Baptist Press
 
Prop 8 ruling could impact religious  freedoms 

Posted on July 13, 2010 | by Michael Foust  
SAN FRANCISCO (BP)--It likely is a very rare event when the Southern 
Baptist  and Roman Catholic official statements on marriage are read aloud in a 
federal  courtroom, as happened earlier this year during the trial of 
California Prop  8.

It's probably also unusual for a key witness to declare that "religion  is 
the chief obstacle for gay and lesbian political progress," as was  said.

But the Prop 8 trial was anything but usual; in reading the  transcripts 
from the 12 days of testimony in January, religion was a major  theme, with 
traditional Christian beliefs on "gay marriage" often cast as  bigoted and 
tantamount to racism.

As both sides wait for a decision that  could come any day and that could 
have major implications for state marriage  laws from coast to coast, 
conservative leaders are warning that what took place  in the trial is only a 
preview of how supporters of "gay marriage" will cast  conservative Christians 
if 
Prop 8 is overturned and "gay marriage" is legalized  nationwide. Those 
leaders say backers of "gay marriage" will try to marginalize  Christians by 
comparing them to the 1950s and '60s opponents of civil  rights.

After Prop 8 passed by a margin of 52-48 percent in 2008 and  defined 
marriage as between one man and one woman, supporters of "gay marriage"  filed 
suit in federal court last year. 

Religion was a major theme on  five of the 12 days of testimony.

"They were trying to show that  religions during the Prop 8 campaign were 
pandering to prejudicial stereotypes  to motivate the voters," Jordan 
Lorence, an attorney with the Alliance Defense  Fund, told Baptist Press. ADF 
attorneys have worked to uphold Prop 8, and  Lorence attended the trial. "That 
feeds the fires that those who take an  orthodox Christian view on the 
definition of marriage are the equivalent of Ku  Klux Klan bigots that need to 
be 
driven to the margins of our society."  

For instance:

-- On the third day of the trial, San Francisco  city attorney Therese 
Stewart asked Yale University history professor George  Chauncey to read 
portions of Southern Baptist resolutions on "gay marriage" from  2003 and 2008, 
as 
well as a Vatican document on the subject from 2003. After  asking Chauncey 
to assume that such religious beliefs are sincerely held,  Stewart asked, 
"During the battles over segregation and interracial marriage,  did people 
hold sincere religious beliefs that were rooted in prejudice?"  Chauncey 
answered "yes" and then continued, "Many people in the South deeply  believed 
that 
interracial marriage was against God's will. I don't question  their 
sincerity. I believe, though, that that reflects the larger system of  
prejudices 
that had shaped their understanding of the world."

-- On the  trial's seventh day, Stanford University political science 
professor Gary  Segura, a witness for the plaintiffs, said he thought that 
"religion is the  chief obstacle for gay and lesbian political progress, and 
it's 
the chief  obstacle for a couple of reasons." Among those reasons, he said, 
"Biblical  condemnation of homosexuality ... on a regular basis to a huge per
centage of the  public makes the political ground, the political 
opportunity structure very  hostile to gay interests."

Attorneys trying to overturn Prop 8 also tried  to place the blame on 
religious groups for its passage:

-- On the seventh  day of testimony, Theodore J. Boutrous, an attorney for 
the plaintiffs, asked  Segura if he could think of an example "where two 
churches of the scope and size  and power" of the Catholics and Mormons "had 
banded together and arrayed  themself against a particular minority group in 
society." Segura said from his  experience it was "unprecedented."

-- Plaintiff attorney David Boies  asked a series of leading questions to a 
defense witness on Day 11, such as,  "The reason [Prop 8] passed was 
because of religion, correct?" The witness said  he disagreed but Boies later 
tried it a different way, casting "gay marriage" in  a sympathetic light and 
asking, "Do you believe that it is generally accepted  that it is not 
appropriate for a majority religion or majority religion  coalition to impose 
their 
views on a minority?"

The case, known as Perry  v. Schwarzenegger, is being watched closely 
because 28 other states have  constitutional amendments that define marriage as 
between one man and one woman.  Additionally, most states that don't have 
amendments have statues defining  marriage in the traditional sense. If the 
case makes it to the U.S. Supreme  Court, all those amendments and laws are in 
jeopardy. 

Richard Land,  president of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty 
Commission,  responded to the denomination's courtroom references, telling 
the SBC annual  meeting in June that the SBC's beliefs are not the product 
of centuries of  hatred and prejudice but rather "the product of centuries of 
people of God being  faithful to God's Word and God's definition of His 
institution, holy matrimony."  

Lorence, the Alliance Defense Fund attorney, said religious liberty is  
already taking a hit across the country in cases involving laws protecting  
homosexuality. He mentioned a New Mexico case in which, last year, a state 
judge  ruled that a husband-and wife-owned photography company violated state  
anti-discrimination laws when they refused to take pictures of a lesbian  
commitment ceremony. He also pointed to a New Jersey case in which a  
Methodist-owned beachfront property lost part of its tax-exempt status because  
its 
leaders denied use of the property to a lesbian couple for a commitment  
ceremony. States with "gay marriage" also have seen controversies over what is  
taught in public schools. Legalization of "gay marriage" nationwide, Lorence 
 said, only will make matters far worse.

"We are not going to have a  wonderful pluralistic nirvana of diversity," 
he said. "We are going to have  something harsh that's similar to a regime 
... that imposes punishments on those  who criticize or blaspheme their 
doctrines."

The Southern Baptist and  Catholic passages read in the courtroom were 
anything but controversial when  viewed through the lens of Scripture's 
teachings on marriage. One SBC resolution  excerpt that was read said, "Any 
action 
giving homosexual unions the legal  status of marriage denies the fundamental 
immorality of homosexual behavior." It  pointed to Leviticus 18:22, Romans 
1:26-27 and 1 Corinthians 6:9-11. Another  passage read aloud said, "We call 
on Southern Baptists not only to stand against  same-sex unions, but to 
demonstrate our love for those practicing homosexuality  by sharing with them 
the forgiving and transforming power of the gospel of Jesus  Christ."

The Vatican document read, in part, "There are absolutely no  grounds for 
considering homosexual unions to be in any way similar or even  remotely 
analogous to God's plan for marriage and family. Marriage is holy,  while 
homosexual acts go against the natural moral law. Homosexual acts 'close  the 
sexual act to the gift of life. They do not proceed from a genuine affective  
and sexual complementarity.'"

Yet both were based on prejudice, Prop 8  opponents said in the courtroom. 

Maggie Gallagher, who supported Prop 8  and who serves on the executive 
committee of the National Organization for  Marriage, asked in a posting at 
NationalReview.com, "Could you try any harder to  confirm religious people's 
fears about where gay marriage is  heading?"
--30--
Michael Foust is an assistant editor of Baptist Press.  The transcripts of 
the Prop 8 trial in California can be read at  
http://www.adfmedia.org/News/PRDetail/?CID=12012 (in the right-hand column 
under  "legal docs").

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