Let?s say for example a gay couple is married in a state that supports it. The couple decide to go to school at a private catholic university and are refused acceptance or partner housing accommodations. Does the state have the right to force the university to accept the couple on the grounds they are discriminating against them and violating the law?
If the university is private as you say, they should have no problem with discriminating against gay couples. But if it is a state college or gets funding from the govt, they can't get away with it.
The Christian Science Monitor has a short article on this -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0315/p02s02-ussc.html
All that article says is that people are wondering if churches will be forced to accept it, which makes no sense. The article didn't even provide valid reasons for why the govt would stick its nose in churches. Churches can basically do whatever they want and get away with it as long as it is legal.
I could see the tax exempt status being a problem, but as far as I know there are no laws that say that the church must accept certain civil rights to keep that status.
Please note, I am for legal equality, but I am not a fan of government bullying my church into doing something it does not want too. Considering the history of activism in this country, I sense that is the direction we are headed, activist courts will get involved, and this will get ugly.
The government allows opposite-gender couples to marry, yet the Catholic church often doesn't allow priests to marry. Do you see the government forcing the church to allow their priests to marry?
The suggestion that this is a simple issue ? ?just change the law so gay couples can get a license? is short sighted. It goes much deeper than that so we should tread very carefully and think through any changes we make.
IMO there is no rational reason why the government would force churches to accept it. Churches are private institutions and can do whatever they want. I can't think of anyone who wants the government to do that either.
I just don't get the argument. Did the government force churches to accept mixed-race marriages when states legalized them? I don't remember it doing that, but again, if someone has proof of that it would help a lot.