Why is religious liberty now losing so much
ground?
By Ryan T. Anderson
As I explain in my just-released book, Truth Overruled:
The Future of Marriage and Religious Freedom, three historical
developments explain our current predicament: a change in the scope of our
government, a change in our sexual values, and a change in our political
leaders’ vision of religious liberty. An adequate response will need to address
each of these changes.
First, government has changed. The progressive movement gave us the administrative state. Limited
government and the rule of law were replaced by the nearly unlimited reach of
technocrats in governmental agencies. As government assumes responsibility for
more areas of life, the likelihood of its infringing on religious liberty
increases. Why should government be telling bakers and florists which weddings
to serve in the first place? Why should it tell charities and religious schools
how to operate and which values to teach? Only a swollen sense of unaccountable
government authority can explain these changes.
Second, sexual values have changed. At the time of the American Revolution, religion and liberty were so
closely linked that Thomas Jefferson could affirm, “The God who gave us life,
gave us liberty at the same time.” Meanwhile, his French contemporary Denis
Diderot, expressing sentiments that would culminate in a very different revolution,
declared that man “will never be free until the last king is strangled with the
entrails of the last priest.” In our own time, however, the sexual revolution
has shattered the American synthesis of faith and freedom, setting religion at
odds with “liberty”—or more accurately, license. Now bakers, florists, adoption
agencies, and schools that uphold what Americans have always believed about
marriage find themselves at odds with the law.
Third, religious liberty has changed. Our Constitution protects the natural right to the free exercise of
religion. But some liberals are trying to drastically narrow that right by
redefining it as the mere “freedom of worship.” If they succeed, the robust
religious freedom that made American civil society the envy of the world will
be reduced to Sunday-morning piety confined within the four walls of a chapel.
They have even gone so far as to rewrite the U.S. immigration exam to say that
the First Amendment protects “freedom of worship” rather than the “free exercise
of religion.”True religious liberty entails the freedom to live consistently
with one’s beliefs seven days a week—in the chapel, in the marketplace, and in
the public square.
These three changes represent a rejection of the American
Founding. Progressive politics and a radical view of human sexuality are
combining to coerce compliance at the expense of a bedrock human right. And of
course much of this has been enabled by judicial activism,
as in Obergefell.
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