Religious Liberty Is In A Precarious State
By Catholic League president Bill Donohue
The U.S. Supreme Court decision on workplace discrimination
against homosexuals and transgender persons leaves religious liberty matters in
a precarious state. We stand with the president of the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops, Archbishop José Gomez of Los Angeles, who said that the
Supreme Court "effectively redefined the legal meaning of 'sex' in our
nation's civil rights laws." He also noted that this ruling "will
have implications in many areas of life."
Among those areas is the fate of religious liberty. Writing
for the majority opinion, Justice Neil Gorsuch said he was "deeply
concerned with preserving the promise of the free exercise of religion."
He then blithely indicated that such "worries" about how this ruling
might negatively impact on religious liberty are "nothing new."
Gorsuch's response was not reassuring. This explains why
Justice Samuel Alito, in his dissenting opinion (joined by Justice Clarence
Thomas), raised a series of problems with it.
Alito noted that a "wide range of religious
groups—Christian, Jewish, and Muslim—express deep concern that the position now
adopted by the Court 'will trigger open conflict with faith-based employment
practices of numerous churches, synagogues, mosques, and other religious
institutions.'"
Alito anticipates a realistic problem. What would happen if
a religious school, one that teaches that "sex outside of marriage and sex
reassignment procedures are immoral," were to employ a teacher who is in a
homosexual relationship, or no longer identifies with the sex he or she was
assigned at birth?
To keep such teachers on staff would be to undercut the
credibility of the religious school's tenets, effectively neutering its
doctrinal prerogatives. This is not a hypothetical.
Many Catholic schools have been targeted by homosexual
activists to challenge the right of the school to discharge, or not renew the
contract of, such teachers. How will matters play out in this new world where
there is no legal difference between sex, sexual orientation, and gender
identity?
What about religious hospitals? Will Catholic hospitals,
for instance, be permitted to decline requests for sex reassignment surgery?
Again, this is not a "maybe" issue—such lawsuits have already been
filed.
Gorsuch opines that the high court will get to these issues
when they are before it. This is unsatisfactory. His language is broad and his
reach is wide. Surely he knows that the majority opinion is going to open the
legal floodgates. Not to provide more assurance to religious institutions, as
well as to other organizations touched by this decision (e.g., women's sports),
is to entice agenda-ridden activists and lawyers to mobilize.
When it comes to controversial moral issues being settled
by judges, prudence dictates that the rulings be narrowly focused. This is one
of many areas where the majority opinion failed us.
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