Religion & Public Life With Mark Silk

Religion & Public Life With Mark Silk

It’s all Scalia’s fault

posted by Mark Silk

Ever alert for Republican wackiness, TPM calls
our attention
to a recent TV interview with Ed Martin, who’s got
the GOP nomination to run against Rep. Russ Carnahan to represent
Missouri’s Third District in Congress.

One thing I like to say is: America is great, not because of
our
genetics. We’re great because we created a place and space where people
can be free. And they can choose Christ, they can choose to be faithful.
They can worship, and they find their way to the Lord. And — or some
of them don’t. We sure want them all to, but some of them don’t.

Part of that freedom — when you take a government and you impose,
and take away all your choices. One of the choices you take away is to
find the Lord. And to find your savior.

And that’s one of the things that’s most destructive about the
growth
of government. It’s this taking away of that freedom. The freedom –
the ultimate freedom, to find your salvation, to get your salvation. And
to find Christ, for me and you.

And I think that’s one of the things that we have to be very, very
aware of. That the Obama Administration and Congressman Carnahan are
doing to us.

There’s no indication that if Martin were asked to connect the dots,
he could point to any specific way that the “growth of government” under
Obama and Carnahan has undermined the ability of Americans to find
Christ. It’s just that O/C = big govt = no ultimate freedom. But there
is a plausible recent example of such undermining, at least if taking up
cudgels on the conservative side of the culture wars appeals to you.
It’s the Supreme Court’s decision
in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez, which upheld the
right of the Hastings School of Law to deny official status to the
school’s chapter of the Christian Legal Society for having a policy of
excluding non-repentant gays and lesbians.

The only trouble is that if you want to blame someone for putting us
on the road to serfdo…er, Christian Legal Society, it should be
that paragon of constitutional originalism, Antonin Scalia, who in 1990
persuaded four mostly conservative justices to go his way in Employment
Division
v. Smith. That decision made it impossible for the
“pro-religion” conservatives on the current court to actually argue on
behalf of the constitutional guarantee of religious free exercise. The
Hastings policy that officially recognized student groups must admit all
comers may be idiotic (a Democratic club must admit Republicans?), but
it’s neutral and generally applicable–the Smith standard.

However, if you look at, say, Timothy Dalrymple’s critique
of CLS over at Patheos, you’ll find nary a mention of Smith.
Dalrymple is more than prepared to believe that the court majority
acted against religious interests, but in fact, thanks to Smith,
there never had to be a balancing of the right of free exercise against
the principle of equality embodied by an “all comers” policy. And the
fact is, there’s real tension between the two that we as a society, and
the Supreme Court as the arbiter of the Constitution, ought to face up
to.

As retired Justice David Souter said in his Harvard commencement
address
,”The Constitution is a pantheon of values, and a lot of
hard cases are
hard because the Constitution gives no simple rule of decision for the
cases in which one of the values is truly at odds with another.” One of
the worst features of today’s blog-eat-blog world is that it allows us to
pretend that there are lots of easy answers.



Previous Posts

The Ayn Rand Republicans
I confess to feeling a little bit queasy about the American Values Network's new video hoisting Rep. Paul Ryan, Sen. Rand Paul, Rush Limbaugh, and other GOP luminaries on the petard of Ayn Rand and her atheistic philosophy of objectivism. Take a look. [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TxCW

posted 7:13:30pm May. 24, 2011 | read full post »

Whither evangelicals?
I'm fully prepared to believe that Mitch Daniels' family proved to be the unleapable hurdle in his abortive run-up to the GOP presidential race. Imagine yourself as wife Cheri, having split for the coast to marry on old flame, your husband and young daughters left behind in Boone County, Indiana,

posted 9:19:56am May. 23, 2011 | read full post »

No more "social conservatives"
With the presidential election cycle getting up to speed, it's time for reporters and yakkers like me to stop writing about "social conservatives" as if they were an identifiable segment of the voting population. I say this as someone who has happily been using the term since late 2008, when it

posted 8:25:11am May. 20, 2011 | read full post »

So clerical celibacy was not the problem?
Those on the Catholic left are not very happy that the Jay Report declines in no uncertain terms to blame clerical celibacy for the sexual abuse crisis. As the report puts it: Factors that remained consistent over this time period, such as celibacy, do not explain the sexual abuse "crisis." Celib

posted 9:50:34am May. 19, 2011 | read full post »

Gay priests are not the problem
That's the big news out of the John Jay College Final Report on the sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests, due out at 2 p.m. today, according to David Gibson's scoop for RNS last night (followed swiftly by NYT's Laurie Goodstein, who also scored a copy). To wit: [T]he researchers found no st

posted 6:56:19am May. 18, 2011 | read full post »

Advertisement
Comments read comments(4)
post a comment
Gwyddion9

posted July 14, 2010 at 12:44 am


I find it disgusting! Typical for the GOP to bed with conservative Christianity when they want votes or approval but then they, the GOP, will drop them as they always do.
Freedom of Religion, yes a very important thing, a very unique thing in this world of fanatics who wish to push their religious beliefs on everyone, which includes conservative Christians and comments like those above in this report. I, like so many have found Christianity lacking or as said in the Old Testament…wanting.
I became Pagan after being Christian. This was the best move, religiously, I could ever have made for myself. Then we have comments like this to find “Jesus”. As much Christianity that is tossed around in this country, I seriously doubt anyone has never heard of Jesus. This simply reflects the arrogance of those people who want to create the “Christian U.S.” which is nothing more than a lie! If people choose to believe as they do, that’s fine with me so long as they don’t push it on me or anyone else. The U.S. is greater than any religion because it was created to be a place where religious beliefs could be practiced without the fear of persecution.
This is why they U.S. was created. Yet, I hear these individuals who want to claim that somehow the U.S. is a Christian Nation. I think they have forgotten a few history lessons but I doubt it. They want to create a nation in their own image even if they have to throw away history to do it. It’s a shame really, as the founding fathers would surly look with disgust at the attempts that are being made to destroy their creation, all under the name of god!



report abuse
 

Dale Warren

posted July 14, 2010 at 8:44 am


I think you should be free to pursue whatever spiritual life you care to follow – or to walk away from your faith and embrace another. The Government’s encroachments do present a slow, inevitable flaking away of those rights.
Martin is being gleefully portrayed as a religious nut but what I have found on his website pertaining to faith is quite reasonable. It only stands out in contrast with the bland secularism of the left who reserve their fervor for government. Check it out for yourself:
http://edmartinforcongress.com/category/personal/



report abuse
 

Marian

posted July 14, 2010 at 2:28 pm


I never understood Scalia’s ruling in Smith, given how much respect he’s always saying we should accord to traditional religious practice. The only possible conclusion we can draw is that Smith’s traditional practice was nothing like Scalia’s, so he could reasonably rule that it didn’t deserve protection.
Captcha: Resign 20.3



report abuse
 

Grumpy Old Person

posted July 14, 2010 at 4:18 pm


It isn’t that Mr. Martin is “being gleefully portrayed as a religious nut” so much as Mr. Martin is gleefully playing the religious nut.
He is too selective by far in his narrow (Christinaist, some would say) definition of freedom.
He forgot a part (included in bold):
“The freedom — the ultimate freedom, to find your salvation - or NOT, to get your salvation - or NOT. And to find Christ
- or NOT.”
Jeezus Mary and Joseph what a Bible thumper.
Hint: Americans ain’t all Christians. Nor is America a theocracy (yet, anyway) despite his obvious best wishes.
And, need I add, they must ALL retain the freedom NOT to be.



report abuse
 

Post a Comment

By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.

Share this story


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Help

Media Kit

Subscribe

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.