Supreme Court rules for Christian baker in Masterpiece Cakeshop case

Supreme Court rules for Christian baker in Masterpiece Cakeshop case

Full ruling

The Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in favor of a Christian baker in its high-profile wedding cake case, deciding that the state of Colorado failed to respect the baker’s religious exercise rights. “The Colorado Civil Rights Commission’s consideration of this case was inconsistent with the State’s obligation of religious neutrality. The reason and motive for the baker’s refusal were based on his sincere religious beliefs and convictions,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion.

Discussion

Very good decision. Hope this will get similar issues straightened out in other states.

David R. Brumbelow

“The Supreme Court ruled 7-2”

I’m glad it wasn’t 5-4. That would still be a win, but the wider margin makes it even more satisfying.

[Larry Nelson]

“The Supreme Court ruled 7-2”

I’m glad it wasn’t 5-4. That would still be a win, but the wider margin makes it even more satisfying.

Makes it pretty clear this case was a legal slam-dunk, despite the nearly unanimous shrieks of oppression coming from the Left.

This decision is a win for Mr. Philips, but not one for religious liberty in general. The court ruled in favor of Mr. Philips primarily based on the religious hostility shown by the CCRC, not on the merits of the argument of freedom of religious expression.

What I gather from this decision is that had the original plaintiffs opted to sue Mr. Philips directly, instead of pursuing their case through the commission, the court’s decision could have been different. The argument that a business can opt to decline a job based on religious preference was very clearly NOT decided.

Going forward, I believe Christian businesses will need to differentiate their product and services as uniquely Christian up front. For example, “all wedding cakes provided by Masterpiece Bakeries will have ‘OMOW’ (One Man One Woman) decorated on it. - No Exceptions.” Individual patrons would then have to decide whether the product or service met their needs.

While we can be relieved and grateful for Mr. Philips win, we must understand with soberness that this issue has not been definitively settled, and that this issue will be litigated again shortly.

John B. Lee

The case was not mainly argued on religious liberty but on free speech, on the principle that the government may not compel individual to artistically express what they do not in fact believe.

To me, that that was a stronger case. But surprise, they went with the religious liberty angle instead.

Here’s David French on the decision. His analysis has been very good through the whole process, IMO.

In Masterpiece Cakeshop, Justice Kennedy Strikes a Blow for the Dignity of the Faithful

John’s idea…

Going forward, I believe Christian businesses will need to differentiate their product and services as uniquely Christian up front. For example, “all wedding cakes provided by Masterpiece Bakeries will have ‘OMOW’ (One Man One Woman) decorated on it. - No Exceptions.” Individual patrons would then have to decide whether the product or service met their needs.

I think some version of this is a good idea. It would work just as well to say “Husband and Wife” on there somewhere, or quote Gen. 2… about leaving and cleaving. I kind of like that option because it puts the whole thing in a “theology of the family” context.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

Yes, not the end of the story. An encouraging start though.

From French’s article…

No, the Court did not issue the sweeping free-speech ruling that many advocates hoped for and others feared. Instead it issued a ruling that reminded state authorities that people of faith have the exact same rights — and are entitled to the exact same treatment — as people of different faith or no faith at all. And it did so in an opinion that decisively rejected the exact talking points so favored by the anti-religious left.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

The potential problem for bakers that would use those terms is that much of society no longer believes that those words always mean what the Bible declares them to mean.

From Skye Jethani

5 Reasons the Supreme Court’s Colorado Baker Decision is a Victory for All Americans

The case of the Colorado baker who refused to create a cake for a same-sex wedding has been a topic of heated debate since 2015. I’ve written about the case a number of times and received criticism from both conservative Christians and marriage equality advocates because I sided with the cake maker (upsetting liberals) but not on the grounds of religious liberty (upsetting conservatives). Instead, I saw the case as a matter of free speech in which the “LGBTs vs. Christians” lens was largely irrelevant.

Nonetheless, many insisted that the case represented the front line in the culture war. The high court, both sides hoped, would finally decide whose rights trumped whose. Did religious belief outweigh gay marriage, or did sexual orientation outweigh religious liberty?

Yesterday the Supreme Court finally ruled on the case in a surprising manner allowing neither side to declare a total victory or defeat. Here are my five reasons why we should see the decision as a victory for the common good rather than either side in the culture war.

ONE: The decision was not determined by the 2016 presidential election

We’ve become used to 5-4 split decisions from the Supreme Court on controversial cases including Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, Citizens United v. FEC, and Obergefell v. Hodges which legalized same-sex marriage. So, when Justice Scalia died in February 2016, filling his vacancy on the court became a central issue of the presidential campaign with many assuming their vote for Trump or Clinton would make a difference in the battle between gay rights and religious liberty.

Yesterday’s decision proved they were wrong. The court voted 7-2 for the cake maker with three of the justices who voted for same-sex marriage in 2015 (Kennedy, Kegan, and Breyer) siding with the conservatives. That margin means the outcome would have been the same even if Hillary Clinton had won the election and had appointed her own nominee to the bench. Progressives cannot blame the decision on Justice Gorsuch, Donald Trump, Russian interference in the election, or the Republicans in the Senate who stonewalled President Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, for 10 months.

It also serves as a reminder to conservatives that the court is not as hostile to religious liberty as pundits and Republican fundraisers would have them believe. In fact, the court—including its more liberal members—has a very strong record of defending religious liberty.

TWO: The decision supporting the Christian baker was written by the same justice who wrote the decision legalizing gay marriage

In an inspired choice, the court assigned the task of writing the majority opinion to Justice Kennedy—the same moderate judge whose swing vote decided Obergefell and who wrote the opinion that legalized same sex marriage three years ago. Kennedy has become a hero to advocates of marriage equality for his principled articulation of the right of all Americans, regardless of their sexual orientation, to marry. Therefore, his equally principled defense of Jack Phillips, the Christian cake maker, cannot be dismissed as the biased logic of an anti-gay conservative. To his credit, Kennedy affirms the dignity and sympathizes with both sides in the debate.

Kennedy’s authorship of both decisions also means future generations of American legal scholars will have to weigh both gay rights and religious liberty together. These are not matters that easily fall along conservative and liberal fault lines. Which leads to my third point.

THREE: The decision sidesteps the culture war and identity politics

These days it feels like everything from the NFL to the latest Star Wars film is caught up in partisan divisions and red/blue tribal identity. The “us versus them” mindset has paralyzed Washington and prevented our political leaders from making headway on life-saving issues most Americans agree on like firearm safety and the opioid epidemic.

The Supreme Court’s decision yesterday avoided this trap and kept the court out of the scrum of the culture war by offering a narrow ruling specific to this case rather than a broad precedent. Although advocates on both sides were hoping for a knockout punch, the court refused to say whether religious liberty or gay rights had the upper hand. It did not go along with the winner-take-all mindset that has overtaken our public discourse. Instead, the court affirmed the value of protecting both religious belief and sexual orientation from discrimination.

The majority opinion understands that the real goal is not a victory for one side but respect, understanding, and tolerance from both sides. The language of the ruling subtly chastises those who view the tension between gay rights and religious liberty as a battle for total domination by the victor and unconditional surrender by the loser. As the decision states, “The outcome of cases like this in other circumstances must await further elaboration in the courts all in the context of recognizing that these disputes must be resolved with tolerance, without undue disrespect to sincere religious beliefs, and without subjecting gay persons to indignities when they seek goods and services in an open market” [emphasis added].

FOUR: The decision condemns anti-gay and anti-Christian bigotry

If there was a loser in the case it was the Colorado Civil Rights Commission who exhibited contempt for Mr. Phillips’ Christian beliefs. The court found, “Some of the commissioners at the Commission’s formal, public hearings endorsed the view that religious beliefs cannot legitimately be carried into the public sphere or commercial domain, disparaged Phillips’ faith as despicable and characterized it as merely rhetorical, and compared his invocation of his sincerely held religious beliefs to defenses of slavery and the Holocaust. No commissioners objected to the comments.”

The First Amendment, Justice Kennedy said, guarantees “that our laws be applied in a manner that is neutral toward religion.” By comparing Mr. Phillips’ sincerely held religious beliefs to that of a slaveholder or Nazi, the Colorado Civil Rights Commission was anything but neutral. This may be one of the most important parts of the ruling. By defending the legitimacy of Mr. Phillips’ religious beliefs, Justice Kennedy—again, the same justice who wrote the ruling legalizing same sex marriage in 2015—was declaring that holding a traditional view of marriage for religious reasons is not inherently oppressive, bigoted, or immoral. That isn’t just good news for Christians, but also for Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and followers of other faiths that have not endorsed same-sex unions for thousands of years.

At the same time, religious business owners should not interpret anything in the ruling as permission to deny goods or services to LGBT patrons. Kennedy wants to protect both gay and religious citizens from the “indignities” of discrimination, and I suspect the majority of Americans share that goal.

FIVE: The decision represents hope for a divided country

The court’s opinion has been criticized by some as “kicking the can down the road.” Maybe, but I see a wisdom to the ruling that culture warriors on the left and right may not. Had yesterday’s decision been a decisive victory for either side it would have short circuited the opportunity to forge a more perfect union in which gay and religious Americans learn to respect one another and pursue the common good as fellow citizens rather than as enemy combatants.

Most Americans do not see the tension between religious liberty and gay rights as a fight to the death. Most do not believe it must be an either/or, zero sum conflict. There are very good, very thoughtful citizens occupying the middle who are not represented by the zealots on cable news and social media. Nor are they engaged by the politicians being pulled to the fringes of both parties who fear compromise more than they love common sense.

At its best the Supreme Court rises above petty partisanship and ephemeral trends, and it did so in this case. The framers of the Constitution gave the justices lifetime appointments so they could avoid the shortsightedness that plagues too many of our elected officials today, and so the court may call us back to enduring Constitutional principles and the founding aspirations of our nation.

I wonder if Justice Kennedy considered the unkind, divisive rhetoric of the current public discourse when writing his opinion, and how a broad, decisive ruling one way or the other would have enflamed the anger already burning in American society. Our country has embarked on a course of cruelty in recent years in which both sides view the court as a weapon against the other. By not offering a final ruling in the strain between religious liberty and gay rights, the court is leaving room for neighbors, local communities, cities, and states to come together around common sense solutions that respect all citizens. The court seems to be hoping that, given enough time, our present cruelty will break with a new dawn of civility.