What Do We Do When the Pope Gets It Wrong? [+video]

No less a defender of Catholic truth than Barack Obama has made it clear: Pope Francis threw “the full moral authority of his position” behind the need to abandon fossil fuels, junk our unjust and exploitative free market system, and massively redistribute wealth via globalist institutions. These heroic measures are essential to save the earth and cushion the impact of switching to solar, thermal or hamster-treadmill power for poor countries worldwide.

Meanwhile, climate catastrophists would love you to (a) completely ignore the encyclical’s reiteration of bedrock Christian principles and (b) conclude that the pope indeed has invoked his “full moral authority” and that docile Catholics must fall in line with his political and economic advice and vote accordingly.

Catholics should, of course, charitably consider what the pope has to say. But, ultimately, are we obliged to agree with either his scientific assessment or his policy recommendations? If the pope predicts it will rain, but then it doesn’t, must we say that it is “raining spiritually” but we are too sinful to see it?

I heard a lecture from a priest a few days ago which insisted that we must, that not just papal encyclicals but even ordinary papal lectures on Wednesday afternoons might well form part of the “ordinary magisterium,” which some Catholics consider to be protected from error by the Holy Spirit. In other words, the pope is something very close to an oracle, coming out with divinely-ordained truths at least once a week.

This is not what the Church teaches, and a good thing too, because it is manifest nonsense. We can see that it is nonsense simply by toting up the statements on which popes have contradicted each other, or which Church councils or catechisms have later gone on to reverse.

When Popes Contradict Each Other, They Can’t All Be Oracles

Let’s leave aside, for the present, the issue of which papal positions are true or false. The only important point here is that papal positions have been different, sometimes radically. Here is a short (and non-exhaustive) list of issues on which, over the course of time, papal positions have made what can be honestly called a 180-degree reversal.

Usury. Lending money at interest was condemned for centuries by popes and councils (Clement V; Lateran II, III, IV & V) as usury, a sin against nature akin to sodomy. Dante, following Aquinas, put bankers alongside sodomites in Hell. Simple lending of money at interest is no longer identified with usury. Pius VIII and Pius XII each allowed for lending at interest, and the Vatican runs its own bank today, which charges interest.

Slavery. Several popes (Gregory I, Urban II, Nicholas V, Paul III) explicitly allowed for the owning of slaves by Christians and Pope Pius IX’s Holy Office was still defending the moral licitness of slave-owning as late as 1866, three years after the Emancipation Proclamation. It took until Leo XIII — after slavery had ended in most major Catholic countries – for a pope to condemn this practice outright. The Catechism of the Catholic Church now calls the practice “intrinsically evil.”

Religious liberty. A long list of papal statements in the 18th and 19th centuries, echoing previous papal bulls and centuries of Church practice, reaffirmed the positive duty of Catholic rulers, whenever prudent, to repress and punish “heretics,” that is, non-Catholic Christians. (The most recent such statement was made by Leo XIII.) This was contradicted by the Second Vatican Council, which teaches that state coercion in matters of conscience violates both revealed and natural law — which means that it is intrinsically evil.

Torture. In service of the repression of heresy, countless popes were knowingly complicit in the use of torture to extract confessions, and a means of execution (burning at the stake). Pope Innocent IV explicitly called for such use of torture. The Catechism of the Catholic Church now teaches that torture is intrinsically evil (2297).

Were those Catholic bankers who charged interest before the popes reexamined the question really committing sins against nature? Were Catholics who joined the abolitionist movement also sinning, by claiming that the institution was evil prematurely, before the popes got around to it? Were advocates of religious liberty before Vatican II material heretics, until that day in 1963 when the Council came round to agreeing with them? Were opponents of torture culpable for teaching a position before the Church approved it?

Or could it be that the notion of the papacy as oracle is false, that Christ never intended the papacy to serve such a function on a such a wide range of issues?

The popes try to act as shepherds, and consult their knowledge of Scripture, Church tradition and natural law to come up with the wisest, most prudent ways to apply the timeless and divinely-protected principles drawn from these sources at a given moment in time — and sometimes they make mistakes.

Sometimes the pressure of secular society, long-engrained evils, institutional self-interest, bad advisors, the limits of their background or personal foibles, overwhelm them and lead them astray. Clearly this is what the Church believes, or else it would have felt duty-bound to cling forever to the first thing said by any pope on any subject. Pope Francis (like each of his predecessors) would feel obliged to go right on denouncing all interest on money, defending slavery and allowing for the torture and imprisonment of Protestants — for fear of discrediting the Oracle.

Then-cardinal Ratzinger said approvingly in 1982 that the Vatican II constitution Gaudium et Spes was a “counter-syllabus” to that issued by Pius IX. The future Pope Benedict XVI knew that the Church is not sacramentally married to every assertion on economics and politics by any pope. Nor are laymen. If popes could be wrong about something like slavery — when Protestant laymen like William Wilberforce were right — they might also be wrong about immigration or economics or climate science.

Does anyone really think while the Holy Spirit failed to prevent popes from approving slavery, He has given Pope Francis infallible insight into the sensitivity of the climate to carbon dioxide and how best to solve the problem? The reality is that popes might be hearkening too closely to secular wisdom, liberal opinion or dominant forces in powerful countries (like the EU), just as previous popes were when they defended slavery.

Our Lord has made His intentions perfectly clear by letting popes contradict each other on such subjects — when He could easily have prevented it. Catholics believe God does prevent popes from erring on central and narrowly-defined matters of faith or morals, much as He protected the biblical authors from error. The credibility of this doctrine is only undermined when we confuse it with contradictory scientific and economic papal opinions. God never meant to leave behind an oracle. When we invent one to shore up our political preferences, we are forging a golden calf. (“What Do We Do When the Pope Gets It Wrong?”, originally posted HERE)

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House Republican Unveils Conservative Response to King v. Burwell [+video]

As Republican lawmakers brace for the U.S. Supreme Court’s King v. Burwell decision, a conservative plan has emerged that would eliminate the subsidies awarded under the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare.

In anticipation of the King v. Burwell decision, Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., introduced the Premium Reduction and Insurance Market Reform Act. The bill would end Obamacare’s subsidies and eliminate the law’s age rating restrictions, benefit mandates and minimum actuarial value requirement—addressing the issue if the Supreme Court rules against the Obama administration. A decision could come as early as Monday.

The Supreme Court is examining the legality of subsidies awarded to consumers purchasing health insurance on the federal exchange. As it was written, the law limits the availability of subsidies to states operating their own exchanges. Just 16 states and the District of Columbia originally established their own exchanges.

However, the administration extended the tax credits to include the remaining 34 states using the federal exchange, HealthCare.gov.

If the court rules against the Obama administration, striking down federal subsidies, Republicans are expected to roll out a response to the decision that would still provide a safety net for the approximately 6.4 million Americans at risk of losing their tax credits.

GOP lawmakers in both chambers gathered Wednesday night to discuss legislative options.

A plan from Ways and Means Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., being discussed in the House allows for the allocation of block grants to states wanting them. Those states would be able to determine how to best spend the block grants to cover consumers. States that do not want the block grants would be able to keep the subsidies offered under Obamacare.

“It block-grants the money to states that opt into our state program, and then they can set up their own exchange; they can give tax credits; they can set up health savings accounts; they can do whatever they want,” Rep. John Fleming, R-La., told The Hill.

In the Senate, Republicans are discussing options that include extending Obamacare’s subsidies through 2017.

“We’re going to be prepared,” Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, told Politico. “We wouldn’t call them subsidies. But we’d certainly keep people whole so that they wouldn’t suffer because of this interim time.”

Republicans are also looking into aspects of legislation introduced separately by Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Ben Sasse, R-Neb.

Though GOP senators appear to be uniting behind a plan that extends subsidies to those living in states on the federal exchange, conservatives like Gosar are pushing for the elimination of them.

In a statement, Michael Needham, chief executive of Heritage Action for America, praised Gosar’s legislation for getting rid of the subsidies. The group touted the plan as the “conservative” response to King v. Burwell.

“A continuation of illegal subsidies will simply cover up the law’s costs while giving the impression Republicans believe subsidies are necessary for Americans to afford health insurance,” he said. (“House Republican Unveils Conservative Response to King v. Burwell”, originally posted HERE)

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Dignity, the Constitution, and the Bible

As noted in this writer’s most recent article, the Supreme Court decisions of the last fifty years which have declared social conservative positions related to sexuality to be unconstitutional in law have their ultimate source in the court’s own moral intuition (and that of a like-minded academic world), not the text of the Constitution. Like the court’s separation of church and state decisions from the mid-twentieth century on, which are less concerned with impartiality between religions and more concerned with striking a balance between religion and irreligion, they were simply imposed by the court on an unwilling nation, and maintained against popular protest by a cultural elite on the strength of its own conviction.

As noted in the previous article, the “right of privacy” which lies at the heart of the court’s decisions on sexual relations was cast in personal terms, as a right to sexual choice in the intimacies of marriage, and this was soon expanded, although not by good logic, to a general right of privacy held by individuals. In the crucial Eisenstadt decision (1972), it appears to have been claimed that equality demands that the rights of married persons be held by all persons (which would really abolish marriage if consistently applied, as indeed, many years later, seems to be happening). All of the concern for personal feelings and dignity in the most intimate matters of life of the original Griswold decision (1965) was carried over in later decisions from an argument about the private nature of marriage into arguments about personal freedom and dignity for all persons in making choices about sexual behavior.

It is from this viewpoint that we now are confronted with the claim that the demands of the sexual revolution override the classic freedoms of the First Amendment. Freedom of religion is disregarded where SOGI (sexual orientation and gender identity) laws apply; freedom of association is threatened by campus non-discrimination requirements and barely survived in the Boy Scouts of America vs. Dale decision of a decade and a half ago; freedom of speech and of the press are in much better shape in this country, with hate speech laws not allowed by the Supreme Court. Nevertheless, the hate speech doctrine, in which truth is no defense, is a doctrine used by the cultural left in advancing the sexual revolution, and has been enacted into law in other countries. In an appallingly perverse twist, the right of privacy, which is the legal weapon of sexual license, and was supposed to guarantee personal dignity, is now the ultimate justification for denying privacy and dignity to most persons in public rest rooms, lest a tiny minority be subjected to indignity (in their own minds).

The Supreme Court’s edicts, which have the effect of constitutional amendments, have substantially brought this deplorable loss of freedom and democracy to pass. While it is sometimes possible to enact laws that defend religious freedom, liberty of conscience, and unborn children into law, they can only be very modest, even when passed by Congress, and even then are faced with legal challenges in an environment in which protecting conscience and life is held to be aggressive, irrational, and a personal attack. To repeat, the Supreme Court’s decisions on sexuality have no basis in the text of the Constitution, which does not mention marriage, the family, or sexual behavior, and which was enacted by people who considered that traditional Judeo-Christian sexual morality was correct for all mankind for all time. The court’s contrary reasoning is that freedom and equality are constitutional ideals, and now we know better about sexuality than the framers of the Constitution (although a large part of the public disagrees, including many very well informed people).

The court’s real claim to power rests on “substantive review” of laws, which is based on the claim that the Fifth Amendment (guaranteeing liberty), and the Fourteenth Amendment (guaranteeing the equal protection of the laws) mandate not only the equal application of laws to all citizens, but also fair law. Used by the court in the era of laissez-faire capitalism to invalidate laws aimed at restraining that view of economics, it was repudiated by the court appointed by Franklin Roosevelt in order to protect the New Deal, only to be practically revived in the second half of the twentieth century to protect the sexual revolution. While Justice William O. Douglas, the author of the Griswold decision, “declined” the “invitation” to revive substantive review generally, he effectively did so on sexual issues. The only other Roosevelt appointed justice remaining on the court, Hugo Black, commonly regarded as a liberal, delivered a devastating rebuke in his dissent:

“I repeat so as not to be misunderstood that this Court does have the power, which it should exercise, to hold laws unconstitutional where they are forbidden by the Federal Constitution. My point is that there is no provision of the Constitution which either expressly or impliedly vests power in this Court to sit as a supervisory agency over acts of duly constituted legislative bodies and set aside their laws because of the Court’s belief that the legislative policies adopted are unreasonable, unwise, arbitrary, capricious or irrational. The adoption of such a loose, flexible, uncontrolled standard for holding laws unconstitutional, if ever it is finally achieved, will amount to a great unconstitutional shift of power to the courts which I believe and am constrained to say will be bad for the courts and worse for the country. Subjecting federal and state laws to such an unrestrained and unrestrainable judicial control as to the wisdom of legislative enactments would, I fear, jeopardize the separation of governmental powers that the Framers set up and at the same time threaten to take away much of the power of the States to govern themselves which the Constitution plainly intended them to have.”

Doesn’t the Ninth Amendment say that there are rights not mentioned in the Constitution? It has to be kept in mind that this amendment was enacted shortly before judicial review made its very modest appearance in the Marbury vs. Madison decision (1803; in which the Court actually declared unconstitutional a law expanding its own authority), and certainly well before the doctrine developed into its monstrous form of today. The Founders certainly did not intend for the Supreme Court or other courts to invalidate state laws they thought violated rights not mentioned in the Constitution. Justice Black explained in his dissent that the framers were warning that the Constitution was not to be understood as saying that:

“those rights which were not singled out [by the Bill of Rights] were intended to be assigned into the hands of the General Government [the United States], and were consequently insecure.”

The Tenth Amendment speaks of powers (saying that the federal government has only the powers explicitly granted it), while the Ninth Amendment speaks of rights (saying that there are rights held against the federal government, enumerated in the Bill of Rights, but these do not mean that any power unaffected by the Bill of Rights is held by the federal government).

One may ask where the Supreme Court finds the audacity to impose its own moral intuition on the country. The real power held by the court is that of an authority with a sacred power to discern moral truth. That is the way in which its decisions are treated by much of our society, and yet everyone, including the court, would deny that it has any sacred power. Chief Justice Earl Warren, the author much of the liberal judicial activism imposed on the country, said quite honestly in an interview with the reporter Harry Reasoner after his retirement that the Supreme Court had “only its conscience” to appeal to. This sounds noble, but why is the conscience of the Supreme Court justices superior to the very different consciences of other people, some of them very well informed?

Christians do believe that there is an authority with a sacred power to declare moral truth, namely God, and that He has spoken in the Bible. There was a time when the nation sufficiently shared this view that it was not unreasonable to enact Biblical precepts into law without further justification, but today, one can understand that people want to know why certain Biblical precepts make good laws for the state. Social conservatives endeavor to give good reasons as to why traditional morality is the best basis for society, and is a reasonable basis for law. Yet on sexual issues, the court’s finding of a right to sexual choice which is fundamental to personhood really means that Biblical doctrine cannot be enacted into law, because it would violate a right to personal dignity the court has found by its own moral intuition.

The morality of personal autonomy the Supreme Court mandates is inimical to the Biblical morality of sin and salvation, indeed, the first move in either evangelism or the religious instruction of children is to say that people are sinners who should feel ashamed and be punished. Only then is there “good news.” But it is precisely this morality and message of personal responsibility, judgment and punishment which the court’s morality of autonomy holds to be oppressive. And since it is the Supreme Court and lower courts that are decreeing a morality of personal autonomy, the wider society is now being organized around a principle of self-law (which is finally lawlessness) inimical to God’s revelation in the Bible.

This stark conflict of moralities, between the Biblical condemnation of sin and the liberationist condemnation of Biblical morality as oppressive, explains the intensity of the culture war over Biblical morality. The Supreme Court’s decisions advancing homosexual liberation, Romer vs. Evans (1996), Lawrence vs. Texas (2003), and Windsor vs. United States (2013) are all intensely hostile to Biblical morality, attacking it as hateful, demeaning, and an attack on personal dignity. While the court found it necessary to refer to such constitutional doctrines as liberty and equality, it is obvious that the real controlling consideration is the claim of personal pain. That being the object of moral condemnation is painful is certainly true, but that it is therefore wrong requires the further demonstration that the condemnation is unjust. And any examination of the justice of the claims of Biblical sexual morality, one widely held from time immemorial and reinforced by the devastation wrought by promiscuity in our day, are precluded by the claim of moral autonomy.

American Christians who are serious about obeying God now have a very difficult future. Not only will they be penalized in business and the professions by the requirement that they contribute to sinful behavior in the provision of goods and services, consideration of employment, and housing, but the Christian subculture itself, established to enable Christians to obey God in the world and provide a refuge from secularization, will be attacked as contrary to the public good and impaired or destroyed through such devices as the loss of tax exemption, loss of accreditation, and the instituting of requirements that a Biblically faithful organization cannot meet. This ominous prospect, already in some measure occurring, was outlined in a recent article discussing Senator Mike Lee’s proposed legislation to protect religious organizations.

The first and overriding consideration of disciples of Christ is to obey God, regardless of the consequences. That may mean the loss of business and professional opportunity, the loss of laudable Christian achievement already existing in these areas (as witness Catholic adoption services), and the destruction of the much of the Christian subculture. But we need to stress to the larger society when and if it does happen, that the reason is not to be found in any false analogy to racism, which rested on superficial differences between people with no firm basis in Christian doctrine, or any threat of a religion dominating society (not a serious possibility in the contemporary West), and certainly not on the text of the Constitution, but on the sensibilities of the secular left, which managed over several decades to convert its desire for sexual license into constitutional law on the basis of the moral intuition a Supreme Court receptive to its wishes. We know that the future belongs to God, and will be to His glory, but we may reasonably hope that future generations will not see sensibilities as a worthy justification of the judicially enforced sexual revolution. (“Dignity, the Constitution, and the Bible”, originally posted HERE)

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Police Officer Soothes Toddler With Lullaby After Deadly Car Crash

When a paramedic handed police officer Nick Struck a weeping toddler soaked in gasoline at the scene of a deadly car crash in Brighton, Colorado, his fatherly instincts kicked in.

Struck did the same thing he does when his own 2-year-old daughter is upset. He began to softly sing “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star.”

Somewhere in one of the lullaby’s verses, a bystander snapped a photograph of Struck and the child. Her family’s white SUV lies upside down in the grassy field behind the two. A paramedic is seen treating another passenger in the background.

Struck, holding the barefoot girl on his hip, points at something outside the frame. The child holds the fingers of one hand in her mouth, and clings to Struck’s shoulder with the other . . .

That image whipped through online social networks, rendering Struck a heartfelt hero. (Read more from “Police Officer Soothes Toddler With Lullaby After Deadly Car Crash” HERE)

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RINO House Republican Leaders Targeting Congressman Ken Buck for Retribution

Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) is nothing if not a team player. Having narrowly lost his first bid for the U.S. Senate, Buck ran again for the Senate in 2014. But Buck graciously stepped aside for Congressman Sen. Cory Gardner (R-CO) and, instead, ran for a congressional seat . . .

That has all come to a head now. The Republican Leadership in Congress has decided to rapidly, and without due process, strip Buck of his status as Freshman class President. The honor was given to Buck not by Leadership, but by his incoming House freshman colleagues.

Buck dared to stand up to the House Leadership on the trade promotion authority legislation. He voted against the rule. Just as Rep. Mark Meadows (R-NC) was stripped of his subcommittee chairmanship, Buck must be stripped of his title . . .

It does not matter to the House GOP Leadership though. They are rushing a meeting in the next 24 hours. Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) 31% and Rep. Mimi Walters (R-CA), who are the go to freshman congresswoman for Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) and leadership, has set the meeting for at 8:30 am tomorrow in room HC-8. (Read more from “House Republican Leaders Targeting Congressman Ken Buck for Retribution” HERE)

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Little Kids Create Salt Black Markets in Cafeterias Due to Michelle Obama’s Lunch Rules

Children are creating their own black markets to trade and sell salt due to First Lady Michelle Obama’s school lunch rules.

During a hearing before the House Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education, chaired by Rep. Todd Rokita (R., Ind.), a school administrator told Congress of the “unintended consequences” of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act.

“Perhaps the most colorful example in my district is that students have been caught bringing–and even selling–salt, pepper, and sugar in school to add taste to perceived bland and tasteless cafeteria food,” said John S. Payne, the president of Blackford County School Board of Trustees in Hartford City, Indiana . . .

Payne noted other problems with the “one-size-fits-all” approach to providing healthier meals to students, including fewer kids participating in the program and higher food waste. The trend started in 2012, when the school lunch law, which was championed by Mrs. Obama, went into effect.

“Students are avoiding cafeteria food,” Payne said. “More students bring their lunch, and a few parents even ‘check out’ their child from campus, taking them to a local fast-food restaurant or home for lunch.” (Read more from “Kids Create Salt Black Markets in Cafeterias Due to Michelle Obama’s Lunch Rules” HERE)

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FBI Files Reveal Obama Adviser Valerie Jarrett’s Deep Family Ties to Communist Activities [+video]

Top presidential adviser Valerie Jarret is well known for being a far-left liberal, but FBI files obtained by the conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch show she comes from a family even further left than most Democrats would want to admit.

Jarrett’s father, her father-in-law and her maternal grandfather were all under investigation by the FBI for deep Communist ties during the 1950s, Judicial Watch reports.

According to Judicial Watch:

Jarrett’s dad, pathologist and geneticist Dr. James Bowman, had extensive ties to Communist associations and individuals, his lengthy FBI file shows. In 1950 Bowman was in communication with a paid Soviet agent named Alfred Stern, who fled to Prague after getting charged with espionage. Bowman was also a member of a Communist-sympathizing group called the Association of Internes and Medical Students. After his discharge from the Army Medical Corps in 1955, Bowman moved to Iran to work, the FBI records show …

The Jarrett family Communist ties also include a business partnership between Jarrett’s maternal grandpa, Robert Rochon Taylor, and Stern, the Soviet agent associated with her dad.

(Read more from “FBI Files Reveal Obama Adviser Valerie Jarrett’s Deep Family Ties to Communist Activities” HERE)

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How One Woman Risked Her Life to Ensure the Charleston Shooting Suspect’s Capture [+video]

Accused Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof was apprehended thanks to the quick thinking of a North Carolina citizen. She gives all credit and glory to God.

Debbie Dills told the Shelby Star: “I was in church [Wednesday] night myself. I had seen the news coverage before I went to bed and started praying for those families down there.” She added: “Those people were in their church just trying to learn the word of God and trying to serve. When I saw a picture of that pastor [Thursday] morning, my heart just sank.” She thought that it could have just as easily been her.

Dills was running late for work Thursday morning at Frady’s Florist near Shelby, North Carolina, when she noticed a car up ahead of her. She wasn’t even sure why she took note of the black Hyundai, which was being driven by a young man.

“I saw the pictures of him with the bowl cut. I said, ‘I’ve seen that car for some reason.’ I look over, and it’s got a South Carolina tag on it,” Dills said Thursday afternoon. “I thought, ‘Nah, that’s not [Roof’s] car.’ Then, I got closer and saw that haircut. I was nervous. I had the worst feeling. Is that him or not him?”

She took her normal exit to go to work, but it was not sitting well with her. She called her boss and friend Todd Frady to ask for his advice.

“She just had a gut feeling that something just wasn’t right,” Frady said.

He told her that she should go try to catch up with him again and get the license plate number, while he called his police officer friend on another phone.

Dills caught back up with Roof and stayed with him until Shelby police cruisers pulled in behind the suspect a few minutes later. From the time Dills first spotted the accused shooter’s car until he was apprehended by police was about 20 minutes. She had trailed the suspect for over 25 miles.

“Them boys knocked it down. They were on it,” Dills said. “Just after the arrest, three of [the police from nearby] Kings Mountain were standing right over there. Thanking me and shaking my hand.”

During an interview on Fox and Friends Friday morning, co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck called the florist a hero for her actions. Dills admitted she got a little nervous after spotting who she thought could be Roof. She said that “God is the hero.” Dills believes He directly intervened to cause events to play out as they did in the suspect’s arrest 430 miles from where the shooting took place.

“I’m not brave, but I started talking to the Lord about it,” Dills explained. “If we are willing vessels, He can use us.”

“That is the kind of God I serve. He puts us where we need to be, when we need to be,” she said. (“How One Woman Risked Her Life to Ensure the Charleston Shooting Suspect’s Capture”, originally posted HERE)

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Fearing Another Lawsuit, Christian Business Owners Stopped Hosting All Weddings, Now Their Business Is Dead

Charged with discriminating against a gay couple, the owners of another Christian family-run business are being forced to shut their doors.

“We can’t pretend it’s going to get better,” Betty Odgaard told The Daily Signal in an exclusive interview. “There wasn’t enough business.”

Betty and her husband, Richard, are the owners of Görtz Haus Gallery in Grimes, Iowa. In 2002, they purchased the 77-year-old stone church and transformed it into a bistro, flower shop, art gallery and wedding venue.

On August 3, 2013, a gay couple from Des Moines asked to rent Görtz Haus for their wedding.

Because of their Mennonite faith, the Odgaards told the couple they could not host their wedding.

Within 24 hours, the couple filed a discrimination complaint through the Iowa Civil Rights Commission.

“We knew that the business was going to be in trouble almost immediately,” Richard, 69, said. “We had to get rid of the wedding business to avoid another complaint and possibly a higher penalty.”

The Odgaards never admitted to any discrimination, but agreed to a $5,000 settlement.

They also returned two non-refundable deposits for couples who, after hearing media reports, didn’t want to use their space for their weddings anymore.

“It was just the right thing to do,” Richard said.

Going On Life Support

After leaving the wedding business, Görtz Haus went on life support.

If they continued to offer wedding-related services, the Odgaards knew they could be subject to another discrimination complaint.

“We didn’t have a choice,” Betty, 63 said. “We would be targets.”

Around town, Görtz Haus became known as the business that refuses to serve gays.

If a group of ladies went to lunch and one disagreed with their opinion not to host same-sex weddings, the entire group boycotted the bistro, the Odgaards explained.

“They didn’t come in because the people who are against us are more vocal than the people who are in our court,” Richard said.

Betty said the situation drove her into a “really dark depression”—so bad, that she had to seek the help of professionals.

“I’m a melancholy artist and no stranger to depression, but this took me down to the darkest I’ve ever been before,” she said.

The case was the first of its kind in Iowa, but it didn’t receive the same sort of media attention as the bakers in Oregon, the photographers in New Mexico or the farmers in New York.

The couple says that’s because pending litigation prevented them from being able to speak out, further isolating them from their community.

“We didn’t get the Chick-fil-A response,” Richard half-heartedly joked.

Iowa’s Involvement

The Odgaards don’t blame the gay community for shutting them down, but rather, the state of Iowa.

“I think if people in Iowa would have had a chance to vote on this, it would have never have been this way. People in Iowa are pretty conservative,” Betty said.

“With the discrimination laws and the legality of same-sex marriage in this state, now you have to prove that you didn’t discriminate,” added Richard.

The Odgaards also feel they never got their day in court, and had the case turned out differently, they might not have been driven out of business.

“This was all administrative judgement,” Richard said. “The [gay couple] had a platform to file their case and we didn’t get our day in court with a jury of our peers.”

Like the other lawsuits involving charges of discrimination, complaints are filed—and judged—in the Iowa Civil Rights Commission.

“We knew what the outcome was going to be, the judge knew what the outcome was going to be, but we had to go through it,” Richard said.

Originally, the gay couple asked for $10,000, but lawyers for the Odgaards at The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty were able to negotiate a settlement for half that amount.

“Now the precedent has been set,” Richard said. “The administrative process has demonstrated what it will do if this happens, so it’s a matter of setting somebody up and collecting money. It’s that simple. It’s all they have to do.”

Moving On

Yesterday, the Odgaards spent the day calling vendors and sharing the news that by the end of August, they’ll be closed completely.

“We have to look on the positive side, but just telling our family what we are doing, telling vendors the decision that we’ve made, it’s been very tough,” Betty said.

The couple has decided to take their story and use it to advocate for Christian teachings by creating God’s Original Design Ministry.

With the ministry, they hope to promote the importance of religious liberty, “regardless of what your religion is,” Richard said.

They received their nonprofit status earlier than expected, which they took as a sign from God.

As for the future of Görtz Haus, the Odgaards hope that it will return to its original function: a church.

“That would be the most wonderful option,” Betty said. (“Fearing Another Lawsuit, Christian Business Owners Stopped Hosting All Weddings. Now Their Business Is Dead”, originally posted HERE)

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