An issue of age and gender
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The moral must always take precedence over the financial or our
morals are for sale.
We must also remember that we do not live in a pure democracy
where laws are enacted by the direct vote of the people. We live
under a representative government where it is our duty to elect
people of moral stature that will not cast their votes according to
the direction of a political wind. America will only stand up to the
expectations of our founders if our representatives are willing to
take tough stands because those stands are just -- not because it has
powerful financial backers.
The school district is in trouble because it is the only school
district that took a stand on the issue. If other districts would
have stood up to the financial pressure, then maybe this could be a
real discussion -- a debate could be opened. Instead, they are being
threatened as bigots. It is sad that not one other school district in
this huge state, including our own, was willing to agree that
third-graders are not capable of deciding questions of sexuality.
RIC OLSEN
Associate pastor
Harbor Trinity Church
Costa Mesa
The relationship between body and identity is an agonizing one for
a number of human beings who believe they were born the opposite
gender.
While Judaism teaches about the possibility of surgical
rectification of this anomaly, these insights are not applicable to
the situation posed by the question concerning the school board. A
trustee is expected to uphold the law and to act for the good and
welfare of the maximum number of children under his charge. To pit
one’s religious views against state law in the matter of whether a
person has the right to define himself, and to jeopardize the welfare
of the student population, which will suffer because of that
conflict, is to deny the fundamental premise that we are a society of
laws, not men.
Through its elected representatives, the state has formulated a
law that that demands adherence. Flouting the law is the wrong
message to send to our children. Claiming that one’s religious
scruples trump the rule of law undermines democracy. School board
members enter upon their office to implement the will of the people,
not to impose their sectarian understanding of the mysteries of
creation.
I accept the validity of a school board member’s right to
determine who is male and who is female in God’s sight as much as I
affirm the right of a theologian to set fourth-grade curriculum.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
For religiously committed people, motivations and principles/
values are primary. We prayerfully ponder truths such as, “God’s ways
are not necessarily our ways” (Isaiah 55:8b) and “The ways of the
Lord are right” (Hosea 14:9c).
Those convinced that certain principles are “God’s way” and not
merely our own prejudices bear consequences; we must never be
self-righteous and always be aware that we might be wrong. Good moral
theology and Christian ethics are pragmatic and practical; our
challenge is to make what we believe to be “God’s ways” work
effectively in our communities and society.
People of faith offer values like love over hate, inclusion over
exclusion, cooperation over competition in a culture that measures
success by achievement of social status and financial security rather
than in accomplishments of good service with one another. We say to
others, “These are our primary principles. What do you value above
all?”
Making principles primary has added significance for people of
faith elected as public officials. In campaigns, they must express
their motivations and values clearly and honestly so that the
electorate will know what to expect from them as representatives.
Once elected, their primary accountability is to those who elected
them and who they represent, people who may well have principles very
different from their own.
They must never discriminate between God’s children, who are all
equal, of course. They must be responsible to others,
programmatically and financially, in fulfilling the duties of their
office.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
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