While Minnesotans may say they’re not ready to extend full equality to same-sex couples, subtle changes abound as gay Minnesotans travel to Iowa to marry and Lutherans look to relax restrictions on churches that want to be inclusive.
And while the religious right is working hard to convince Minnesotans that a proposed Constitutional amendment is needed, a new Star Tribune poll shows support for that option waning.
Young people showed the most support for same-sex marriage, with 38 percent backing it. Older Minnesotans resoundingly opposed gay nuptials with just 12 percent support. Overall, 25 percent of Minnesotans support same-sex marriage, 33 percent want it prohibited by amendment, and a plurality, 35 percent, say that the Minnesota Supreme Court should decide the issue, much like Iowa.
“I think the situation in Iowa points to the urgency of what needs to be done here in Minnesota,” Tom Prichard of the Minnesota Family Council told KARE-11. “The people need to be aware that marriage is under threat in Minnesota from possibly the courts or the legislature.”
Prichard’s group wants to pass a Constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, civil unions and domestic partnerships.
The question asked in the latest Star Tribune poll isn’t the same it posed in 2004, when 58 percent of Minnesotans said they wanted a constitutional amendment. The Family Council believes that the 25-percent drop in support for an amendment is due to poll bias because the 2009 poll also asks if respondents if they would prefer the Minnesota Supreme Court handle the issue.
“The Star Tribune has a reputation for poll results biased against conservative political candidates,” wrote Prichard. “This poll suggests the same is true regarding issues like homosexual marriage.”
Gays and lesbians still have no relationship rights in Minnesota, but for those who want to celebrate their commitment and at least have one state recognize their partnership, Iowa is only hours away. And many are taking the trip.
A group of 10 couples from Minneapolis’ All God’s Children Church traveled to Davenport, Iowa, last weekend to marry. One such pair was Fay and Julianne King.
“There are a lot of people who suffered a great deal before us to get us to this point,” Fay told KARE 11. “I’m doing this in their honor and I’m also doing it for the future.”
Another group of churches has decided to affirm same-sex relationships in their congregations, even if the marriages themselves are not yet legal.
The Southeastern Minnesota Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America passed a resolution last weekend paving the way for member churches to perform same-sex marriages.
“I want to say we have turned the corner, but it’s probably more accurate to say we are turning the corner,” the Rev. Bruce Benson of the St. Olaf Student Congregation in Northfield, Minn., said.
Minnesota’s gay and lesbian couples are anxiously awaiting Minnesota to turn that corner. Five states now have legalized same-sex marriage: Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, Vermont and, as of Wednesday, Maine.














14 Comments »
Comment posted May 6, 2009 @ 1:24 pm
“The Southeastern Minnesota Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America passed a resolution last weekend allowing member churches to perform same-sex marriages.” This isn’t what happened, dudes. Check the report at http://www.postbulletin.com/newsmanager/templates/localnews_story.asp?z=2&a=397771.
Comment posted May 6, 2009 @ 1:41 pm
Mr. Prichard’s position is absurd. Same-sex marriage doesn’t threaten heterosexual marriage. Conservatives in opposition to this bandy about the “threat” buzzword like once same-sex marriage is legalized that heterosexual marriages and families will implode. You never hear specific examples of how marriage is threatened or what kind of damage will be done because there is none. Heterosexual couples will wake up in the morning in the same marriage they went to bed with the night before, with the same children, same mortgage, taxes, protections & responsibilities that they have today. The difference is that the couple across the street who are gay will also.
Who REALLY thinks that the State of Minnesota has the time,energy, money, or resources to try and fight something as ludicrous as preventing a different person from having the choice to share their life with someone they love? All of that effort could and SHOULD be redirected towards issues that are critical to maintaining Minnesota’s economy.
I dare say, Mr. Prichard should be more worried about the effects of poverty & foreclosure on marriage and children’s welfare.
Comment posted May 6, 2009 @ 1:43 pm
From the article: “Gay marriage is not recognized in Minnesota, Benson acknowledged, but the resolution will likely be seen by ELCA pastors as permission to recognize same-gender relationships.”
I changed “allowing” to “paving the way,” since the article clearly points to this resolution as affirming those churches that perform them. And that is the context of the article. Thanks for the clarification though.
Comment posted May 6, 2009 @ 4:40 pm
“for those who want to celebrate their commitment and at least have one state recognize their partnership, ”
Did the reporter who wrote this take any journalism class? This sentence seems to betray an obvious bias in favor of homosexual marriage. An objective sentence might would read;
“those who want to have a same sex marriage may want to travel to the nearby state Iowa only hours away.”
Doesn’t have that same ring of political correctness to it though.
Comment posted May 6, 2009 @ 9:40 pm
I generally disagree with the Minnesota Family Council on every issue and probably disagree with its views on homosexuality or civil unions and probably Tom Prichard’s reasons for opposing gay marriage. But I don’t disagree with his opposition to “gay marriage” is entirely irrational.
It’s true that if same-sex marriage is legalized, heterosexual couples will not implode or wake up to some different world. The world we are in has already changed so that this issue is openly and seriously being considered by responsible people. But i think we need to consider how we got here and what the implications of recognizing “same -sex marriage” are before we take further steps down that road.
I won’t deny that our lax civil, secular society has allowed things to drift into this. But generally, most people still accept that men and women need to be married to live together in long term relationships. I think the polls Andy cites points to this. One of the implications we should be considering is what further erosion or devaluation of marriage as an institution or regulator of long term relationships between men and women are we willing to accept. No matter how many ways the courts and legislatures think they can say otherwise, marriage as an institutional force is a legally sanctioned means of regulating relationships between men and women. From my personal experience, I don’t think men and women can stand one another enough to be in a long term relationship any other way than that society makes it difficult to get out of. That’s what marriage as an institution or institutional force does. “For the sake of the children” as they say but laws of inheritance and property have been written to underscore this high price for dissolving a marriage. Divorce is messy, ugly and expensive for those who go through it. No-fault has not changed that. It just changed the issues.
But men and women still decide to take the risk of divorce and get married. I assume most people get married to a member of the opposite sex because they are in love and often because they want to reproduce children. But also because marriage as an institution defining the long term relationship between a man and woman has also defined the social pressures men and women feel to not try to live together outside of marriage.
We have no experience with “gay marriage.” Will gay men or gay women feel the same stigma to simply living together without benefit of matrimony as hetero men and women? I’m betting that most gays will not feel any pressure to getting married but will remain single in serial or multiple relationships of whatever sort. What you have done by declaring “marriage” the same as between two men or two women as it is between a man and a woman is devalue marriage as an institution and a regulator of human relationships.
The whole issue of gay marriage has not been around long enough for most people to consider the implications of this to society other than the usual religious moral ones which often come off as sounding bigoted and gay-bashing. That’s why many people in Minnesota are reluctant to accept it. Unfortunately, most people also feel afraid to express any opinion about it and don’t feel qualified to do so until they have heard others speak about it. I’m not a gay-basher and I deplore the horrific brutalization which gays have suffered at the hands of bigots. But I think there are larger and more profound implications to this issue than have been expressed so far. I think the issue has a lot to say about how men and women relate to one another in long term relationships that we have traditionally defined families. i.e. in terms of blood ties. It is not just about how members of the same sex relate to each other.
Comment posted May 7, 2009 @ 1:02 am
Maybe what so many conservative churches and their adherents fear is that gay marriage or civil unions will make a mockery of the divorce rate for str8 couples. All my anecdotal evidence reading the web, eg re Canada, England, etc points out that the gay “divorce rate is perhaps 1/2 to 1/4 the str8 divorce rate. Meanwhile the str8 divorce rate is 50%. I and my wife are almost in a minority – especially for those married a long time, eg for us 41 years, with no other marriages in the past.
And don’t we owe it to our gay citizens to give them a legally sanctioned, difficult to dissolve relationthip recognition?. It helps them get over the rough spots of any marriage, rather then simply moving out in a hothead moment. In our 41 years, yes we’ve had our differences, but we cool down and go back to the business at hand. And stabilizing gay relationships will help end the spread of STDs, It will also do the same, by setting an example for all the hetero couples who live in a “for the moment, till a couple fights occur” unmarried relationship. Or are just in the “next partner mode – next thrill” all the time.
Something I learned long ago in the sales business is that embarrassment is the greatest driver for or against sales of big ticket items in a corporate environment. Remember the old adage about you can’t go wrong by buying computers from IBM?
And that is what the conservative churches fear – they will be shown to be on the wrong side of history, and like in Europe, church attendance will plunge, and with it the money and power goes away.
And re the old “marriage is for kids” argument. Well, we are empty nesters, obviously incapable of producing any more kids. Should our marriage be automatically annulled, given that our children are now alld in their 30’s?
JonEriks post is well thought out. And he is well on his way to realizing that gay relationship recognition is good for gays, it is good for str8s, and it is good for our nation. Just going to take a little more time, JonErik, And I think you’ll fully see the light, the meaning of tying together ly (nothing re forcing churches to do marriages against their dogma) gay couples legally, and making them full citizens in our society. With all the legal benefits and responsibilities for maintaining a relationship which is difficult and painful to dissolve.
And lets all remember what we all said so many times in school – that paragraph that ended with the words “…..with liberty and justice for ALL”. It didn’t say ” only for those who conform to teachings of particular churches”. Something about religious freedom, including that churches cannot impose their religious beliefs on others. And btw we belong to two churches – both of which support gay marriage. And we had the guts to leave the backwards looking churches of our past. And are so happy for it. And our wonderful gay friends as well.
Comment posted May 7, 2009 @ 1:50 am
jonerik, I totally concur. An extremely well written piece. Good job!
Comment posted May 7, 2009 @ 6:33 am
It’s time. Kudos to New England and Iowa.
Joe Mustich, Justice of the Peace, Washington CT USA.
Comment posted May 7, 2009 @ 7:09 am
Bravo, Katie Murphy!
Pingback posted May 7, 2009 @ 8:00 am
[...] A related story from Andy Birkey in the MN Independent: Gay marriage hits close to home, but Minnesotans not ready May 7, 2009, 7:50 am | Category: Misc. Local Politics [...]
Comment posted May 7, 2009 @ 9:16 am
Compare and contrast; one of my high school english teachers drilled that into my head. Compare and contrast: Slave rights and gay rights; the contrasts are easy, the comparisons are profound. Slaves could not get legally married either. They could not create and sign contracts, and what is marriage mostly (legally speaking) but a huge contract with thousands of rights and responsibilities. Navanethem Pillay, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights spoke there last year saying, “That just like apartheid laws that criminalized sexual relations between different races, laws against homosexuality are increasingly becoming recognized as anachronistic and inconsistent both with international law and with traditional values of dignity, inclusion, and respect for all.” Apartheid: A system of laws applied to one category of citizens in order to isolate them and keep them from having privileges and opportunities given to all others. Stop gay apartheid.
Comment posted May 7, 2009 @ 9:30 pm
Jonerik writes: “We have no experience with “gay marriage.” Will gay men or gay women feel the same stigma to simply living together without benefit of matrimony as hetero men and women? I’m betting that most gays will not feel any pressure to getting married but will remain single in serial or multiple relationships of whatever sort. What you have done by declaring “marriage” the same as between two men or two women as it is between a man and a woman is devalue marriage as an institution and a regulator of human relationships.
EY: Jonerik: how do gays devalue the institution of marriage? Why shouldn’t gays who do wish to get married be able to participate in the institution? How does it devalue the institution of marriage to have gays included in the institution? It says something that gays want to participate in the institution of marriage.
What has always seemed ironic to me, is that gays are often criticized for being promiscuous, but then the same people who criticize gays for being promiscuous want to deny gays access to the stabilizing institution of marriage.
Pingback posted May 10, 2009 @ 5:04 pm
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Comment posted May 19, 2009 @ 5:20 am
If someone has feelings for another human being then they have the right to get married even if they are of the same sex! Stop discrimination !
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