There are no pronouns in the Bible.
—Lavern Spicer, Republican congressional candidateFootnote 1
Do not ever refer to my Lord Jesus Christ with pronouns.
—Lavern Spicer, Republican congressional candidate.Footnote 2
In the by-now familiar framing “religious freedom versus LGBT+ rights,” perhaps the most visible conflicts today in the United States, and elsewhere, concern the “T”—transgender or gender identity rights. This issue of the Journal of Law and Religion includes a conversation in print between Patrick Parkinson, Laura Portuondo and Claudia Haupt, and Shannon Gilreath on this timely topic, and their contrasting perspectives mirror dimensions of the larger public controversies. Although tweets like those quoted above (by unsuccessful Republican congressional candidate Lavern Spicer) asserting that neither the Bible nor Jesus had pronouns sparked both factual corrections and comical retorts,Footnote 3 the underlying issues about religious stances on transgender rights are serious. Midway through 2022, state legislatures in the United States had already considered or passed a “record” number of bills seeking to restrict LGBTQ rights, with “most” of those bills “target[ing] transgender and nonbinary people, with a particular emphasis on trans youth.”Footnote 4 These bills range from restricting gender-affirming care for minors to restricting what teachers may teach in schools to requiring transgender persons in public facilities like schools to use single-sex bathrooms and locker rooms based on their sex assigned at birth.Footnote 5 One overview of such legislative efforts identified protecting “religiously-motivated discrimination against trans people” (such as religious exemptions from antidiscrimination laws) as one aim.Footnote 6 At the same time, some other state legislatures have taken steps to protect transgender persons, for example, by protecting their access to gender-affirming care and the rights of medical professionals to provide that care.Footnote 7 Further, citing the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County,Footnote 8 the Biden administration has issued executive orders declaring a policy to “prevent and combat” discrimination on the basis of gender identity and sexual orientation through enforcing Title VII and other civil rights laws (including Title IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in education).Footnote 9
The prominence of transgender rights as a perceived threat to religious liberty may seem surprising given the intense focus, at least since the 1990s, by conservative religious leaders, scholars, and activists on civil marriage equality (same-sex marriage). Similarly, a little over a decade ago, queer theorist Libby Adler pointed out the comparative absence of attention to the “T” in “LGB” advocacy given the intense focus on civil marriage equality and explored possible paths transgender advocates might take.Footnote 10 As a participant in various scholarly conversations about whether religious liberty and civil marriage equality were inevitably in conflictFootnote 11 or whether there were “prospects for common ground,”Footnote 12 I have seen the focus shift from whether same-sex couples should have access to civil marriage—a question answered in the affirmative (at least for now) as a matter of federal constitutional law in Obergefell v. Hodges Footnote 13—to whether such couples should have full and equal access to goods and services in the marketplace or if, instead, states must provide exemptions from antidiscrimination laws for persons who oppose such marriages on religious grounds. Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission did not fully resolve that issue, deferring to future cases resolution of the various “difficult” and “delicate” questions that the case raised about the intersection of the First Amendment with antidiscrimination law.Footnote 14 The Court’s second bite at the apple, 303 Creative LLC. v. Elenis, presents the matter as one of whether antidiscrimination law may compel artistic speech—an issue also raised but avoided in Masterpiece Cakeshop. However, given that the website designer Lorie Smith’s stated reason for seeking to offer her services only to different sex couples is her religious belief about marriage (that same-sex marriage is “false” and “contrary to scripture”Footnote 15), any robust ruling the Court issues carving out artistic speech (however broadly or narrowly defined) from the reach of antidiscrimination will have implications for religious liberty.Footnote 16 So, too, a ruling for 303 Creative LLC will have implications for religiously motivated gender identity discrimination.
Legislatures proposing or passing anti-trans bills often defend them by appeals to rationales that are not obviously religious. For example, lawmakers defend laws restricting transgender girls and women from participating in K-12 and college sports as ensuring “fairness” to cisgender female athletes.Footnote 17 However, religious beliefs about sex—being female or male—as God-given, binary, a gift, and immutable are often a catalyst for anti-trans legislation. Further, such beliefs also motivate lawsuits raising First Amendment objections to trans-friendly laws or school policies (such as requiring teachers or professors to use a transgender student’s preferred pronouns).Footnote 18
Religious beliefs about gender often travel with another belief: that marriage—as designed by God—is the union of a male and a female only. For example, several years before this recent spate of state legislative activity, the Mississippi legislature—in the wake of Obergefell—enacted H.B. 1523, called the Protecting Freedom of Conscience from Government Discrimination Act.Footnote 19 H.B. 1523 protected a wide range of public officials and employees, religious persons and organizations, and for-profit corporations against governmental “discrimination” if they act—or refuse to act—in many different contexts on the basis of “sincerely held religious belief or moral conviction” that (1) marriage “is or should be recognized as the union of one man and one woman;” (2) “sexual relations are properly reserved to such a marriage,” and (3) being “male” or “female” is immutably fixed at birth by one’s biological sex.Footnote 20 Like twenty other states, Mississippi, it bears mention, does not have an antidiscrimination law that treats either sexual orientation or gender identity as a protected category.Footnote 21
By comparison, twenty-two states and the District of Columbia expressly include sexual orientation and/or gender identity in their antidiscrimination laws, while another six interpret “sex” discrimination to include these categories as well.Footnote 22 Among those with express protections is Colorado, whose antidiscrimination law was before the Supreme Court in Masterpiece Cakeshop and is once again before the Court in 303 Creative LLC.
The question of baselines, that is, what approach a legal system takes—or should take—toward prohibiting gender identity discrimination, is crucial not only for Patrick Parkinson’s article, “Gender Identity Discrimination and Freedom of Religion,”Footnote 23 but also for the two commentaries on his article: Shannon Gilreath’s “Gender Inequality and Biological Supremacy: A Sex Equality Analysis of Patrick Parkinson’s ‘Neutral’ Proposal,”Footnote 24 and Laura Portuondo and Claudia E. Haupt’s “The Limits of Defining Identity in Religion-Gender Conflicts: A Response to Patrick Parkinson.”Footnote 25 Parkinson sets up a comparison between Australia’s approach to “whether there is a religious basis for discrimination on the basis of gender identity” and “the U.S. position” on freedom enjoyed by religious organizations in the United States under federal antidiscrimination statutes, such as Title VII.Footnote 26 However, within the United States, there is a checkerboard (as it were) of states with different baselines concerning the scope of their civil rights laws. Thus, Parkinson may have legal landscapes like that of Colorado in mind when he asks about “the issue of exemptions from the operation of antidiscrimination laws that prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender identity, because of an organization’s religious belief, or an individual belief.”Footnote 27 I highlight “or an individual belief” because state antidiscrimination laws already exempt various religious organizations and their personnel (houses of worship and clergy) from their reach. The areas of controversy more typically involve individuals operating in the marketplace who claim that antidiscrimination laws conflict with their living out their faith when they enter commerce or the proverbial “public square.” To be sure, controversies also arise with religiously affiliated organizations (like hospitals and social service agencies) offering—or refusing to offer—goods and services that conflict with conscience.Footnote 28
Parkinson’s article proposes that conflicts between religious freedom and prohibitions on gender identity discrimination may be broader or narrower depending on the baseline understanding of what it means to be transgender. His premise is that the religious beliefs that there are only two sexes, male and female, and that the “complementarity of the two sexes [is] fundamental to the created order” (citing Catholic teaching) do not necessarily conflict with understanding being transgender primarily as a “medical issue.”Footnote 29 This religious perspective, he suggests, could recognize instances of persons suffering “gender incongruence” that requires resolution through hormonal and/or surgical treatments that properly align what he calls a person’s “natal” sexFootnote 30 (or sex assigned at birth) with a person’s sense of gender identity. By comparison, Parkinson asserts there is a conflict between such religious understandings and the newer understanding of transgender identity (“informed by queer theory”) that rejects a medical model as well as a strict gender binary (or “sexual dimorphism”) in favor of gender as “fluid,” and instead views gender identification as a matter of “personal discovery,” “self-identification,” and self-declaration—regardless of any medical treatment.Footnote 31 Parkinson argues that this newer approach “promotes an alternative belief system” and seems to suggest that religious exemptions from gender identity discrimination would be easier to defend on this understanding than in the instance of the medical model: “there is a compelling case, at least, for religious exemptions on the basis that the state must take a position of creedal neutrality between different belief systems and worldviews.”Footnote 32 As Parkinson elaborates, “Where the law imposes no obligation on person A to recognize person B’s self-declared gender identity, but no inhibition from doing so either, it maximizes the freedom that people ought to have to choose for themselves whether to affirm a person’s truth about themselves if their own worldview or understanding of the issues makes it difficult for them to do so.”Footnote 33 Parkinson seems to distinguish impermissible “adverse treatment” of transgender persons, such as “bullying, ridicule,” or expulsion from school, and permissibly declining to accept and act on another’s self-identification.
In their commentary, Portuondo and Haupt offer reasons to doubt Parkinson’s argument about “creedal neutrality” and the proposition that the medical versus self-identification model solves the religious freedom problem. First, they observe that it is hardly “creedal neutrality” if a state that already includes gender identity as a protected category in its antidiscrimination laws grants robust religious exemptions from complying with such laws. As they point out, such an analysis requires a “libertarian baseline” and a premise that “a law’s burdens should be measured not by reference to existing legal entitlements, but instead by reference to a world free from government regulation.”Footnote 34 Second, they question whether the medical issue/self-identification dichotomy that Parkinson posits should be dispositive on the religious exemption issue given the former’s reliance on outdated premises about “immutability” as a precondition for protection against discrimination. They offer the insightful point that religious liberty is protected even though one’s religion is not “immutable,” and defenders of religious liberty would hardly wish such liberty to rest on immutability.Footnote 35 In any case, they argue, far from demonstrating why religious exemptions are more compelling if gender identity is a belief system, Parkinson instead must provide a normative argument about why one belief system should trump another. As they observe, “it is clear that belief systems, at least when they are religious, can generate unique legal interests worthy of protection,” but, they add, “[t]here is no obvious reason why gender identity, if characterized as a belief system, cannot generate similar liberty or equality interests.”Footnote 36 They correctly note the emphasis, in arguments for religious exemptions, about how government must not discriminate “among all kinds of important belief systems and conceptions of the good.”Footnote 37 Indeed, a striking feature in 303 Creative and other challenges to state antidiscrimination laws is the characterization of conduct—refusals by business owners to provide goods and services—as an expression of beliefs and the granting of religious exemptions as protecting them from compelled expression in violation of that worldview. On this view, to require Lorie Smith to design a wedding website for same-sex couples stifles public debate about marriage and compels her to express a governmental orthodoxy—akin to requiring those famous school children in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette to salute the flag, contrary to their religious beliefs as Jehovah’s Witnesses.Footnote 38 Portuondo and Haupt conclude, “[w]ithout more, then, the simple assertion that gender identity is a belief system does not explain why transgender and gender-nonconforming individuals’ interests should give way to those of religious objectors.”Footnote 39
Consider, in this regard, that state antidiscrimination laws are a product of democratic deliberation and reflect important values about equality. Those state laws (such as Colorado’s) have added newer protected categories (such as sexual orientation and gender identity) as understandings about wrongful discrimination evolve. Justice Stevens once observed that “every state law prohibiting discrimination is designed to replace prejudice with principle.”Footnote 40 That dynamic applies to Colorado. In 1992, in the wake of municipal laws protecting against sexual orientation discrimination, Colorado voters approved Amendment 2, which prohibited municipalities or the State from adopting such laws. The campaign for Amendment 2 vilified gay people as threatening the family and “the well-being of children;”Footnote 41 it also asserted religious liberty as a rationale.Footnote 42 By 2008, after decades of hard-fought effort in the democratic process, Colorado’s antidiscrimination law affirmatively required such protection (including on the basis of gender identity).Footnote 43
Gilreath’s commentary urges attention to another dimension: the “sexual politics” at issue in Parkinson’s argument for justifying religious (or conscience) exemptions to antidiscrimination laws.Footnote 44 Gilreath argues that a feminist analysis of “religiously motivated gender identity discrimination” directs attention to an underlying “sexual politics” of “biological determinedness, where gender defined from the point of view of heterosexual male supremacy is a natural fact of biology, objectively neutral, and therefore, normal and appropriate as an ordering principle of society and law.”Footnote 45 A feminist lens (particularly, a radical feminist lens informed by the work of Andrea Dworkin and Catherine MacKinnon) instead understands gender as a matter of gender hierarchy in which sex-based anatomical difference provides the rationalization for a set of “political meanings” and distributions of social power that favor “male/gender masculine as dominant and female/gender feminine as subordinate.”Footnote 46 From a feminist vantage point, an anti-subordination approach is necessary to achieve substantive equality; antidiscrimination laws, thus, have a role to play in furthering such equality. That lens critiques the medical/self-expression dichotomy that Parkinson offers (with exemptions being readily defended in the non-medical context), arguing that it leads to a solution that “tracks the preferences of patriarchal religious conservatism.”Footnote 47
Gilreath offers some sobering questions, asking the reader to confront the real stakes—the “real life-and-death stakes”—at issue when considering the religious exemptions/gender identity discrimination issue: “How many bakers died yesterday because a transgender person came into their bakery and bought a cake? By contrast, put the question this way: How many transgender people were murdered for no reason other than their gender identity—or more accurately, how they were identified by majoritarian society?”Footnote 48 These are powerful questions. Defenders of robust religious liberty and speech exemptions from antidiscrimination laws freely quote Justice Jackson’s powerful warnings in Barnette (written during World War II) about the risks of seeking to “attain unity,” or “compulsory unification of opinion”: when moderate efforts fail, increasingly severe methods are adopted, with the “coercive elimination of dissent” achieved only in the “unanimity of the graveyard.”Footnote 49 While this use of Barnette generally feels hyperbolic, given the context of civil enforcement of antidiscrimination laws, Gilreath commits no hyperbole in reminding readers of the real threat of hate crimes against LGBTQ persons, particularly transgender persons. I write this editorial shortly after the killing of five people (two of them transgender and one gay) at a LGBTQ club in Colorado Springs and as armed Proud Boys and other extremist groups protest and threaten drag events.Footnote 50 Moreover, in states like Massachusetts that protect gender-affirming care, some leading hospitals that offer it (such as Boston Children’s Hospital) have experienced bomb threats, death threats, and hate mail.Footnote 51
Further, Christian nationalist groups (although they represent only a minority among Christians) have been particularly active in teaming up with conservative legislators to draft the spate of anti-trans bills mentioned at the beginning of this editorial.Footnote 52 Particularly cruel among these laws are bans on gender-affirming care,Footnote 53 which not only lack a factual basis but rest on provocative and erroneous claims about medical personnel performing genital mutilation on or sterilizing children. Such rhetoric ignores that prevailing medical guidelines for treating pre-adolescent children who are gender diverse is a “social affirmation” model that involves neither hormones nor surgery, but simply providing space for the child to “adopt gender-affirming hairstyles, clothing, name, gender pronouns, and restrooms and other facilities.”Footnote 54 As legal scholar Marie-Amélie George points out, “the science of gender identity development indicates that only adolescent children—defined as minors who have begun puberty—have a stable gender identity.”Footnote 55 Prior to adolescence, “there is no way to predict whether a pre-adolescent’s gender variance is fleeting or permanent.”Footnote 56 What children need is support for gender identity exploration. Parkinson details some of the mental health issues found among children with “gender incongruence.”Footnote 57 However, scientific research also suggests that one significant reason that gender diverse youth are at “greater risk for experiencing psychological difficulties than age-matched cisgender peers” is encountering “destructive experiences, including trauma and maltreatment stemming from gender diversity related rejection and other harsh, non-accepting interactions.”Footnote 58 In comparison, “prepubescent children who are well accepted in their gender diverse identities are generally well-adjusted,” which supports an ecological approach so that children feel safe and nurtured both with the important people (teachers, coaches, religious leaders) and in the various settings they “frequent” (schools, sports).Footnote 59
Thus, the rhetoric of child protection accompanying these bans on gender-affirming care distorts the picture. To be sure, standards of care for adolescents do recommend consideration of medical treatments, such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy when the experience of gender incongruence/diversity is “marked and sustained.”Footnote 60 Gender-affirming surgeries such as chest reconstruction and genital surgeries are typically not done until a person is eighteen.Footnote 61
It is hard to predict how the current battles over religious liberty and gender identity will resolve. On the one hand, some optimism may be warranted by analogy to the evolution of the religious liberty/marriage equality conflict, seemingly intractable on some views when first percolating. The very week that the Court heard arguments in 303 Creative, the Senate passed the Respect for Marriage Act, requiring states to recognize out-of-state marriages between same-sex and interracial couples.Footnote 62 Not quite two decades ago, Senator Mitt Romney (then governor of Massachusetts, the first state to permit same-sex marriage as a matter of state constitutional law) urged Congress not to abandon “marriage as we know it, and as it’s been known by the framers of our constitution,” but instead to pass a federal marriage amendment to protect other states from what happened in Massachusetts.Footnote 63 As Romney explained his vote on the Respect for Marriage Act: “While I believe in traditional marriage, Obergefell is and has been the law of the land upon which LGBTQ individuals have relied. This legislation provides certainty to many LGBTQ Americans, and it signals that Congress—and I—esteem and love all of our fellow Americans equally.”Footnote 64 Certainly, one reason some religious institutions praised the law was its statement (echoing Obergefell) that “[d]iverse beliefs about the role of gender in marriage are held by reasonable and sincere people based on decent and honorable religious or philosophical premises,” and its inclusion of “religious liberty” protections.Footnote 65 The Act also affirmatively valued interracial and same-sex married couples, declaring that they “deserve to have the dignity, stability, and ongoing protection that marriage affords to families and children.”Footnote 66
On the other hand, not all would embrace the Senate’s finding about what is due to same-sex marriage, as 303 Creative illustrates. Two sitting Justices on the Supreme Court (Justices Alito and Thomas) have been publicly critical of Obergefell, with the latter urging the Court to find the occasion to overrule it as “demonstrably erroneous.”Footnote 67 In the eyes of some religious conservatives, Obergefell (mirroring the dissenters) branded them as bigots and compels them to accept a new orthodoxy if they seek to participate in the public square.Footnote 68 These same themes feature in claims about religious beliefs being under threat and under attack because of new orthodoxies about gender. Unfortunately, compounding that is the strategic use of sexual politics (to return to Gilreath) in the hyperpolarized United States as a wedge issue to ignite voters worried about teaching “gender ideology”—along with critical race theory—in the public schools.Footnote 69 The rhetoric of teachers being “groomers” of young children deployed to support Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law (which restricts speech about both sexual orientation and gender identity) has eerie resonances with Anita Bryant’s warnings about teachers in her “Save Our Children” campaign against a gay rights ordinance in Miami-Dade County forty-five years ago.Footnote 70 When Bryant succeeded in overturning the ordinance, she declared, “Tonight the laws of God and the cultural values of man have been vindicated.”Footnote 71 The conversation in this volume invites us to reflect on whether there are ways to learn from rather than repeat this history.
Acknowledgments
I thank my daughter, Katherine McClain Fleming, for valuable help with sources discussed in this editorial.