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OCT.
17, 2005
UPDATED
MAR. 30, 2006
UPDATED
JUNE 5, 2006
UPDATED
OCT. 30, 2006
MARRIAGE
A guide to covering same-sex marriage debates
Same-sex marriage
remains a hot issue in Congress, courts, state legislatures and state ballots.
It was kicked into high gear in 2003 when the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled
that a law barring same-sex marriage was inconsistent with the state constitution.
Legal and religious
activity has been constant ever since, with a dizzying array of votes, rulings
and reversals. The issue has ignited and polarized public sentiment, and elected
officials - from mayors in the smallest cities to the president - have weighed
in with opinions.
The issue is in
high flux. Laws and initiatives allowing or restricting same-sex marriage are
being passed and rescinded across the nation, mostly at the state level. Religious
bodies endlessly debate and occasionally shift their policies. ReligionLink
offers a guide to resources for covering the ever-changing debate.
Skip to:
What's New
General Resources
In The States
Courts
Congress
Religious Bodies
Polls
Articles
What's
New
Oct.
25, 2006: In a 4-3 decision, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that same-sex
couples are entitled to the same benefits as married couples under the New Jersey
Constitution. It gave the state legislature six months -- until April - to decide
whether to call same-sex partnerships marriage, civil unions, or something else.
(Read an Oct. 25, 2006, Stateline.org story.)
June 7, 2006: The U.S. Senate rejected a constitutional amendment
to ban same-sex marriage by a vote of 49-48, far short of the two-thirds required
for passage. The amendment was endorsed by President Bush. (Read a June
8, 2006, Washington Post story.) The Federal Marriage Protection
Amendment was worded this way: "Marriage in the United States shall consist
solely of the union of a man and a woman. Neither this Constitution, nor the
constitution of any state, shall be construed to require that marriage or the
legal incidents thereof be conferred upon any union other than the union of
a man and a woman." (Read a June 5, 2006, Baltimore Sun article about how
religious groups - both conservative and liberal - are involved in lobbying
related to the amendment.)
May
16, 2006: A Georgia judge overturned a state constitutional ban on same-sex
marriage that had been approved by voters in 2004. (Read a May,
17, 2006 Atlanta Journal-Constitution article posted by the National
Constitution Center.)
March 30, 2006: The Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that same-sex
couples who live in other states cannot get married in Massachusetts unless
same-sex marriage is also legal in their home state. Massachusetts is the only
state in which gays and lesbians can wed. See a March
30, 2006, New York Times story.
Advocates of same-sex marriage are filing lawsuits in state courts as
a way to try to expand the rights of same-sex couples. See a March
23, 2006, USA Today story.
On Feb. 28, 2006, the Wisconsin State Assembly voted to place a constitutional
amendment banning same-sex marriage on the Nov. 7 ballot. In November 2005,
Texas voters approved an amendment with wording similar to Wisconsins.
General
Resources
See "Same-sex
unions: a constitutional race," from Stateline.org, which keeps the
page updated, with links.
The
National Conference of State Legislatures updates its web
page on same-sex marriage and has a timeline
tracking state legislation and court rulings.
Wikipedia keeps its page
on same-sex marriage updated with background, links, state-by-state information
and charts.
DOMAwatch.org,
a site maintained by the Alliance Defense Fund, which opposes same-sex marriage,
offers resources on all aspects of the issue and tracks legislative and court
action.
The Marriage
Center of the Human Rights Campaign, which supports same-sex marriage, offers
resources on all aspects of the issue and tracks legislative and court action.
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life tracks
related news developments and conducts polling on the subject.
For national and
regional interview sources, check these ReligionLink issues:
Same-sex
marriage in limbo (2004)
A
guide to covering marriage issues (2003)
Same-sex
marriage moves beyond Vermont (2002)
In
The States
Early 2004 saw
a flurry of gay marriages in cities and counties where legal opinions, ordinances
or executive orders encouraged gays and lesbians to marry. Conservatives organized
in response, getting anti-marriage constitutional amendments on state ballots.
Since then, legislation for and against - but mostly against - same-sex marriage
has been considered or passed at every level of government.
SAME-SEX
MARRIAGE
Massachusetts
is the only state to allow same-sex marriages. Couples were allowed to marry
starting on May 17, 2004, after the state Legislature passed a law allowing
the marriages. The Legislature acted in reaction to a November
2003 Massachusetts Supreme Court ruling that declared the state's marriage
law discriminatory.
See "Mass.
law about same-sex marriage," at the Massachusetts Trial Court Law
Libraries site, which includes links to many resources.
Read FindLaw's May 17, 2005 article, "The
one-year anniversary of same-sex marriage in the United States."
The Massachusetts restriction of gay marriage to residents of that state
is being appealed to the state Supreme Court.
CIVIL
UNIONS
Vermont and Connecticut are the only states that allow civil unions to be performed
for same-sex couples.
VERMONT
Vermont has allowed civil unions for same-sex couples since July 1, 2000,
when the
Vermont Civil Union law went into effect. The state Legislature passed it
in reaction to a state Supreme Court mandate in Baker
v. State. The law gives same-sex couples rights under family laws, such
as annulment, child custody, child support, alimony, domestic violence, adoption
and property division; rights to sue for wrongful death, loss of consortium
and under any other tort or law concerning spousal relationships; medical rights,
such as hospital visitation, notification and durable power of attorney; family
leave benefits; joint state tax filing; and property inheritance when one partner
dies without a will.
Read the Vermont
Guide to Civil Unions and secretary of state's web
page on civil unions.
CONNECTICUT
On Oct. 1, 2005, Connecticut became the first state to legalize civil unions
among same-sex couples without being forced to by state courts. The new
law gives the parties the same benefits, protections and responsibilities
as married spouses have under state law.
See A
Guide to Civil Unions in Connecticut.
CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENTS / LEGISLATION
As of May
2006, 18 states have "defense of marriage" constitutional amendments
that limit marriage to one man and one woman. Seven states have votes scheduled
in 2006 on constitutional amendments. Ten states have current legal challenges
that seek legal permission for same-sex marriage. At least 40 states ban gay
marriage by statute. Here are resources for checking on action on amendments
and legislation throughout the nation. Because of court rulings and legislative
action, the numbers of states with amendments and legislation are constantly
changing:
The National Conference of State Legislatures maintains a list
of states with Defense of Marriage Acts or constitutional language defining
marriage. The site's timeline
shows legal and legislative developments at the city, state and tribal level
since 2003.
Stateline.org
updates its site with news of state legislative activity.
For legislation, litigation and constitutional issues in each state,
click on a map
at DOMAwatch.org, a site maintained by the Alliance Defense Fund, which opposes
same-sex marriage. The alliance also maintains a site
with a list of state marriage laws and amendments.
About.com's Gay and Lesbian site gives the wording
of each state marriage constitutional amendment ballot measure in the 2004
election and reports the election results.
See the pro-gay-marriage Human Rights Campaign's map
of statewide marriage laws. The HRC also maps
legislation, laws and ballot initiatives, state by state.
MarriageWatch.org, a project of the Catholic University of America, keeps
track of DOMA
statutes.
Courts
Federal and state
courts are constantly considering new cases involving same-sex marriage. Numerous
web sites track action:
DOMAwatch.org,
a site maintained by the Alliance Defense Fund, maintains a linked
map that lists same-sex marriage issues by federal court circuit.
The Catholic University of America's Marriage Law Project links to briefs
and filings in state court cases involving same-sex marriage. See the cases
alphabetically by state or click on a map
of states.
See the Washington Post's April 20, 2005, timeline, "Gay
Marriage in the Courts."
FindLaw.com offers a history
of legal cases on same-sex marriage.
The California Courts web site has links
to all that state's Supreme Court rulings on same-sex marriage, oral arguments
and case documents.
Congress
In 1996, Congress
passed and President Clinton signed the Defense
of Marriage Act permitting states to refuse to recognize same-sex marriages
performed elsewhere and defining marriage as between one man and one woman.
(Read Wikipedia's backgrounder.)
Efforts are being
made to amend the Constitution, based in part on fears that the law could be
found unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court. An amendment to the Constitution
would have to be approved by 67 senators and two-thirds of the House of Representatives,
then be ratified in at least 38 states.
Several attempts
have been made before the current push in 2006.
The most recent was rejected by the Senate on June 20, 2004. See the
roll
call vote at Senate.gov.
Read a history
of these efforts at ReligiousTolerance.org and background
with links at Wikipedia.
Religious
Bodies
A snapshot of where
notable religious denominations stand on gay marriage.
For general information,
see:
"Policies
of 46 Christian denominations on homosexuality" at ReligiousTolerance.org,
which also maintains a list called "Homosexuality
and religion: Policies of non-Judeo-Christian religions".
MarriageWatch.org's list
of faith organizations' policies and statements on gay marriage.
CATHOLIC
Roman
Catholic Church: ( 63 million U.S. members): In the document "Considerations
regarding proposals to give legal recognition to unions between homosexual persons,"
issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Roman Catholic
Church in 2003 reiterated its position that "No ideology can erase from
the human spirit the certainty that marriage exists solely between a man and
a woman."
EVANGELICAL
PROTESTANTS
Southern
Baptist Convention (16 million members): The nation's largest Protestant
denomination says in its "basic
beliefs" that "Marriage is the unity of one man and one woman in covenant
commitment for a lifetime."
American
Baptist Churches USA (1.5 million members): It faces a denominational
split after the national body refused to declare homosexuality "incompatible
with Christian Scripture." The 1.5 million-member denomination includes
some 5,000 churches. Read a Sept. 15, 2005, PlanetOut Network article, "Baptists
may split over gay issues," at Yahoo! News.
MAINLINE
PROTESTANTS
United
Church Of Christ (1.3 million members): The 25th biennial General Synod
in July 2005 approved an "equal
marriage rights for all" resolution, making it the first mainline Christian
denomination to endorse gay marriage.
United
Methodist Church (9 million members): The second-largest Protestant
denomination in the country and the largest mainline Protestant denomination
rejected a proposal to become more inclusive of gays and lesbians. Read a July
13, 2004, UMNS article about the convention, republished at Techshopministry.org.
Evangelical
Lutheran Church In America (4.9 million members): In August 2005 a churchwide
assembly rejected changes to church guidelines on gay and lesbian ordination
and marriage. Read an Aug.
12, 2005, Fox News story.
Episcopal
Church (2.4 million): The denomination has been in turmoil since Gene
Robinson was elected as its first openly gay bishop two years ago. Read an update
in an Oct.
14, 2005, Boston Globe story. Its
constitution
defines marriage as "a physical and spiritual union of a man and a woman,
entered into within the community of faith, by mutual consent of heart, mind,
and will, and with intent that it be lifelong." Read a March
2, 2004, news release from the Episcopal News Service in which Presiding
Bishop Frank T. Griswold urged Americans to proceed carefully and thoughtfully
in considering a federal marriage amendment to the Constitution.
PENTECOSTAL
Church
Of God In Christ (5.5 million members): In 2004 this African-American
denomination issued a proclamation
on marriage, saying "we declare our opposition to any deviation from
traditional marriages of male and female."
OTHER
Unitarian
Universalist Association (158,000 members): It passed a resolution
in 1996 supporting the legal right to same-sex marriage and urging UUA congregations
to bless such marriages. Read a 2004
update from the denomination.
Metropolitan
Community Church: The church, whose motto is "sexuality and spirituality
rejoined," welcomes gays, lesbians, transgendered people and bisexuals
and encourages the blessing of same-sex marriages.
JEWISH
Reform
Judaism (1.5 million members): Reform Judaism, the largest of the three
main branches of Judaism in America, is the only one to officially allow same-sex
commitment ceremonies. In 2000 the Central
Conference of American Rabbis approved a "Resolution
On Same Gender Officiation" allowing rabbis to officiate at gay and lesbian
commitment ceremonies. Read a March
29, 2000, press release posted by Beliefnet.
ISLAM
Islam prohibits
same-sex marriage.
Polls
The Pew
Forum on Religion & Public Life posts polls
and resources on the Marriage Protection Amendment.
Pollingreport.com
posts recent polls on same-sex marriage. Newest polls are at the top.
ReligiousTolerance.org posts a collection
of polls, which it updates. The most recent are at the bottom of the site.
A Boston
Globe poll conducted May 4-9, 2005, found that about half of Americans
say they don't want their states to recognize Massachusetts gay marriages -
and nearly half do.
A CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll in March 2005 found stronger opposition
to gay marriage. Read a Washington
Times story.
Articles
The
Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life posts recent
news articles on same-sex marriage.
Read
a June
5, 2006, Chicago Tribune story about religious liberty issues involved
in the Marriage Protection Amendment.
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