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Friday, May 1, 2015

Modern Sin: Holding On to Your Belief

Trying to put florists, bakers and others out of work for unapproved ideas about marriage.

A protestor holds balloons calling for religious freedom outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.ENLARGE
A protestor holds balloons calling for religious freedom outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.PHOTO: OLIVIER DOULIERY/GETTY IMAGES

On Tuesday the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Obergefell v. Hodges, the case that asks whether the Constitution requires states to allow same-sex couples to marry. Four days before the hearing, in Oregon, an administrative-law judge proposed a $135,000 fine against Aaron and Melissa Klein, proprietors of the Sweet Cakes bakery in Gresham, for the “emotional distress” suffered by a lesbian couple for whom the Kleins, citing their Christian belief that marriage is between a man and a woman, had declined to bake a wedding cake in 2013.

Same-sex marriage wasn’t legal in Oregon when the Kleins made their decision. But the couple was found to have violated a 2008 Oregon law forbidding discrimination in public accommodations on the basis of sexual orientation.

Media sympathy for the Kleins’ claim that being forced to participate in a same-sex wedding would violate their consciences ranged from nonexistent to . . . nonexistent. A CNN headline dubbed the Kleins’ since-closed business the “anti-gay bakery”; the Huffington Post prefers “anti-gay baker.”

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