Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Brief Musings on Gay Marriage and Religious Liberties

Personally, I do not feel that the church should feel threatened by the legalization of gay marriage. I do, however, think the church should not be required by the law to perform marriage ceremonies indiscriminately to both heterosexual and homosexual couples. Discrimination, while a taboo today, is not necessarily a bad thing. It can be, but not always. Performing marriage ceremonies, in my view, is an act of service or charity done by the church, and I don't believe the government should have any place in determining which people receive charities from which people. I think if a denomination decides that it is okay for its clergy to perform homosexual unions, then it has the right to do that. But if another denomination believes such a thing to be against the views and practices of their religion, then they should not be required by law to do so. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, after all...

I think that discrimination is key in our lives. We should love all people, but government cannot make us do it. It can pass civil liberties laws, which are a good thing I might add, but it can't make us love our neighbor as ourselves. We should have the legal right to withhold charity from whomever we please... because its charity. The question is, should we withhold this charity from gay couples who want to get married? And that certainly depends on the situation - just like any marriage. The choice should be up to the denominations, not the government. Seriously though, what gay couple in their right minds would ask, say, a Southern Baptist pastor to marry them? Any such move would be clearly political, and if they really wanted to get married, I would hope that they would be sincere enough to look for someone willing to perform such a ceremony. It would be wrong for anyone to insist that a pastor or church do something that they believe to be immoral - for some pastors that would be to perform a gay marriage, and for others it would be to deny a gay couple a marriage ceremony. Any sort of blanket law fails to understand the scope of the complexities of human existence.