I want to start by saying something that should be obvious: Religious discrimination is an awful, awful thing.
It
is a horrible thing to demean someone because you don't like her
religious beliefs. It is a horrible thing to demean someone because you
don't like what you assume her religious beliefs to be. Religion is one
of those things that define us as individuals and as communities.
Belittle a person's faith, and you are not only belittling and demeaning
them, you are belittling something that defines them, inspires them,
and connects them not only to the Transcendent but to the teeming masses
of humanity.
Mocking that, belittling that, or discriminating
against a person because of their religious beliefs is wrong, wrong,
wrong. I wish everyone could see that.
Which is what makes what is happening in Washington state right now so aggravating.
Washington
state Sen. Sharnon Brown (R-Kennewick) is sponsoring a bill that would
grant an exemption to the state's anti-discrimination laws, so that
business owners could refuse to serve customers if doing so would
violate their religious principles. As reported by Rachel La Corte of the Associated Press, the bill has its genesis in a lawsuit the American Civil Liberties Union has filed against florist Barronelle Stutzman.
Stutzman,
you may recall, made national news on March 1 when she refused to
provide flowers for a same-sex wedding, because she believes
homosexuality to be sinful, and gay marriage immoral. (Stutzman has told
TV station KEPR that she is a Christian. I regret that this disclosure does not surprise me.)
Of
the law that Stutzman ran afoul of, and that Brown is trying to amend,
Joseph Backholm, executive director of the Family Policy Institute of
Washington state put it like this: "The government is now saying if you
have a conviction about an issue that we happen to disagree with, then
you as a business owner are going to be fined or shut down because of
that. People should and do have the right to their own convictions."
Well,
yes; people do have a right to their convictions. There is nothing in
the law that says that people can't have their convictions. Our
Constitution guarantees all of us the right to our convictions, and even
our right to express those convictions. That's a cornerstone of our
free society, and it's been put to the test repeatedly; only last year,
the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the right of Westboro Baptist Church to
proclaim its virulent hatred of gays even at funerals.
It's
really hard not to appreciate the irony here, that Brown essentially is
arguing that Stutzman has a right to discriminate against gays and
lesbians, and that denying her this right is discriminatory. But let's
be clear about this: No one's convictions give them the right to decide
who they'll do business with. If Stutzman and her attorney want to argue
that she has that right, then they're on shaky ground. Deep-South
segregationists also wanted to decide whom they would and wouldn't do
business with, and they also claimed that their convictions were based
in Scripture.
I'm also really curious to know what Bible Stutzman
and her supporters are reading from that give divine sanction to take
this stand. It's safe to say that Jesus encourages his followers to
stand by their convictions, but it's also plain to see that the most
basic conviction Jesus wants us to have is one of compassion.
See
a man who's blind, heal him. Bump into a woman who has been bleeding
for years, then you not only heal her, but you also stop and pay a
little attention to her. Hug a leper, commend the faith of a heretic,
eat and drink with gluttons and drunkards, love the hookers, and welcome
the outcasts. Whatever Jesus' view on the righteousness of any given
behavior, the gospels make one thing clear time and time again: Jesus
valued people more than he was bothered by their sin.
It's worth noting that there was one
group in the gospels that was really offended by the sins the people
committed, and they were shocked that Jesus allowed sinners to come near
him. They would go to great lengths to make sure that people knew
what God thought of their sin, so that they could repent and be
forgiven. I suspect they would approve of Stutzman's decision not to serve a gay couple.
This group was called the Pharisees, and Jesus had some harsh
words for them. Their words were even harsher; and, in the end, they had him killed.
Perhaps no one gets to the heart of the issue like Victoria Childress. Back in 2011, Childress, who runs a bakery from her Iowa home, refused to
sell a wedding cake to a lesbian couple. As she explained to KCCI-TV,
"It is my right, and it's not to discriminate against them. It's not so
much to do with them, it's to do with me and my walk with God and what I
will answer [to] him for."
Exactly. Christians believe that
we ultimately will stand before God and have to answer for the choices
we made, including the choice to devalue the worth of another human
being because we don't approve of their lifestyle, exactly the choice
that Jesus rejected, and exactly the choice he castigated the Pharisees
for making.
Discrimination is wrong. Cloaking it in the mantle of
religion and claiming divine sanction for it is even worse. We need to
stop justifying morally reprehensible behavior, and we need to hold
accountable those who want it to be legal.
Copyright © 2013 by David Learn. Used with permission. All rights reserved.
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