Friday, February 6, 2015

An unexpected win for religious freedom – LGBTQ Nation

Religious Freedom Day, the most significant national Day that few had ever heard of, emerged from the shadows this year. There were no picnics or fireworks or speeches by elected officials — and the press largely ignored it. But so much happened just below the national radar. We may have witnessed the first stirrings of a renewed movement for the rights of individual conscience.

It is too early to say whether it was a turning point in our history — but just might have been.

At a time when the Christian Right is making religious freedom the centerpiece of its political program, many of us are beginning to stand up and say that religious freedom is not just for the few.

This year, for the first time, organizations that embrace LGBTQ equality and reproductive justice decided to seize the day — joining with religious and secular agencies and advocates of separation of church and state to commemorate Religious Freedom Day.

Instead of leaving the narrative to the likes of Tony Perkins and the Alliance Defending Freedom who bogusly claim that religious freedom means the right of Christians of the right sort to discriminate, this Religious Freedom Day, many of the rest of us began to tell the story of how religious freedom is a great progressive value – and why it is for everyone and not just a few.

An unexpected win for religious freedom – LGBTQ Nation

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