Nitefox wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
Nitefox wrote:
Just to get a head count for future developments...
If a gay couple wants to get married by a church that doesn't support gay marriage, should the church be forced to marry the gay couple or punished somehow for not doing so?
Apart from the rhetoric of the social-right claiming this is the end result, I've yet to see anyone in the social-left (or middle) suggest this is something they would ever want.
I'll bet you a box of donuts that it will be put to the challenge by someone within the next 10 years.
Sure, there will probably be a handful of suits filed, but they won't have any significant support and they won't stand a chance of success. Opponents of interracial marriage raised the same concern when the Supreme Court flat out ruled that state prohibition of interracial marriage was unConstitutional (a ruling that obviously went much farther than the current DOMA decision does on gay marriage). That fear has proven to be unwarranted. No church has ever been required to perform an interracial marriage, and there's no reason to suspect things will be different with gay marriage.
As for churches being punished, the main mechanism for that would be revoking the church's tax-exempt status, and again, no church has ever lost its tax-exempt status for refusing to perform interracial marriages. The closest thing to that happening was Bob Jones University (a self-described Christian school) losing its tax-exempt status for prohibiting interracial dating based on religious objections to the practice, but when the Court upheld the IRS's decision, it explicitly limited its holding to religious
schools, not churches or other purely religious institutions, which are subject to a higher degree of protection under the Court's First Amendment precedents. As before, I see no reason to suspect things will be different with gay marriage.
With the Bob Jones University ruling in mind, though, I do think it's possible that church-affiliated institutions (as opposed to the churches themselves) that discriminate against gay couples could lose their tax-exempt status and/or become ineligible to participate in various government-funded programs. For example, if a Catholic university has special dorms for married students and refuses to allow a married gay couple to live there, it's certainly plausible, in the absence of DOMA, that such university could lose it's tax-exempt status and/or become ineligible to participate in federal financial aid programs.