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Forced ‘Tolerance’
New Jersey Town Forced to Accommodate Same-Sex Unions
BY DENNIS POUST REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
January 25-31, 2009 Issue |
Posted 1/16/09 at 8:06 AM
OCEAN GROVE, N.J. — A Christian camp meeting community here is being forced to accommodate same-sex ceremonies. Are Catholics next?
Ocean Grove, a
tiny seaside village on the Jersey Shore, is in many ways like something out of
another time.
With its wood frame Victorian inns,
small family-run cafes and restaurants (no alcohol served in this “dry” town
with a long history of temperance), Ocean Grove might have been lifted out of
the 19th century.
But a distinctly 21st-century
controversy has rudely intervened in this Methodist Church-owned village, which
began as a place for Protestant tent revival meetings.
Ocean Grove has come out on the
short end of a homosexual union controversy that traditional marriage advocates
say portends chilling religious liberty implications.
An official of the state’s Catholic
Conference voiced concern that Catholic organizations could be next.
It all started in March 2007, just
three months after the New Jersey Legislature passed a bill allowing
homosexuals to enter into state-sanctioned civil unions, the legal equivalent
of marriage.
Two lesbian partners sought
permission to hold their civil union ceremony at the Ocean Grove Boardwalk
Pavilion, owned by the Methodist-run Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association.
Ocean Grove was founded in 1869 by a
group of Methodist ministers seeking an oceanfront Christian camp meeting
community. They formed the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association, which
continues to own all of the village land, which it leases to residents.
The association regularly made the
pavilion, which overlooks the Atlantic Ocean, available for weddings,
regardless of religious affiliation. The pavilion also has long been used as a
site for religious services. (The association keeps its section of beach closed
on Sunday mornings.)
Because the Methodist Church
disapproves of homosexual activity, same-sex “marriage” and civil unions, the
two women were denied the use of the pavilion. That prompted them to file a
claim of discrimination with the state of New Jersey.
On Dec. 29, the state’s Division of
Civil Rights ruled that because the association regularly made the pavilion
available for weddings and other public use, it was a public accommodation and
therefore bound by the state’s anti-discrimination law to allow the civil union
ceremony.
Lawrence Lustberg, an attorney with
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) who represented the plaintiffs, hailed
the decision as a “spectacular victory.”
But those who support not only
traditional marriage but the ability of a religious organization to remain true
to its teachings saw it as a grave assault on religious liberty, with
potentially dire consequences.
“Gay ‘marriage’ advocates seek to
get the law to endorse a new moral principle — orientation is just like race,”
said Maggie Gallagher, president of the National Organization for Marriage,
which was the biggest single financial supporter of California’s Proposition 8
banning same-sex “marriage.” “Once the law endorses this principle, traditional
religious communities are going to be treated like racists if we act on and
promote our countercultural view [that] there’s something special about unions
of husband and wife. Ocean Grove is the tip of a very large iceberg. Take it
seriously.”
Experts say Ocean Grove is just one
example of religious liberty taking a backseat to promotion of the new societal
ideal of nondiscrimination against homosexuals in any possible form.
For example, in 2006, Catholic
Charities in the Archdiocese of Boston had to stop its adoption services
because the state of Massachusetts, where court-ordered same-sex “marriages”
have been performed since 2004, would not allow it to “discriminate” against
homosexual couples seeking to adopt. And last year in New Mexico, the New
Mexico Civil Rights Commission found a private wedding photography business in
Albuquerque run by a Christian husband and wife guilty of “sexual orientation
discrimination” for declining to photograph a lesbian commitment ceremony.
What About Tolerance?
One attorney fighting the
discrimination charge in Ocean Grove warned of a “real and present threat” to
religious liberty.
“On a broader level, what you’re
seeing is these nondiscrimination laws that are being turned against Christian
people,” said Jim Campbell, an attorney for the Alliance Defense Fund who
served as associate counsel representing the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting
Association. “They’re being used against religious organizations to tell them
what to do and force them to use their own property in a way that violates
their own religious principles, which is a very dangerous road to go down.
We’re elevating these sexual relationships to a level that’s trumping one of
the fundamental rights in this country — our right to religious liberty and
religious freedom.”
In New Jersey, Campbell believes the
deck is stacked against the association because state law makes the Division of
Civil Rights, “the judge, the jury and the prosecution” in such cases. Now that
the agency has issued its determination, the case moves to a trial-like hearing
by the same agency, which will also decide on any remedies.
Lustberg, the ACLU attorney, told
the Associated Press he would seek an order for the pavilion to be “open to all
on an equal basis.”
Patrick Brannigan, executive
director of the New Jersey Catholic Conference, worries about the implications
for the Catholic Church. While former New Jersey Attorney General (now chief
justice of the state Supreme Court) Stuart Rabner previously issued an opinion
saying that clergy would not be required to bless civil unions, the decision
could impact the Church in other ways.
“We do have serious concerns about
Catholic organizations, such as the Knights of Columbus, being required to
provide a facility for events and activities which would violate Catholic
teaching,” said Brannigan.
Since the controversy arose, the
association has stopped permitting any weddings to be held in the pavilion.
This is the only way to avoid charges of discrimination, similar to the action
taken by Catholic Charities in Boston regarding adoption.
“It just goes to show the pretense
of tolerance from the homosexual agenda; that’s exactly what it is — a
pretense. It’s not true, and we see that here,” said Campbell. “They will talk
about it all day, saying, ‘We’re not trying to infringe on anyone’s religious
liberty.’ … But when the rubber meets the road, look what they’re demanding
here.
“They’re demanding that a Christian
organization use its property in a way that violates their religious principles
and forces them to recognize — in a sense, endorse — these relationships.”
Dennis Poust writes
from Albany,
New York.
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