What would be useful would be hearing everyone's  excuses:
 
O, I can't do anything because...
This doesn't really concern me...
My time would be better spent in other areas...
That's your interpretation, the way I see it we have nothing to  fear...
I have a plan for 2025, in the meantime God wants us to be  martyrs...
 
 
And on and on.
 
How about it? Excuses please. I'd like to start a collection of  excuses
for future reference. Surely everyone here can come up with 
all sorts of creative evasions, its the least you can do.
 
Thank you
BR
 
-------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
 
Real Clear Politics
 
Real Clear Religion

 
 
 
July 1, 2015  
 
After Obergefell, Churches Are Next
By  _Dominic  Lynch_ 
(http://www.realclearreligion.org/authors/dominic_lynch/) 




The Supreme Court has ruled that same-sex marriage is a constitutional 
right,  and there seems to be nothing to prevent the government from forcing 
churches to  perform same-sex weddings. 
In King v. Burwell, the case regarding Obamacare subsidies  which hinged on 
what the definition of "State" is, the Court held that subsidies  can be 
distributed by a State exchange or a federal exchange established by the  
Secretary of Health and Human Services (who, obviously, is not a  State).
 
The Court's analysis in Burwell renders words meaningless. The  "State" now 
means whatever the Court wants it to mean, whenever it wants it to  mean 
it. Justice Antonin Scalia's delightfully scathing dissent notes the  
ramifications of removing the meaning of a word and assigning it a different  
meaning for political expediency: "Words no longer have meaning if an Exchange  
that is not established by a State is 'established by the State.'" 
Once the Court becomes unhinged from reality, as it did in Burwell, what  
force is there to anchor it back where it belongs? 
This brings us to the gay marriage case, _Obergefell v.  Hodges_ 
(http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/14pdf/14-556_3204.pdf) . Justice Anthony 
Kennedy's opinion is legally reckless for a  number of reasons, which I will 
leave 
to actual lawyers to explain. 
But one thing is certain: the religious liberty of individuals and  
faith-based institutions -- up to and including churches -- is now threatened 
in  a 
way not present before the ruling. When the Court heard oral arguments for  
Obergefell in April, Solicitor General Donald Verrilli's admitted that  the 
tax-exempt status of religious institutions "could be an issue" if same-sex 
 marriage is recognized as a right. 
Sounding very much unlike the man from Burwell, Chief Justice  Roberts's 
Obergefell dissent lays the stakes on the table: 
Today's decision, for example, creates serious  questions about religious 
liberty. Many good and decent people oppose same-sex  marriage as a tenet of 
faith, and their freedom to exercise religion is --  unlike the right 
imagined by the majority -- actually spelled out in the  Constitution. Respect 
for 
sincere religious conviction has led voters and  legislators in every State 
that has adopted same-sex marriage democratically to  include 
accommodations for religious practice. The majority's decision imposing  
same-sex 
marriage cannot, of course, create any such accommodations. The  majority 
graciously suggests that religious believers may continue to "advocate"  and 
"teach" 
their views of marriage. The First Amendment guarantees, however,  the 
freedom to "exercise" religion. Ominously, that is not a word the majority  
uses. 
How do we get from "marriage equality" to churches forced into performing  
weddings that violate their teachings? Lawsuits. 
Imagine a same sex couple who consider themselves deeply Catholic want to 
get  married at the Catholic church of their choice. They approach the pastor 
and he  declines to officiate the wedding or be a party to it. The spurned 
couple might  then file a non-discrimination lawsuit against the pastor and 
his parish making  the simple argument that because same-sex marriage is a 
right protected under  the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, a 
parish cannot discriminate  in who it weds and who it doesn't. 
The religious liberty protections of the First Amendment can only hold up 
so  long when put under the scrutiny that drove Burwell. Play some mental  
gymnastics a la Roberts and suddenly a centuries-old protection of  religious 
liberty fades away. "Prohibiting" could be construed to mean "Congress  
can't prohibit except when..." And "free exercise" could take a similar 
meaning: 
 "Churches can practice their faith freely except when..." It's not a far 
stretch  to suggest this can happen. If Burwell happened, this can happen. 
Advocates of same sex marriage have avoided discussing religious liberty  
protections outside of some editorials that scoff at the idea that the free  
exercise of religion would ever be threatened by the gay marriage movement.  
Ultimately, our society is one step away from the previously unthinkable 
stage  of government-coerced marriages in churches. 
Unless Congress, governors, and state legislatures act immediately,  
government-coerced weddings are a matter of when, not  if.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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