Religious conservatives in the United States have been complaining that developments in the political arena – the Obamcare contraceptive
mandate, the progress of same-sex civil marriage – threaten religious
freedom.
They’re crying wolf, but similar alarms in the Mother Country
make a bit more sense.
Because England
has an established church, some of whose bishops sit in Parliament, the
political question of same-sex marriage has religious reverberations
that don’t sound here.
Meanwhile, the Church of England’s surprise
decision not to approve the ordination of women as bishops has caused a
stir at Westminster, with Prime Minister David Cameron
urging the church to “get on with it, as it were, and get with the
program” and some parliamentarians suggesting that the church should
lose its exemption from laws against sex discrimination.
It isn’t clear that approval of same-sex marriage by Parliament would
require priests of the established church to officiate at gay weddings
in church, as some British conservatives fear.
But the absence of a wall of separation between church and state in
England has led to situations in which members of Parliament, including
non-Anglicans, have made essentially religious decisions.
The most famous example came in the 1920s when the House of Commons rejected a new Book of Common Prayer that
restored some elements of Catholic worship to the Anglican liturgy.
(Some so-called Anglo-Catholics also opposed the book because they
feared it would make it harder for them to import other “Romish”
ceremonies.
That odd alliance of Evangelicals and Anglo-Catholics was
mirrored in the debate in the church’s General Synod over female
bishops.)
American evangelicals and Catholics who cry wolf about threats to
religious liberty in this country should cast an eye across the Atlantic
and count their blessings.
President Obama
would never demand that the Roman Catholic Church “get on with”
admitting women to the ranks of priests and bishops, and it’s
inconceivable that Congress would apply laws against sex discrimination
to the hiring of clergy – and, if it did, the Supreme Court would swoop
down with a vengeance, hurling constitutional anathemas.
Priests who
don’t want to officiate at same-sex religious weddings are free under
the 1st Amendment to say no.
They and their bishops, unlike clergy in the Church of England, are not civil servants in dog collars.
Granted, in a modern welfare state in which churches and government
interact in the provision of healthcare and other services, tricky
questions will arise.
Take the current hot-button issue of whether the
Obama administration can require hospitals affiliated with the Catholic
Church to offer their employees contraceptive services as part of a
standard health insurance plan.
Defenders of the administration argue
that a religiously affiliated institution that employs people of many
faiths should be bound by laws that bind secular employers.
Advocates
for the Catholic bishops insist that the contraceptive mandate violates
the 1st Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act,
which protects religious practice above and beyond what the
Constitution requires.
Who’s right?
The Supreme Court likely will decide. But however the
court rules, religious liberty will remain more robust in this country
than it is is England.
For that, America’s religious leaders should
thank God – and the Framers.