Thinking Anglicans

Ashers Bakery judgement generates controversy

Updated again Thursday evening

Judgement was given yesterday in the case of Lee v Ashers Baking Co Ltd & Ors, in the Northern Ireland County Court.

The full text of the decision by Presiding District Judge Isobel Brownlie can be found here. A PDF copy of that file is also available here.

Some writers think this is a good decision:

Joshua Rozenberg Guardian The ‘gay cake’ ruling is a victory for equality in Northern Ireland

Mary Hassan at Huffington Post Finally: A Victory for the LGBT Community in Northern Ireland

Colin Murray Ashers Bakery Loses “Gay Cake” Discrimination Case

But other commentators are critical:

Savi Hensman at Ekklesia Ashers bakery ruling sows confusion about discrimination

Peter Ould at Psephizo The ‘Gay Cake’ ruling

Neil Addison Ashers Bakery and the “Gay Cake”

Mark Woods at Christian Today Ashers’ Bakery: The real loser here is a tolerant society

The Christian Institute reports Ashers owners speak out for first time about ruling, and that link also leads to a video interview.

The Telegraph has this editorial opinion: Icing on the cake as well as Bert and Ernie gay marriage cake ruling ‘banishes religion from commercial world’ and The ‘gay cake’ ruling against a Christian bakery could lead to even more discrimination

Updates

Frank Cranmer at Law & Religion UK has this: Lee v Ashers Baking Co Ltd & Ors – an analysis

Simon Jenkins has written this for the Guardian The moral of the gay wedding cake row: the law can’t create tolerance

Alasdair Henderson at UK Human Rights Blog Conscience and cake

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FrDavidH
FrDavidH
9 years ago

It is utterly bizarre for Peter Ould to criticise the judge for assuming that those who wish to enter same-sex marriage are most likely gay. Is Ould seriously suggesting it is sensible for heterosexuals to marry a same-sex partner? Or conversely a gay man to marry a straight woman? That would be cruel and risky to the happiness of both.

Erika Baker
Erika Baker
9 years ago

A very good analysis of the judgement can be found here:
http://humanrights.ie/civil-liberties/ashers-bakery-loses-gay-cake-discrimination-case/

David Bunch
David Bunch
9 years ago

Savi Hensman is one of the best Christian commentators on equality and inclusion. However, her comment about an atheist florist is puzzling. If someone is in to the business of selling goods and/or services then, within the limits of law, they should not arbitrarily decide what customer opinions they will or will not favour. Christians, humanists, those of other faith or secular traditions, or of none – all should be entitled to equal commercial treatment.

Anthony Archer
Anthony Archer
9 years ago

This is a hard case which will continue to divide opinion. I have taken the view that it is solely about the law, not conscience, morals or anything else. This was a discrimination issue, concerning protected characteristics (under NI law which includes political opinions). That may seem to be a positivist position but it was, by definition, at the core of the case and no amount of picking holes in what is a robust and clear judgment will help. Joshua Rozenberg’s summary in the Guardian is spot on and in these cases it pays to turn to lawyer journalists. “The… Read more »

Father Ron Smith
9 years ago

“Admittedly it can be especially painful to those of us who are LGBT, and/or women, when other people fail to see the value of full inclusion in all walks of life. But giving governments too much power, in a way that interferes with freedoms of expression and belief, is not the answer.” – Savi Hensman – Dear Savi, normally, I agree with most of your conversation on the subject of LGTB people, but I’m afraid I must take issue with you on this: The bakery is providing a public service for money. This renders it liable to provide what the… Read more »

John
John
9 years ago

As a Northern Irish Protestant (but one who has, I hope, grown up a bit over the decades), I support this judgement 100%. It’s clearly correct. Interesting, of course, also to note that the Ashers do not seem to have been fully honest in their protestations: often the way, when you’re a fundamentalist Christian, you’ll sacrifice standards of integrity in support of the great goal. Oh, come to think of it, that also applies to our revered archbishops.

Mark Wharton
Mark Wharton
9 years ago

Rev ron smith:

Same-Sex marriage is not legal in NI. The referendum has not yet taken place.

Francis
Francis
9 years ago

I think Savi Hensman’s point is that by putting a piece of advocacy on the cake (“Support Gay Marriage”), instead of just testing whether the bakery was willing to sell to a gay individual, or to cater for a same-sex wedding, another issue was introduced. Of course they shouldn’t be allowed to refuse service to categories of people, or to categories of event – that’s a straightforward matter of civil rights. But the writing on the cake is speech, and by framing the test case this way, the civil rights issue gets tangled with a free speech issue. Should you,… Read more »

Savi Hensman
Savi Hensman
9 years ago

Ron, marriage of same-sex couples is sadly not yet legally recognised in Northern Ireland – the point of the cake was as part of a campaign for change. It seems strange that a state which has decided that it is acceptable not to let same-sex partners marry should seek to force businesses to assist a campaign against its own decision! The issue is whether providing services to people is the same as promoting beliefs and causes (e.g. if a Catholic bakery is expected to sell birthday cakes to ultra-Protestants, as is right and proper, must it also be required to… Read more »

Paul Powers
Paul Powers
9 years ago

So, under Northern Ireland’s law that prohibits discrimination based on political opinion, if a baker were asked to put “God hates gays,” on a cake, would she have to comply? I think this is different from those cases here in the U.S. where bakers have been sanctioned for refusing to make a cake for a same-sex wedding. Wedding cakes don’t typically have political messages on them.

Paul Richardson
Paul Richardson
9 years ago

“they have a decent trade in Halloween cakes, on a seasonal basis of course.” Antony Archer.
The Eve of All Hallows is of course a Christian celebration!

peterpi - Peter Gross
peterpi - Peter Gross
9 years ago

What is it with Christian-owned bakeries? Here across the Pond, in the US of A, we’ve also had bakers, along with butchers, pizza makers, and maybe even candle-stick makers saying their religious views declare that gay couples are unfit to receive their services. First, As far as I’m concerned, these religiously-uptight folks are saying “We are right with God, we are pure, and if we sell you heathen sinners a cake, we will be doomed!” I have railed against people who too easily believe the caricatures of the Pharisees in the Christian Gospels — but, these uptight tradespeople sound exactly… Read more »

Bernard
Bernard
9 years ago

Father Ron Smith – purely as a matter of information – Same Sex Marriage is not recognised in Northern Ireland.

Tobias Haller
Tobias Haller
9 years ago

Well, Jesus appeared to want to banish commercialism from the religious sphere, at least as far as the Temple was concerned. This all goes back to the idea that freedom of belief somehow entails other beliefs not existing in one’s little world. Once one enters public commerce, one is free to keep religious beliefs, and even some religious practice (such as closing on the sabbath); but one cannot keep one’s customers from also having religious beliefs, beliefs that conflict with one’s religion, or no beliefs at all. Although you can meet saints “in shops or at tea” I’m not sure… Read more »

Savi Hensman
Savi Hensman
9 years ago

It is worth noting that, according to the judgement, ‘If the Plaintiff was a gay man who ran a bakery business and the Defendants as Christians wanted him to bake a cake with the words “support heterosexual marriage” the Plaintiff would be required to do so as, otherwise; he would, according to the law be discriminating against the Defendants. This is not a law which is for one belief only but is equal to and for all.’ So it would appear that, if the judge is correct, a gay graphic designer could be required by law to produce posters urging… Read more »

Paul Hitchcock
Paul Hitchcock
9 years ago

Years ago after a frosty ride across Exmoor, a nice warm bar refused to serve me tea and showed me the door because they ‘didn’t serve bikers’. Admittedly I was quite perplexed and upset about it at the time, but came to conclusion that since it was their business, they reserve the right to serve whom they like. Besides, there were other tea shops and bars who accepted motorcyclists close by in any case.
It’s about time the homosexual community grew up.

Paul Powers
Paul Powers
9 years ago

Peterpi, if this were about refusing to bake a wedding cake for a same-sex couple, I would agree with you. It’s just a cake. In this case, though, the bakery was asked to put a political message on a cake (“Support Gay Marriage”) with which the owners disagree. It’s my understanding that this ruling is based in part on a law unique to Northern Ireland that forbids discrimination based on political beliefs. The motivation for this law (preventing, for example, a merchant who’s in favor of NI remaining in the UK from refusing service to a customer who favors unification… Read more »

MarkBrunson
9 years ago

So, here it is again, across the ocean, this time. I understand Savi’s position, and am, frankly, torn. Private and public intersect in strange ways, where business is concerned. “We reserve the right to refuse service . . . ” is a rather hallowed tradition. The test for me came in the U. S. when riders were attached to various religious freedom bills that would require the business to post clearly and publicly to whom they would refuse service. If it were truly about conviction, this would have been welcomed by supporters of these religious freedom bills. It was roundly,… Read more »

Erika Baker
Erika Baker
9 years ago

Savi,
“So it would appear that, if the judge is correct, a gay graphic designer could be required by law to produce posters urging people to ‘Defend traditional marriage’. This does not seem like much of a victory for freedom.”

But that’s exactly the point. Northern Ireland with its political history has, rightly for its context, decided that political expression is to be protected.
And that means all political expression. And yes, that’s freedom.

I just wish people offering commercial services stopped believing they’re “promoting” or “condoning” anything by serving a customer.

Thomas Renz
9 years ago

Like Mark Brunson, I am torn. I do not find the first part of the judgement persuasive and have explained on my blog why. The second seems to me to have greater force and maybe within NI law is the right decision. But as Savi pointed out it is not as simple as “The bakery is providing a public service for money. This renders it liable to provide what the customer want.” Whatever the customer want? There is a difference between, on the one hand, refusing to sell to a customer one of the products that your company sells and,… Read more »

magistra
9 years ago

On the political issue, it’s about political discrimination, i.e. differential treatment of political views. So I think it would be perfectly legal for a bakery (or a printshop etc) to have a blanket policy that “We will not decorate cakes for political causes” or “We will not print offensive slogans on our T-shirts” and not be held to be discriminatory. What you can’t do in Northern Ireland is say “we’ll decorate cakes with Catholic symbols but not Protestant ones” or (anywhere in the UK) say “we’ll print T-shirts saying ‘Adam loves Eve’ but not ones saying ‘Adam loves Steve’ because… Read more »

Pat O'Neill
Pat O'Neill
9 years ago

“Years ago after a frosty ride across Exmoor, a nice warm bar refused to serve me tea and showed me the door because they ‘didn’t serve bikers’. Admittedly I was quite perplexed and upset about it at the time, but came to conclusion that since it was their business, they reserve the right to serve whom they like. Besides, there were other tea shops and bars who accepted motorcyclists close by in any case. It’s about time the homosexual community grew up.” And what happens to the discriminated-against in the communities where multiple choices for a service are not readily… Read more »

Laurence Cunnington
Laurence Cunnington
9 years ago

An alternative solution for the service provider is to provide the goods/services and then make their contrary opinion known. For example, the hotel where our wedding reception was held last year accepted our booking and provided the service to us as they were legally obliged to do. Unbeknownst to us, the owner was, at the time, extremely anti-gay and was subsequently interviewed by the media where he gave his perfectly lawful opinion that men marrying each other was ‘nonsense’ and that ‘next we’ll be marrying pigs’. A number of people boycotted the hotel as a result but I am sure… Read more »

FrDavidH
FrDavidH
9 years ago

I wonder if Paul Hitchcock chose the lifestyle of a biker, or perhaps was he born that way. If it’s genetic, he won’t be able to get off his bike and walk. What a pity some businesses won’t serve men who have no choice except to ride a bike.

Susannah Clark
Susannah Clark
9 years ago

I have misgivings about making Christians write words on cakes that are an affront to their conscience. Similarly, if I asked a Muslim baker to inscribe the words ‘Eat pork’ on a cake, I think that also would be unkind, offensive, and setting out to put him or her in a legal predicament. I certainly think – in general terms – Christian hoteliers should be obliged to accommodate gay couples (otherwise we go back to a ‘No blacks or Irish’ situation)… and I also think that Christian bakers *must* be willing to serve everyone, regardless of race, creed or sexual… Read more »

Erika Baker
Erika Baker
9 years ago

Susannah, ” I personally think that the request for this cake to include its wording the way it did, was disrespectful and fundamentally unkind.” You’re assuming that the person who ordered the cake from a large bakery with outlets in 7 towns knew that the top management did not agree with same sex marriage. And you’re assuming that the person who ordered the cake could expect the management of the bakery to be unaware that political speech is a protected criterion in Northern Ireland, or that they would deliberately ignore the law. Have we really got to the stage where… Read more »

Susannah Clark
Susannah Clark
9 years ago

Erika, I may indeed be wrong to assume that the complainant knew that the management was Christian. If, has been reported, the complainant was already a gay activist, then that leaves me wondering if there was a deliberate intent to ‘test the limits’ and ‘assert legal rights’ over other people’s consciences. But I admit I could be wrong about the intent here. I just think there should be more give and take. To quote the defence: “If the plaintiff is right, a Muslim printer could not decline printing a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad. An atheist baker could not decline… Read more »

Erika Baker
Erika Baker
9 years ago

Susannah, There are many “gay activists” on these pages too, I would be surprised if a single one of us knew what our local baker thinks about marriage equality. It absolutely must be possible to walk into a shop, any shop, and be served like anyone else without first having to consider all possible political or religious sensibilities of any of the staff, from the front of house person to the one who ices the cake to top management. Society cannot function if one single group of people has to tread carefully for fear that who they are and what… Read more »

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