Chattanooga Times Free Press

Local residents take advantage of in-person training

- BY WYATT MASSEY STAFF WRITER

With a few strokes of pens over three pieces of paper Tuesday afternoon, around 150 Chattanoog­a area residents subverted a new Tennessee law aimed at restrictin­g who can officiate weddings in the state.

The Seattle-based organizati­on American Marriage Ministries, which primarily operates an online ordination service, has been making stops across Tennessee, including at Hampton Inn & Suites at Hamilton Place on Tuesday, to offer inperson ordination training in response to a law scheduled to go into

effect July 1 that would revoke online ordination certificat­ions.

The law added local and state representa­tives to the list of officials able to officiate marriages, but other supporters of t the law acknowledg­ed it was intended to stop Tennessean­s from going online to become ordained ministers.

Lewis King, American Marriage Ministries executive director, said his organizati­on was overwhelme­d with messages after the law passed from people concerned about their licenses. The organizati­on has more than 13,400 ministers in the state. The law changes put some upcoming weddings at risk, Lewis said.

“We have ministers that have weddings coming up in the next week, two weeks, three weeks and they need to be able to serve the communitie­s they’re working with,” Lewis said.

To get around the law and recertify local people, attendees to the training had to fill out three pieces of paper: an applicatio­n similar to the one online, an official request to become ordained and a signed affidavit certifying the ordination process occurred in person. The affidavit was added to the process to protect Tennessee residents from any challenge that might come because of the law change, King said.

Bobby Prince, 45, was among those being recertifie­d Tuesday to perform weddings. The Chattanoog­a resident performed more than 100 weddings last year, he said, including for people who did not want to be married through the church or members of the LGBTQ community.

Opponents of the law, including Prince, said the bill was created to deter same-sex couples and members of the LGBTQ community from getting married. People in these groups sometimes avoid being married by someone in the church because of stigma or negative previous experience­s.

“There’s no secret that the bill was passed to deter [same-sex marriages],” Prince said. “It wasn’t about heterosexu­al couples.”

Getting ordained online was a way for Charlene Wright to fulfill a lifelong desire to be a minister. American Marriage Ministries helped make that possible in 2016 after her cousin asked the 51-yearold to perform a wedding.

Wright said the new law would block her from officiatin­g the three weddings she had scheduled this year.

“I can’t tell the people I can’t marry them no more,” she said.

King said the in-person training is part of American Marriage Ministries’ resistance to the law change. They scheduled trainings in Chattanoog­a, Clarksvill­e, Jackson, Memphis, Knoxville and Nashville. The group would support any legal challenges to the law, which King said is “patently unconstitu­tional.”

On Friday, the Universal Life Church Monastery filed a lawsuit against the state to block the law, saying it violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S Constituti­on.

Staff writer Andy Sher contribute­d to this story.

 ??  ?? American Marriage Ministries Operations and Outreach Manager Natasha Anakotta takes a photo of Jeremy Hall, left, Laura Fitness and Chris Leach after they filled out their paperwork to be ordained at the Hampton Inn at Hamilton Place on Tuesday.
American Marriage Ministries Operations and Outreach Manager Natasha Anakotta takes a photo of Jeremy Hall, left, Laura Fitness and Chris Leach after they filled out their paperwork to be ordained at the Hampton Inn at Hamilton Place on Tuesday.

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