Phil Burress says all major religions are against same-sex marriage


In two rulings on the final day of its 2012-2013 term, the U.S. Supreme Court struck downparts of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), the 1996 law that banned the government from recognizing same-sex marriages performed in states where they are legal, and let stand a lower court ruling that struck down a California gay marriage ban.

The rulings left in place the laws that ban same-sex marriage in 37 states. Among them is Ohio.

FreedomOhio, an advocacy group pushing to overturn Ohio’s ban, said the high court’s decisions add momentumto its effort to get the issue on the November 2014 ballot.

Citizens for Community Values, a Cincinnati-based conservative group that championed the 2004 constitutional ban, said it was ready to fight measures that would bring same-sex marriage to the state.

Phil Burress, president of the group, was quoted sayingin March that legalizing same-sex marriage in Ohio is unlikely: “I can’t look into the future, but I just don’t ever see it happening. This nation was founded on Judeo-Christian principles, and, like Judeo-Christian beliefs, every major religion is opposed to same-sex marriage. You can’t allow same-sex marriage until you destroy all religions.”

While his last sentence is matter of opinion that PolitiFact Ohio can’t rate, we wondered about the accuracy of his statement about religious opposition.

The Supreme Court decisions affected the legal recognition of marriage under civil law. They do not extend to religious recognition.

But what do religions say about same-sex marriage?

Citizens for Community Valuestold us it stands behind the statement by Burress, which was also cited in a Plain Dealer story last month, and added: “The mainstream, conservative and orthodox majorities of the primary religions in America, that is Judaism, Christianity and Islam, oppose same-sex marriage.”

They referred us to a comprehensive survey of the U.S. religious landscapeby the nonpartisan Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. It details the country’s current religious makeup and changes in religious affiliation.

Pew also presents an overview of official positions on same-sex marriageamong major religions in the United States. These are the findings, summarized alphabetically:

“Religious groups do not speak with one voice on the same-sex marriage issue,” said a report in March from Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, “but more oppose it than support it.”

“Religious groups fall on both sides of the same-sex marriage debate,” the Public Religion Research Institutereported in March.

Burress would have been on solid ground stating that the majority of major religions do not approve same-sex marriage. The opposition is significant. Most of the biggest religious groups do not accept same-sex marriage.

But “most” is not “all.” The opposition is not unanimous. Views varywithin Judeo-Christian tradition. The number of denominations accepting same-sex marriage has been increasing.


We rate his statement Half True.

By
Tom Feran
Plain Dealer reporter
July 9, 2013

Truth-o-meter Ruling

Half-True

Statement

"Every major religion is opposed to same-sex marriage."

Context

news story

Speaker/Target

Statement Date

June 26, 2013
Our Sources

 

The Plain Dealer, "Ohio sorts out impact of same-sex marriage decisions," June 26, 2013


New York Times, "Supreme Court Bolsters Gay Marriage With Two Major Rulings," June 26, 2013


The Plain Dealer, "Portman's stance on gay marriage gives momentum to group seeking to scuttle Ohio's ban," March 18, 2013


Email/interview with Charles Tassell, assistant to the president, Citizens for Community Values, June 28, 2013


Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, "U.S. Religious Landscape Survey," accessed June 27, 2013


Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, "Religious Groups' Official Positions on Same-Sex Marriage," Dec. 7, 2012


Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, "Same-Sex Marriage," March 29, 2013

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