Director, Commonwealth Policy Center

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Model Resolution to Affirm Marriage and Religious Liberty released by
Commonwealth Policy Center
DATE: July 15, 2015
CONTACT: Richard Nelson
PHONE: (270) 271-2713

Cadiz, KY— The Commonwealth Policy Center released a model resolution regarding marriage and religious freedom for local governments on Tuesday. According to Richard Nelson, executive director of the nonpartisan public policy group, the resolution allows local governments to go on record regarding what they believe about marriage. It also affirms that the local government respects individual conscience and religious freedom.

“Many local officials are scrambling in the wake of the the U.S. Supreme Court ruling which redefined marriage and struck down Kentucky’s marriage law,” Nelson said. “The court issued its opinion, now local governments have a chance to respond. Even though the resolution doesn’t have the force of law, it allows city councils and fiscal courts to go on record to affirm basic truths about marriage and religious freedom.”

The resolution states that the local government is resolved to “respect the rights of individual conscience as guaranteed in Article 5 of the Kentucky Bill of Rights; and… that it is neither wise nor safe for government to compel its citizens to violate their conscience”

Full text of the resolution: 

A Resolution to Affirm Religious Freedom and the Timeless Definition of Marriage

WHEREAS, on June 26, 2015 the U.S. Supreme Court by a 5-4 ruling, struck down Kentucky’s Constitutional Amendment defining marriage as between one man and one woman in the case Obergefell v Hodges; and 

WHEREAS, the U.S. Constitution is silent on the definition of marriage; and

WHEREAS, the Tenth Amendment reserves the rights of the states the power and authority not delegated to the federal government; and

WHEREAS, in 2004, 118 state legislators voted to amend Kentucky’s state constitution to say “Only a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Kentucky.”; and

WHEREAS, 1,222,125 voters or nearly 75 percent of Kentuckians ratified the state constitutional amendment on November 2, 2004;

WHEREAS, Kentucky along with 30 other states amended their constitutions to define marriage as between one man and one woman.

WHEREAS, 106 Kentucky legislators signed onto a friend of the court brief encouraging the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the Commonwealth’s duly enacted marriage law; and

WHEREAS, marriage is the most basic human relationship bringing one man and one woman together into a lifelong covenantal union; and 

WHEREAS, anthropology supports man/woman marriage by recognizing that  men and women are different and complementary; and

WHEREAS, biology affirms man/woman marriage through the truth that human reproduction depends upon the joining of a man and woman; and

WHEREAS, sociology affirms that the children produced by the union of male and female do best when they are raised by both their biological mother and biological father; and

WHEREAS, the major religions including orthodox Judaism, Christianity and Islam affirm that marriage is between one man and one woman; and

WHEREAS, social science affirms that children statistically do better in every category when raised in married two-parent heterosexual households; and

WHEREAS, there is not a single peer reviewed credible scientific study measured longitudinally that indicates that children do better under same-sex parenting; and

WHEREAS, stable heterosexual marriages are in the government’s best interest and best protection against government dependency; and  

WHEREAS, the definition of marriage as between one man and one woman applies throughout all of time, to all cultures and preceded civil government;

WHEREAS, the Kentucky Bill of Rights says in Section 5: “… No human authority shall, in any case whatever, control or interfere with the rights of conscience.”

WHEREAS, the Kentucky legislature enacted the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in 2013 which says the “government shall not substantially burden a person's freedom of religion.” If there is another way to carry out a compelling government interest, it must be done in the “least restrictive means to further that interest”; and

WHEREAS, many Kentuckians hold a sincerely held religious belief that they should not be forced to affirm or participate in same-sex marriage in any way; and

WHEREAS, many Kentucky business owners hold a sincere religious conviction that materially participating in a same-sex wedding ceremony, celebration, or reception, through their goods and services is sacrilegious, and therefore a violation of their conscience or sincerely held religious beliefs; and

WHEREAS, while government may recognize what is written into the laws of nature regarding marriage, it cannot rightly redefine, expand or alter the definition; and

WHEREAS, the recent imposition of same sex marriage by the United States Supreme Court poses potential infringements on the inalienable right of religious liberty; and

Therefore, be it resolved: We believe that marriage is between one man and one woman in a lifelong monogamous covenantal union; and

We affirm religious freedom is an inalienable right and guaranteed by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution; and

We, respect the rights of individual conscience as guaranteed in Article 5 of the Kentucky Bill of Rights; and

We acknowledge that it is neither wise nor safe for government to compel its citizens to violate their conscience; and

We support the principle of religious freedom in that people have an inherent right to conduct their public lives according to their religious convictions.