Why Are These Pastors Being Threatened With Fines of $1,000 Per day
culled from christianpost.com - By Jim Daly , CP Contributor
October 23, 2014|10:24 am
- (Photo: Twitter/Jim Daly)Focus on the Family president Jim Daly recently spoke on same-sex marriage on NPR's "Weekend Edition Sunday."
Meet Donald and Evelyn Knapp. --"For each day they refuse to perform a same-sex ceremony, they are
subject to fines of up to $1000 and 180 days in jail. So if they refuse
for a week, they face a fine of $7000 and more than three years in jail.
If they refuse for a year, they could go to jail for 180 years and be
fined $365,000."-----
Both
in their late 60s, the Knapps have owned and operated the Hitching Post
Wedding Chapel in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho since 1989. In that time,
they've performed more than 34,000 weddings. The chapel is conveniently
located across from the Kootenai County Clerk's office, which issues
marriage licenses.
The Knapps are more than wedding chapel owners,
though. They're also ordained ministers from the Foursquare Church, an
evangelical denomination. They take the tenets of their faith and
denomination seriously, including the belief that marriage is a union of
one man and one woman.
In fact, they've turned down numerous
requests over the years to perform same-sex ceremonies, including one as
recently as October 17.
And that's when their "troubles" began.
The
city of Coeur d'Alene has a public accommodations law that pits the
Knapps' constitutional religious freedoms against newly created rights
based on sexual orientation. The city recently informed the Knapps that
under that law, they would have to perform same-sex ceremonies if and
when such unions became legal in Idaho.
A couple weeks ago, that
happened when the federal courts imposed same-sex marriage on the state,
and county clerks began issuing licenses on October 15.
The
city's public accommodations ordinance does not include a religious
exemption for Christians like the Knapps, making it a crime for them to
stand on religious principles concerning marriage. For each day they
refuse to perform a same-sex ceremony, they are subject to fines of up
to $1000 and 180 days in jail. So if they refuse for a week, they face a
fine of $7000 and more than three years in jail. If they refuse for a
year, they could go to jail for 180 years and be fined $365,000.
By
comparison, if you were found guilty of assault with intent to commit
murder in Idaho, your maximum sentence could only be 14 years.
Since
the Knapps were forewarned by the city that non-compliance would be
dealt with as a criminal offense under the city ordinance, they enlisted
the help of our friends at the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), and
filed a federal lawsuit in Idaho on October 17. A court hearing will be
held soon on the couple's request for a court order preventing the city
from prosecuting them under the ordinance.
Idaho officials are
defending their pursuit of the Knapps based upon the fact the Hitching
Post Wedding Chapel is not a traditional church. They contend that
because the Knapps live off the proceeds they realize from the wedding
ceremonies they perform, they should be subject to the city's public
accommodations ordinance.
I couldn't disagree more strongly.
People
of faith do not forfeit their freedoms of speech and religion when they
go into business. The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that again recently
in the Hobby Lobby decision last June. The Knapps are protected by the
1st Amendment as well as Idaho's Religious Freedom Restoration Act, the
type of statute that protected Hobby Lobby from a government law that
violated a business owner's religious conviction.
Public
accommodations laws that elevate homosexual behavior to a protected
status have been used to punish churches, wedding photographers, bakers,
florists, wedding venues, faith-based adoption agencies, and even
t-shirt makers in various states for refusing to participate in or
promote an event or message that violated their conscience.
Promoters
of same-sex marriage assured us that pastors and ministers would not be
coerced to perform same-sex weddings. We were skeptical for good
reason, as it turned out. But as we're also seeing in Houston (where
several pastors are feeling the full weight of government harassment for
opposing a city law like Coeur d'Alene's), government coercion is
becoming the unfortunate reality.
As Christians who faithfully
accept and interpret God's Word as written, we're bound by Scripture and
what it says regarding sexuality, marriage and family. However
well-intentioned, there is no "third way" on the issue for Christians –
only God's, and His way is clear.
Our country was founded on the
right to live according to our deeply held religious convictions. Recent
events indicate that many in positions of power would like to see these
rights eroded, if not obliterated.
In your estimation, how should
these pastors in Idaho and Houston respond? And do you agree with me
that people of faith don't forfeit their freedoms of speech and religion
when they go into business?



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