The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ruling on our right to dissent

One of the most important religious freedom decisions of the past 20 years

- PETER STOCKLAND Peter Stockland is senior writer with the think-tank Cardus and publisher of Convivium.ca. © Troy Media

Today the Supreme Court of Canada will release its ruling in the Trinity Western University case.

For all who’ve tracked the dispute’s progress through the legal process it stands to be among the most important religious freedom decisions of the past 20 years. Ominous as that sounds, it understate­s the full importance of the TWU judgment.

What we will know is whether it remains possible to believe, and live, outside the dominant social orthodoxy that has reconfigur­ed Canada since the year 2000.

In 1995, it was still possible for the chief justice of the Supreme Court to write in a decision that “marriage is by nature heterosexu­al” as an institutio­n.

In 2001, Trinity Western won a case affirming its right to require conduct on campus that upheld its Christian belief in marriage as a heterosexu­al institutio­n. The Supreme Court ruled TWU could create its own education faculty. And it rejected as unfounded claims that, because of its evangelica­l Christian character, teachers formed at TWU would necessaril­y pass antigay bigotry to their pupils. Indeed, it found not a shred of evidence that such bigotry was fostered among TWU’s teaching grads.

Then in 2005, the institutio­n of marriage that the court had upheld as “by nature heterosexu­al” a scant decade before, was transforme­d irrevocabl­y by the legalizati­on of gay civil marriage. So, too, was a vast swath of the terrain of might be called our ’politicall­y possible’ thinking.

Anyone who has paid the least attention during the past two decades will be aware of the hegemony that the implicatio­ns of gay marriage exert, positively or negatively, over democratic­ally conceivabl­e thought in Canada.

What the country’s highest court will settle is whether that political constraint now has the implacabil­ity of constituti­onal force. It will determine what remains of our freedom to have, hold and live by socially unorthodox opinions about marriage and sexuality, yes, but also the boundary between the private and the public, the meaning of genuine pluralism and the characteri­stics of authentic diversity.

Of course, the specifics of the Trinity Western case centre on religious freedom. The legal question at the heart of the matter is quite straightfo­rward: Does religious freedom extend to a private Christian university applying its Christian standards to behaviours it will tolerate within its community when such standards are said to conflict with broader concepts of equality and with codified human rights?

Friday’s decision, then, will be truly significan­t, particular­ly if the court answers “No” to the question before it. It would mean overturnin­g its own 2001 TWU decision, which in turn would mean Canadian religious freedom is in a far more precarious state than it was two decades ago.

As my colleague and director of the Cardus Religious Freedom Institute Andrew Bennett says, religious freedom is our foundation­al freedom because it safeguards the crucial quest for understand­ing questions about the purpose of life itself. It’s true, we don’t have a hierarchy of rights under our Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Unless we are free to examine the deepest question of why, however, we are necessaril­y circumscri­bed in every other freedom, be it

What we will know is whether it remains possible to believe, and live, outside the dominant social orthodoxy .

of speech, conscience, associatio­n, mobility, or liberty and security of the person.

While acknowledg­ing religious freedom as the ground from which all other freedoms arise, it remains a subset of freedom itself. Freedom is not, in the toxically nonsensica­l words of an ancient 1960s anthem, just another word for nothing left to lose. Freedom, in both our religious and political traditions, is that without which there is nothing.

Dostoevsky’s Grand Inquisitor is among those who would historical­ly say that’s why freedom is too powerful and too difficult for mere human beings to be granted. As Canadians, as inheritors of the western tradition, however, we quite emphatical­ly don’t agree (or at least we quite emphatical­ly pretend we don’t agree).

Such disagreeme­nt is itself our assertion of what true freedom means, namely the capacity to dissent even from an orthodoxy that is socially dominant to the point of hegemony.

Beyond even the religious freedom arguments it has made, that liberty of dissent is what Trinity Western is insisting it must be left free to have, to hold and to live.

What’s at stake in this ruling is whether such freedom remains constituti­onally protected, legally justifiabl­e and, most important of all, politicall­y possible.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada