A cross-post from the HuffPost, this piece is one I wrote last week in response to an article in the Baltimore Sun describing the call of Maryland's Roman Catholic bishops to parishioners to act against marriage equality and other measures that they say threaten "religious liberty." Keep it in mind as the Conference of Catholic Bishops meet this week in Baltimore.
Bishops Behaving Badly
The Nov. 10 Baltimore Sun headline read "Maryland Bishops: Same-sex Marriage Erodes Religious Freedom." There's a theological term for that: it's "bunk."
And there's also a Commandment for that: it's number 9 of 10, which reads, "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
I realize I have the benefit of a seminary education, but even for a first-time reader it should be patently clear that the Ninth Commandment does not read, "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor unless thy neighbor is gay or lesbian, in which case all bets are off." The Maryland bishops know that. And if they don't, here's a little remedial reading:
Same-sex marriage will have exactly the same impact on religious freedom that no-fault divorce did. And that would be none. And that would be because the First Amendment to the Constitution makes it ever so clear that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
What that means is exactly what it says. No law in these United States of America can prohibit the free exercise of religion. Period. And that includes Roman Catholic priests choosing not to marry same-sex couples -- just like they already choose not to marry divorced ones. Or Orthodox Rabbis who choose not to marry interfaith ones. Or other clergy who choose not to marry couples who don't go to their church, practice their faith or color inside their theological lines. Bottom line: clergy cannot be compelled by the state to preside at any marriage. Never have been. Never will be. To say otherwise just isn't true.
Which brings me back to the Ninth Commandment. "Bearing false witness" (a.k.a. "lying") is not a traditional Biblical value. I've checked.
And yet over and over again, we hear faith leaders -- like the Maryland bishops -- perpetuating the fiction that extending the equal protection of civil marriage rights to same-sex couples is somehow a threat to religious liberty. Somebody needs to call them on it. And we are who we've been waiting for.
The First Amendment protects the right of the Maryland bishops to believe whatever they want to about the sacrament of marriage. It does not protect their right to write those beliefs into our constitutions and deprive same-sex couples of the same protections civil marriage provides for opposite-sex couples.
The brilliance of the First Amendment is that it guarantees not only freedom of religion but freedom from religion. As a Christian I believe that when Jesus said, "Love your neighbor as yourself," he didn't just forget the caveat that said "unless your neighbor is gay or lesbian." He meant love all your neighbors. And you don't love your neighbor by discriminating against them. And as an American I believe that "liberty and justice for all" really means all -- not just some.
And while I'll defend to my last breath the right of the Maryland bishops to believe whatever they think they know about what God does or doesn't bless, I will also challenge with my last breath, blog, tweet, email, letter-to-the-editor, sermon, speech and soundbite their right to inflict their theology on the rest of us. And I invite you to go and do likewise.
3 comments:
back in the (bad) day even our church reserved marriage for procreation of children. TBTG we got over this before I (post-menopause) married my beloved -- after the death of my late husband.
This is very off topic so feel free not to print it, but this debate has interesting twists and turns in places with an established church, not entirely unlike our USA debate about whether NY town clerks can refuse to issue marriage licenses because it violates their conscious even though they are state employees (can firefighters refuse to protect glbt homes because they disapprove of homosexuality?). I spent the summer in Denmark where same sex marriage is being debated, and Sweden where it's already legal. In Denmark there is a state church and all priests are government employees. The parliament is the legislative body for the church (there is no synod). So, if the parliament says same sex marriage is legal, it can also say whether same sex marriages can or must be able to be performed in the state church. Currently, they are debating whether or not to allow exemptions for clergy opposed to same sex marriage. Some feel that the exemption is necessary as a matter of courtesy and respect for divergent views. Others feel that since the clergy are paid by tax dollars, they should not be able to discriminate when they cannot do so on the basis of race. I went to church several times over the summer and felt deeply torn over this issue. Not sure how I would vote if I were a Dane. But the clergy I met were all supportive of same sex marriage in the state church even though they had colleagues who would not want to be forced to do them. Beautiful services, btw, even though I could not understand a word of it.
Your most concise comment yet, thank you, Susan!
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