Factual Information as Favoritism
Friday May 02nd 2008, 8:27 am
Filed under: religion

This ruling seems a bit absurd to me. Let’s see if I can summarize:

Georgia Tech, a public university, has a university-affiliated group called Safe Space, which distributed literature describing some religious traditions and their relationships with gayness. A federal judge ruled that these materials favored some religions over others and are therefore unconstitutional

The details:

The case was filed on behalf of two Georgia Tech students, assisted by the Alliance Defense Fund, a legal group that has sued many public colleges accusing them of violating the rights of religious students. The portion of the suit about Safe Space argued that materials at the public university were effectively religious in that they endorsed some faiths over others — and that these materials were as a result unconstitutional. Judge J. Owen Forrester agreed.

The materials in question dealt with issues that may be faced by religious gay students, or by gay students challenged about the sexuality by people from different faiths. One passage cited in the ruling says that “historically, Biblical passages taken out of context have been used to justify such things as slavery, the inferior status of women, and the persecution of religious minorities.” Such attitudes have led some religious groups to declare “that homosexuality is immoral,” the group’s materials state, while others “have begun to look at sexual relationships in terms of the love, mutual support, commitments and the responsibility of the partners rather than the sex of the individuals involved.”

In another section, the materials discuss specific faiths, noting which faiths recognize same-sex unions, and the conditions under which some faiths will ordain gay clergy. While the Episcopal Church is praised as “more receptive to gay worshipers than many other Christian denominations,” the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is described as having “the most anti-gay policies of any religion widely practiced in the United States.” The section on Roman Catholic belief also notes that some theologians have argued, “much to the embarrassment of the Vatican,” that the medieval church recognized unions for same-sex couples.

Those passages seem pretty darn factual to me though they are generalizations. In any case, the materials are no longer used. A small case, but the implications for public institutions are big.

Via Inside Higher Ed



2 Comments so far

Oh lord, not the Alliance Defense Fund. *grumble grumble*

I’m not sure how such pamphlets “violate the rights” of religious students. I wonder about that judge ….

Comment by h sofia 05.02.08 @ 4:46 pm

“Keeping the door open for the spreading of the Gospel….”

Comment by Ms. Theologian 05.02.08 @ 4:59 pm



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