Same-Sex Marriage Activists Have Launched a
Religious War
March 16, 2004
by
Nicholas Stix
Seeing Rosie O’Donnell condemn President Bush just after she “married”
her girlfriend, Kelli Carpenter, was bizarre in a tiresome sort of
way. O’Donnell claimed, “We were inspired to come here by the sitting
president and the vile and vicious and hateful comments he made.”
If O’Donnell had any sense of humor or irony, she would look at herself
and say, “Gee, for such a tolerant, open-minded person, I sure do
condemn and vituperate an awful lot, especially on what should have
been the happiest day of my life.”
Maybe I’m some sort of pervert, but I don’t recall bearing anyone
in the world any ill will on my wedding day, much less having decided
to get married, just to spite someone.
O’Donnell is in the habit of changing her rationalizations for her
“wedding,” at a moment’s notice. First, it was a reaction to her inability,
during her lawsuit last fall against Gruner & Jahr/Bertelsmann,
the publisher of her defunct magazine, to use “spousal privilege”
to keep her girlfriend from being called to testify. Her “marriage”
couldn’t be a desperate attempt at publicity for her forthcoming book,
considering the tens of millions of dollars she lost, due to her failed
TV talk show, her failed magazine, and the bomb of a Broadway musical
she produced about gay pop star, Boy George, could it?
But I’m less concerned with O’Donnell’s opportunism, than I am with
her vileness, her viciousness, her hatefulness. I have my policy differences
with Pres. Bush, but I do not question his compassion or tolerance,
which are inseparable from his Christian faith.
But if you disagree with Rosie O’Donnell, you’re a “hater,” pure
and simple. I’m focusing on O’Donnell, because I think she exemplifies
the gay movement. Like New Yorkers, gay activists are the most compassionate,
tolerant people on earth – just ask them, they’ll tell you. But disagree
with any of their demands, and they’ll
yell things at you that would make a guest on The Jerry Springer
Show (blush).
(The first time I tried to see the movie Basic Instinct, in early
1993, I think it was, gay vandals shut down the theater with stink
bombs, to “protest” that the serial killer was bisexual. Not that
they would admit that it was they who had done the deed. As a heterosexual
couple walked away from the theatre at Manhattan’s Union Square, one
of the lesbian vandals yelled at the woman, “Go home and fake some
orgasms!”)
And the thing gay activists hate more than anything else, is Christianity.
Now, I could get arrested for saying this in New York,
but the gay campaign for same-sex marriage is a war on Christianity.
And while I’m apparently not permitted to say the following anywhere
in America, America is a Christian nation … and you don’t have to
be a Christian to recognize this. (I’m a Jew.)
It was the unique mixture of political freedom and Christianity,
that produced in America the most religious nation in the West, and
the freest, most religiously tolerant nation on Earth. (Some commentators
speak of attacks on “Judaeo-Christian ethics,” but I have to confess
ignorance of any "Judaeo-Christian" religion.)
Secularists insist that the “constitutional wall of separation of
Church and state” forbids discussing religious issues in political
debates. To which I say: Show me where it says that in the Constitution.
The notion of a "constitutional" wall of separation of
Church and state derives from a personal position Thomas Jefferson
took in a letter to an acquaintance 200 years ago. But secularists
like it, and so they have projected it onto the Constitution. Better
similes, more in tune with the Constitution, would be of a “balance”
or even a “dance.” Besides, secularists aren’t even true to Jefferson;
they seek not the separation of religion from government, but the
burying of religion, as one would bury radioactive waste. In any event,
the First
Amendment does not suggest a wall:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”
The part before the first comma is known as the “establishment clause”;
the part immediately following it, is known as the “free exercise
clause.” Together, they balance each other. Gays and other radical
secularists seek to nullify the free exercise clause, and replace
the religious assumptions of the establishment clause with anti-religious
ones. And so, instead of the government not giving preference to any
particular denomination, secularists and gay activists demand that
government be hostile towards, and use its coercive power against
religion, excepting, that is, Islam.
Gay activists deny that if they succeed in imposing same-sex marriage
on America, that they will seek to force it on religious institutions.
To anyone who believes them, I say, I have a great deal for you on
a slightly used bridge. For years, homosexual activists denied that
they sought same-sex marriage, right up until the moment the U.S.
Supreme Court overturned the Texas sodomy law, last June 26.
I predict that if gay marriage becomes the law of the land, religious
freedom will be a dead letter. Gays will use the same carte blanche
interpretation of the 14th amendment they have used in
demanding same-sex marriage, in which “equality” somehow always
requires that they be “more equal” than others, to demand that churches
and synagogues be forced by the state to perform same-sex marriages,
that devout Christians be forced to rent apartments to gay couples, and that
Christian organizations be forced to hire openly homosexual applicants.
(Gay activists are oddly tolerant of Islam, partly because Islam
is so intolerant of them, and partly because Islam is the enemy of
Christianity.) And once they have gotten enough gay “hate crime” and
“anti-discrimination” laws passed at the state and federal level,
gay activists will have people prosecuted, merely for disagreeing
with them.
Why are gay activists so intent on forcing Christianity to submit
to them? Because Christianity is foundational to America, and they
want to replace America’s foundations with those of their own choosing.
And because Christianity condemns sodomy, and gay activists will not
abide being told, “No.” Theirs is a totalitarian will. They will have
their way, even if it means having the Bible censored, and remaking
God in their own image.
Nicholas Stix
New York-based freelancer Nicholas Stix has written
for Toogood Reports, Middle American News, the New York Post, Daily
News, American Enterprise, Insight, Chronicles, Newsday and many other
publications. His recent work is collected at
www.geocities.com/nstix and http://www.thecriticalcritic.blogspot.com.