No debate
of importance should happen without great thought and great struggle.
Thus, if I
do this right, I will make everyone who reads this believe I agree with them.
If I do this right, I will make everyone who reads this believe I’m against
them.
That’s the
middle ground I’ve staked out.
There are
19 states in the country with “religious freedom” laws. There is a 22-year-old
federal law that has much of the same language.
So why has
Indiana’s passage of such a law become a firestorm of controversy? Some of it
is timing, but not all.
Supporters
of the Indiana “Religious Freedom Restoration Act” say it is modeled on the
federal RFRA, which was introduced as a Senate bill by Ted Kennedy 22 years
ago. The federal law was passed by a near unanimous vote in the Senate and by a
unanimous vote in the House. President Bill Clinton signed it into law.
The Federal
law applied to all religions, but it was most pertinent to Native American
religions – and others such as the Amish – by increasing expansion of
government projects onto sacred land. But by the time that law was three years
old, already it was found that Jewish, Muslim and Native American religions,
which make up only three percent of religious membership in the U.S., made up
18 percent of the cases involving the free exercise of religion.
And,
perhaps most importantly, it was found that the RFRA was unconstitutional as
applied to states. Thus, states began over time to pass their own RFRAs.
Supporters
of the Indiana law point out that it does not mention, much less target, LGBT
people.
However,
and it is a big ol’ honking however,
there is no doubt in my mind that the new effort to pass state RFRAs is almost
entirely a reaction to the very much growing gay-rights movement, including the
increasing acceptance and reality of same-sex marriage.
Friends, there
is no doubt that we are at a crossroads here. Everything changed in this debate
without much of a notice when Hobby Lobby won its case in the Supreme Court
last year. Oh, there were some protesters holding signs, as there always seem
to be, but mostly it passed without near the uproar that Indiana’s law passage
has had.
The Supreme
Court ruled 5-4 that two for-profit corporations with sincerely held religious
beliefs do not have to provide a full range of contraceptives at no cost to
their employees “pursuant to the Affordable Care Act.” Hobby Lobby and its
owners the Green family used the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act in
its defense.
When that
occurred, state legislatures began to rush to write their own RFRAs. Arkansas
passed one this past week, as well, though it hasn’t been signed yet.
It is without
question an emotional issue. It would seem to me that thoughtful people would
think for a moment what it would mean if they were part of the LGBT community,
or conversely if one was a believing Christian who is struggling with what
scripture surely seems to say.
But taking
the emotion out of the discussion for a moment, I note that University of
Arkansas Little-Rock law professor says, “The U.S. protects religious liberty;
no one is forced to join a church, no one is punished for attending or not
attending church. Religious organizations enjoy broad freedoms to meet, speak,
advocate and practice their religions. In a plural, democratic society,
however, individuals don’t have the right to exempt themselves from the laws
that apply to all of us.”
In other
words, religious freedom is protected. Is and has been protected. It isn’t
going away. But it can’t and must not be a sword by which civil rights heads
are lifted.
I feel like
even in my own little blogosphere I must give some sort of opinion on this very
divisive subject or else why am I a religion columnist.
I
understand the difficulties on the “right” when, for example, someone is forced
by law to bake a wedding cake for two persons in the LGBT community who are
getting married in a state in which that is lawful. I understand the problem if
the bakers have deeply held religious views. I really do. For some this is
about the validity of the Bible, and what it appears to say about
homosexuality. I get that very much.
I also, as
best I can, understand the tragedy of being a part of the LGBT community and
being discriminated against simply because of who I am, and let no one think
that the above example isn’t discrimination if you are on that side of the
issue.
Further, if
one can not bake that cake for those two persons, then who else might that cake
not be baked for? That seems to me to be the issue above all.
Whenever
there is a divisive subject, someone’s beliefs are going to be discriminated
against.
It was that
way in the debate over slavery.
It was that
way in the debate over women’s rights.
It was that
way in the debate over African-American civil rights in the 50s and 60s.
It is that
way today both in the LGBT community and the sincere, loving Christian
community.
It is.
But, for me
in this instance, it comes down to the law. And the laws in most states that
have written RFRA laws protect the LGBT community from discrimination, as well.
Indiana
does not. It must. I strongly suspect it will, soon.
I believe
Indiana is wrong, and business owners without true deeply held convictions
could manipulate the law any way they so choose in the same way that persons
with deeply held convictions that the Bible condoned slavery made that argument.
In our
nation, to be our nation, we must protect everyone’s rights. That’s who we are
at our best. I pray that both sides remember that. Still, someone has just as
much right to believe the Bible says homosexuality is a sin without someone
calling that person a hater as someone else has the right to believe the Bible
is a bunch of hokey. Someone can pray in school if it is student led, and can
pray to whomever they want. That’s what this nation was built on, and it hasn’t
changed. Name calling on either side needs to stop. We are, our should be,
better than that.
We have the
right to worship the way we so choose. We always have had that right, and
Christian “religion” need not be restored. It hasn’t gone away. Both sides need
to admit that, and both sides need to back away and take a breath.
2 comments:
Man oh man, Billy. If there's anything I've learned this Lent --, as I recover from a leg broken due purely to of my own folly, as I retreat from he noise of Facebook, much of it made by me, as I cannot avoid the fervent indignation and anger all around by all sides on every issue great and small --- Yes, if there's anything I have learned, it's that we need to step back and take a breath. And how right it is that "breath" and "spirit" are sometimes the very same thing.
Goodness, Kevin, I'll pray for your leg...
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