For
those of you tracking the culture war and religious liberty, here is
info about sexual orientation and Gordon College.
The Next Religious Liberty Case
After Hobby Lobby, a Christian college asked for a different kind of exemption. Then came the backlash.
By DAVID
SKEEL
July
17, 2014 7:03 p.m. ET
When
D. Michael Lindsey, the president of a well-known Christian college
in Wenham, Mass., called Gordon College, signed a letter to
President Barack
Obama with
13 other religious leaders on July 1, he can't have known what he was
getting into.
The
letter urged the president to exempt religious groups from an
executive order that will bar the government from contracting with
organizations that discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or
gender identity. A week earlier, numerous other religious
leaders—including many college presidents—had sent a similar
letter.
But
that was before the Supreme Court's sharply divided Hobby
Lobby decision
holding that the Affordable Care Act's contraception mandate violated
the religious-freedom rights of several for-profit corporations. Now
it seems Gordon College has stirred up another big religious-freedom
controversy.
The
Obama administration announced its intention to issue the
nondiscrimination order several weeks before the Hobby
Lobby decision,
after the House failed to pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act,
which would prohibit sexual orientation or gender identity
discrimination in all employment contexts.
Gordon
College students attend a required chapel service. Boston
Globe via Getty Images
Despite
its silence on sexual orientation, Hobby
Lobb y's
vindication of religious-freedom rights emboldened the leaders to
send their letter. "We must find a way," they wrote, "to
respect diversity of opinion on [sexual orientation and gender
identify issues] in a way that respects the dignity of all parties to
the best of our ability."
Media
coverage in the Boston area quickly shifted from Michael Wear, a
former Obama campaign official who spearheaded the letter, to Mr.
Lindsay and Gordon College. The principal flash point was Gordon
College's code of conduct, which forbids its students and faculty
from engaging in sexual activity except in a heterosexual marriage.
The day after the letter, the city of Salem announced that it was
canceling a contract Gordon has to use Salem's Old Town Hall. Salem
cannot work with "an institution that enables, and now advocates
for, discrimination," the mayor wrote.
The
divisions didn't end there. More than a hundred current and former
students signed a letter urging Gordon to rescind its call for a
religious exemption, and more than 3,000 people signed an online
petition. Even the regional college accreditation agency—the New
England Association of Schools and Colleges—has taken note. The
Boston Business Journal reported that the Gordon controversy will be
on the agenda when the agency meets in September. (The agency later
clarified that Gordon's accreditation is not at risk.)
Mr.
Lindsay and Gordon College are unlikely magnets for the attention. A
highly respected sociologist who made his reputation studying
America's business and cultural leaders and running an institute at
Rice University, Mr. Lindsay likely travels in some of the same
circles as the president himself. In his three years as Gordon's
president, Mr. Lindsay has steered clear of hot-button issues.
"In
general practice," he wrote on Gordon's website after the
controversy erupted, "Gordon tries to stay out of politically
charged issues, and I sincerely regret that . . . Gordon has been put
into the spotlight in this way. My sole intention in signing this
letter was to affirm the College's support of the underlying issue of
religious liberty."
An
executive order that did not include a religious exemption might be
upheld by the courts, since the government has broad powers when it
comes to spending. But it would be a sharp break from political
precedent. In 2002 President Bush signed an executive order decreeing
that faith-based organizations be permitted to "participate
fully in the social service programs supported with Federal financial
assistance without impairing their independence, autonomy,
expression, or religious character." The Employment
Non-Discrimination Act itself, as passed in the Senate before
stalling in the House, also included an explicit exemption for
religion.
If
Gordon College fades from the news in the coming months, this likely
will mean that pluralism is working. If not, it or another
institution like it may find its name in the caption of the next big
Supreme Court religious liberty case.
Mr.
Skeel is a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania and author
of the forthcoming book "True Paradox: How Christianity Makes
Sense of Our Complex World" (Inter Varsity Press, 2014).
My comments: The
godless, Democrats and Secular Humanists want to stamp out Religious Liberty from this entire Nation because it is Christ Jesus that tells
them that what they do is EVIL [John 7:7] and they HATE Him for that.
They will NEVER give up on this issue. They are only one Supreme
Court Judge away from accomplishing this.
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