerated “findings” within his decision. Among the 
most  important - and startling - of these are the following: 
“Religious beliefs that gay and lesbian relationships are sinful or 
inferior  to heterosexual relationships harm gays and lesbians.” 
“Children do not need to be raised by a male parent and a female parent to 
be  well-adjusted, and having both a male and a female parent does not 
increase the  likelihood that a child will be well-adjusted.” 
“The gender of a child’s parent is not a factor in the child’s adjustment. 
 The sexual orientation of an individual does not determine whether that  
individual can be a good parent.” 
“Same-sex couples are identical to opposite-sex couples in the  
characteristics relevant to the ability to form successful marital unions.” 
In a breathtaking and brief sentence, the Judge Walker asserted: “Gender no 
 longer forms an essential part of marriage; marriage under law is a union 
of  equals.” 
Until this verdict, such language had never appeared in a decision of a  
Federal court. If gender is no longer “an essential part of marriage,” then  
marriage has been essentially redefined right before our eyes. 
The religious liberty dimensions of the decision are momentous and deeply  
troubling. While Judge Walker declared that the religious freedoms of 
citizens  and religious bodies were not violated because no such body is 
required 
to  recognize or perform same-sex marriage, the very structure of his 
argument  condemned religious and theological objections to homosexuality and 
same-sex  marriage as both harmful and irrational. 
Beyond this, Judge Walker claimed to read the minds of California’s voters, 
 arguing that the majority voted for Proposition 8 based on religious 
opposition  to homosexuality, which he then rejected as an illegitimate state 
interest. In  essence, this establishes secularism as the only acceptable basis 
for moral  judgment on the part of voters. The judge’s statements 
condemning religious  opposition to homosexuality speak for themselves in terms 
of 
animus. 
Judge Walker’s decision will be appealed to the Court of Appeals for the  
Ninth Circuit, also located in San Francisco - the most notoriously liberal  
appeals court in the nation. Inevitably, the case will be then appealed to 
the  U.S. Supreme Court. The decision handed down by Judge Walker, especially 
as  expressed in his findings, was clearly constructed with such appeals in 
 mind. 
Thousands of cases make their way through the Federal courts each year. 
Some  are important, but only a few have lasting legal significance. Whatever 
happens  on appeal, the decision handed down yesterday by Judge Vaughn R. 
Walker will  reverberate for decades to come. Yesterday, a very important gavel 
fell on  marriage. The central institution of human civilization suffered a 
direct hit,  and its future hangs in the balance. 
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Adapted from R. Albert Mohler Jr.'s weblog at _www.albertmohler.com_ 
(http://www.albertmohler.com/) . R. Albert  Mohler, Jr. is president of The 
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in  Louisville, Kentucky. For more 
articles 
and resources by Dr. Mohler, and for  information on The Albert Mohler 
Program, a daily national radio program  broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, 
go 
to _www.albertmohler.com_ (http://www.albertmohler.com/) . For information 
on  The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to _www.sbts.edu_ 
(http://www.sbts.edu/Home.aspx) . Send feedback to [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) . Original Source:  _www.albertmohler.com_ 
(http://www.albertmohler.com/) .

R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Christian Post Guest Columnist   
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