Re: ACT Same-Sex Marriage Bill in the High Court
The church is effectively a building block of religion but The church isn't in itself religion if you get what I mean. It is all quite complex in general even lawyers themselves argue over it and it just ends in massive court trials over the smallest terminology.
A lot of cases end up being down to the smallest terminology so it'd be no surprise that it would be a shitstorm for the lawyers and justices.
There may be people in the street protesting for gay marriage but if it forced religions to recognise them I can assure you there would be many many times as many protesting against it at the moment people assume it will be purely a civil ceremony but if it is to be forced on religions then you will see many more people having problems with it.
Given that marriage is technically legal contract that has its roots in religion but is not governed by religion I think it is already considered a purely civil ceremony (with the exception of full-on religious weddings), especially since you don't even have to have any religious affiliations to marry - you don't even need a pastor, just a JP. I can understand the outrage but it is unlikely the Government would be stupid enough to force gay marriage onto religions. It'd probably be unconstitutional and violate their religious freedom at the very least since they'd be forcing a constraint/condition on religions by saying they have to go against what their religious doctrines say, which would have to be infringing on their "free exercise" of religion (
s 116).
In terms religion being law it is as law is a reflection of the beliefs and views of the majority of society (e.g. christian beliefs mean marriage laws and others are made according to it) this is the basic principle of law so different religous majorities in different countries will influence the law differently e.g. Christian majority will have different laws to Atheist, Budhist, Islamic societies and the Australian one is based of Christianity particularly evident through the Marriage Act 1961 (CWLTH) outlining what constitutes marriage Hyde vs Hyde is also quite interesting in this instance to.
Historically yes, but Australia has no prescribed national religion and is largely pluralistic now. The majority of society is in favor of same-sex marriage (
52% - 36%). Hyde v Hyde was a decision in 1866, and over a century later, it's pretty clear the social perception of marriage has changed. You recognised that laws are a reflection of the beliefs and views of the majority but the Christian population is no longer the majority. The large point I'm trying to make is that laws have a positivist function in that they are separate from religion and morality, and so they should be in a society as multicultural and pluralistic as Australia.