

Conservative
religious and political leaders rallied in Boston on Sunday
in opposition to same-sex marriage, arguing that their
rights to religious expression are being threatened.
The event, being broadcast to churches nationally, is
part of a larger effort to energize conservative
voters before the November 7 congressional elections.
''Here in Massachusetts, activist judges struck
a blow to the foundation of civilization: the
family,'' Republican governor Mitt Romney, a likely
presidential candidate, told an applauding crowd of about
1,000 people, some of whom responded with ''Amen.''
Romney, during his speech inside Tremont Temple
Baptist Church, criticized the state's highest court
for its 2004 ruling legalizing same-sex marriage in
Massachusetts. ''What [the judges] ignored is that
marriage is not primarily about adults; marriage is about
the nurturing and development of children.... Every
child deserves a mother and a father,'' he said.
The Washington, D.C.–based Family
Research Council chose Boston for the site of its
annual ''Liberty Sunday'' because Massachusetts is the only
state that has legalized marriage for same-sex couples.
''When we look at what has happened with same-sex
marriage, as it began in this state and threatens to
spread across the country, we've seen in its wake the loss
of religious freedoms and the ability to speak out based
upon one's moral convictions,'' Tony Perkins, the
organization's president, said Sunday.
Eight states will vote in November on
constitutional amendments banning same-sex marriage,
following 20 states that have already approved
bans. Prompted by a ruling from its highest court,
Massachusetts legalized same-sex marriage in 2004.
Massachusetts lawmakers are expected to consider a
proposed constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage
on November 9.
David Parker, a speaker at the Boston event, was
arrested last year after he refused to leave the
grounds of his 6-year-old son's school in Lexington
after officials said they would not excuse the boy from
discussions about homosexuality. ''When religious liberty is
compromised, all liberty is compromised,'' Parker said
at a news conference before the rally.
But the issue is less about liberty and more
about political posturing, according to the Reverend
Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for
Separation of Church and State. Lynn said he's not worried
that the Sunday night program will change the minds of
voters. In a way, he said, they're preaching to the
choir. ''But it's the choir that has become the
majority in these elections.... [The Family Research
Council] has escalated their rhetoric and are trying
to use this as a fire under their supporters,'' making
sure religious conservatives cast their ballots
in November, he said.
Among the ballot initiatives in November to
prohibit same-sex marriage, passage is considered
certain in Idaho, South Carolina, South Dakota, and
Tennessee, but gay rights strategists believe their side is
at least competitive in Arizona, Colorado, Virginia,
and Wisconsin, where Romney spent Sunday morning with
Rep. Mark Green, a Republican running for reelection.
In the Boston speech, Romney, who is a Mormon,
cautioned against discrimination: ''I believe God
loves all of his children.''
A statement from MassEquality.org, a group that
advocates same-sex marriage, denounced the governor's
appearance at the rally, saying, ''Mitt Romney has
come home for one day to Massachusetts for one reason
only—to continue courting the extreme right wing of
the Republican Party.'' (Brandie M. Jefferson, AP)
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