Houston Chronicle Sunday

Ministers ordained online fight state law

- By Christine Hauser

The house in Chattanoog­a, Tenn., was the perfect venue for the quiet wedding the two men were planning for August. They would hold the ceremony in the glass-clad sunroom of the house, set on 2 acres that backed up to the woods. They started to write their own vows. The owner of the house, the couple’s friend Gabriel Biser, agreed to officiate.

But then Biser, 36, got bad news that brought his friends’ plans, and those of many others in Tennessee, to a halt. On May 21, Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, signed a bill that amended state law to prevent ministers ordained online from solemnizin­g weddings, starting July 1.

“It’s summertime in the South,” said Biser, a minister who was ordained online in 2015. “In the evening, we get fireflies. It is kind of a magic time for us. It was going to be a very intimate ceremony. Then we found out about this law.”

So Biser, two other ministers ordained online and the Universal Life Church Monastery, the nonprofit organizati­on that ordained them, filed a lawsuit in federal court last month that alleges that the new legislativ­e action violates their rights of expression and religion.

On July 3, a judge blocked the law and ordered a trial to be held this year, court documents show. On Friday, lawyers for the five defendants — four county clerks and the state attorney general, Herbert Slatery III — met with the plaintiffs’ representa­tives to set a tentative trial date in November or December.

Critics say the law restricts citizens’ ability to personaliz­e marriage ceremonies that are unconventi­onal. Online ordination­s are often procured by friends of same-sex couples and by those who are officiatin­g at bilingual weddings or weddings that are interfaith, not religious or not affiliated with traditiona­l churches, they say.

“This is a backdoor attack on the LGBT community, impeding our ability to be legally wed,” said Biser, who has officiated at ceremonies for four same-sex and straight couples, all of them friends, since he was ordained. “After doing a few of these myself, there is a certain intimacy about having somebody you already know officiate. They always say, ‘We could not imagine this day without you being part of it.’”

Couples who want low-cost “backyard weddings” or who plan to customize their ceremonies will also be affected, said Lewis King, executive director of American Marriage Ministries, which ordains ministers online. The organizati­on quickly dispatched a team to Tennessee to conduct ordination­s in person after hearing about the law.

“Look at the groups of people who are negatively impacted by this law,” he said. “LGBT couples, now if they want to get married, they have to go to a government office and maybe get married by someone who does not respect who they are. Courthouse weddings are going to be in English. These groups are completely sidelined by this law.”

But the state argues that by explicitly banning online ordination­s, the new law, Public Chapter 415, does not significan­tly alter Tennessee law, which has always required ministers to be ordained after “considered, deliberate and responsibl­e” preparatio­n. An ordination that takes little more than a “click of a mouse” is not sufficient to authorize a person to solemnize marriages, Slatery, the attorney general, argued, according to court documents.

State Rep. Ron Travis, a Republican, said it was impossible to determine online whether a person had the “care of souls,” as the law states.

“Just because you pay $50 and get a certificat­e doesn’t mean you’re an ordained minister,” Travis said, according to WATE-TV.

The opposition in Tennessee reflects a clash with a growing trend in the United States to privatize marriage and personaliz­e weddings by distancing them from the state or establishe­d religions.

Ministers ordained online can officiate at weddings in 48 states, with the exception of Virginia and some parts of Pennsylvan­ia, according to the Universal Life Church Monastery, which says it has ordained more than 20 million ministers nationwide. But rules can vary by county, as in New York state.

Tennessee had not explicitly ruled out online ordination­s before Public Chapter 415. Slatery’s rebuttal to the lawsuit said online ministers could still officiate at weddings but that the couple would still need to “have their marriage solemnized in the state.”

Lucian Pera, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said that step placed an extra “burden” on the online minister and the couples they had married.

Donna Flores, who was ordained by American Marriage Ministries, said her plans to officiate at eight bilingual or fully Spanish-language weddings from July through October were thrown into question. As one of the state’s few ordained ministers who is fluent in Spanish, she also conducts counseling.

“That is a major hit when they are saying, ‘You can’t do this,’” she said of the law. Many of the couples she is scheduled to marry do not belong to a church or know people who do premarital counseling, she said. “There is a big, wide range of areas here that is affected.”

King said American Marriage Ministries had ordained more than 13,000 ministers in Tennessee since 2009. Thousands of people had weddings planned for the summer, he said.

“Let’s say I want my minister to dress up as a stormtroop­er,” he said. “You are going to be hard pressed to find a minister like that from a mainstream church.”

“It feels like a consolidat­ion of power,” he said of the new law. “Bringing religion back to the mainstream brick-and-mortar churches.”

 ?? Jason Eaton / Associated Press ?? Erin Patterson, officiatin­g at a wedding in Smyrna, Tenn., is a plaintiff in a lawsuit challengin­g a Tennessee law that prohibits ministers ordained online from solemnizin­g weddings.
Jason Eaton / Associated Press Erin Patterson, officiatin­g at a wedding in Smyrna, Tenn., is a plaintiff in a lawsuit challengin­g a Tennessee law that prohibits ministers ordained online from solemnizin­g weddings.

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