Sep 18, 2015
Let's begin by recognizing that the case of the Kentucky county clerk who refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples because same-sex marriage conflicts with her religious faith raises questions that both sides in this argument need to take seriously.
Up to a point, this particular dispute has been settled-more or less. Kim Davis was jailed for contempt of court while others in her office issued the licenses, then was released. Whether that's the end of it remains to be seen, but whether it is or isn't, issues involved in the Kentucky dispute are likely to keep coming up. They deserve consideration before the fog of conventional wisdom sets in.
People who share Davis' faith-based opposition to same-sex marriage need to recognize that the right claimed here-for public officials to refuse to enforce laws they disagree with in conscience-is not a principle to be invoked casually or unconditionally. How far do you go? Where do you draw the line? Should the principle apply not only to county clerks but to military commanders and even commanders in chief?
But supporters of same-sex marriage need to recognize that casually overriding an appeal to conscience is a response worthy of a totalitarian state. Many of them made it a practice to appeal to conscience back when they were working to win approval of what they provocatively called "marriage equality." If their appeal to conscience was legitimate then, why is somebody else's appeal to conscience suddenly illegitimate now?