Stephen Law
 
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
 
 
   
Is religious freedom  threatened by gay rights? 




 
Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs
Georgetown University
 
April 10, 2012
Religious Freedom and Equality: Emerging Conflicts in North  America and 
Europe
In both Europe and North America,  an increasing emphasis on equality has 
pitted rights claims against each other,  raising profound philosophical, 
moral, legal, and political questions about the  meaning and reach of religious 
liberty. The questions emerge in several areas --  for example, questions 
of religious conscience, an all male Roman Catholic  clergy, or the prospect 
of establishing a separate Muslim system of family law  within a democratic 
state.

No question is more salient in the West,  however, than the emerging 
conflict between new equal rights claims on behalf of  homosexuals and existing 
claims of religious freedom. The conference at Magdalen  College focused on 
this issue as the primary exemplar of the broader  conflict.
Three examples illustrate  emerging conflicts surrounding the principle of 
equality and the rights of  religious groups and individuals.

- The Catholic Archdiocese of  Washington DC ceased its foster care program 
because DC's same-sex marriage law  would have required placement of 
children with same-sex couples.

- The  High Court in the United Kingdom denied to a married Christian 
couple the right  to foster children because they would not agree to teach 
their 
children that  homosexuality is natural.

- In California, the federal judge who  overturned a referendum defining 
marriage as between a man and a woman dismissed  religious and moral arguments 
against same-sex marriage as "irrational", and for  that reason 
unconstitutional.

Each of these examples addresses the  tension between claims of equal 
rights and the claims of religious freedom in  various domains: the rights of 
religious communities to adhere to their  fundamental teachings, including 
protecting the rights of conscience; the rights  of parents to impart their 
religious beliefs to their children; and the liberty  to advance 
religiously-based moral arguments as a rationale for laws.

The  conference brought together leading scholars, politicians, and 
religious leaders  to explore how these tensions and conflicts are playing out 
differently on both  sides of the Atlantic. It consisted of three panels – on 
the United States and  Canada, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and continental 
Europe – that debated a  core set of questions.

- What are the legal and moral frameworks that  govern tensions between 
claims for homosexual equality and for religious  freedom?

- How are those tensions illustrated in particular legal,  political, and 
policy controversies?

- What is the proper balance between  new claims of equality before the 
law, on the one hand, and existing claims for  freedom of religious groups and 
individuals, on the other? 

-- 
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