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Lord, we are grieved at this decision. We want to stand firm for what your word says. Help us not to give up standing for righteousness and your values.
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President Donald Trump suggested Monday that the administration would not be moving to challenge or mitigate the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling writing “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” into a longstanding law meant to prohibit discrimination on the basis of biological sex.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first addition to the nation’s highest court, wrote the majority opinion for the ruling, which concluded that “sex discrimination” in Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act should be interpreted to mean sexual orientation and gender identity, in addition to its original biological meaning.

“An employer who fires an individual for being homosexual or transgender fires that person for traits or actions it would not have questioned in members of a different sex,” Gorsuch wrote. “Sex plays a necessary and undisguisable role in the decision, exactly what Title VII forbids.”

“I’ve read the decision, and some people were surprised,” the president told reporters at the White House this afternoon, The Hill reported. “But they’ve ruled and we live with their decision. That’s what it’s all about. We live with the decision of the Supreme Court. Very powerful. Very powerful decision actually. But they have so ruled.”

Trump’s reaction did not discuss any of the details of the ruling, and did not address the fact that his own administration weighed in against the position Gorsuch ultimately chose, by filing an amicus brief that argued that Title VII “simply does not speak to discrimination because of an individual’s gender identity or a disconnect between an individual’s gender identity and the individual’s sex.”

The majority’s reasoning flies in the face of both the plain statutory meaning of “sex” in 1964 and the clear legislative intent of the lawmakers who drafted and passed the Civil Rights Act, as explained by Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) senior counsel John Bursch. “There is little dispute that, in 1964, the term ‘sex’ was publicly understood, as it is now, to mean biological sex: male and female,” he wrote. “After all, the term ‘gender identity’ wasn’t even part of the American lexicon at the time. Its first use was at a European medical conference in 1963. And no semblance of it appeared in federal law until 1990.”

But Gorsuch’s opinion panned the notion of authorial intent, a bedrock principle of judicial originalism, by declaring that judges “are not free to overlook plain statutory commands on the strength of nothing more than suppositions about intentions or guesswork about expectations. In Title VII, Congress adopted broad language making it illegal for an employer to rely on an employee’s sex when deciding to fire that employee.”

Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas dissented, panning the majority opinion as “legislation” written under the “deceptive” guise of “interpreting a statute,” reminding the majority that the court’s duty “is limited to saying what the law is” rather than adding to it.

Trump’s other Supreme Court appointee, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, wrote his own dissenting opinion, in which he noted that the “responsibility to amend Title VII belongs to Congress and the President in the legislative process, not to this Court.”

He also wrote, however, that the majority opinion represented an “important victory achieved today by gay and lesbian Americans,” who “advanced powerful policy arguments,” displayed “extraordinary vision, tenacity, and grit,” and “can take pride in today’s result”… “notwithstanding my concern about the Court’s transgression of the Constitution’s separation of powers.”

A few conservative voices raised doubts about the reliability of both Gorsuch and Kavanaugh during their respective confirmation hearings, though their warnings fell largely on deaf ears among conservative pundits and pro-life, pro-family organizations.

Conservatives warn that today’s ruling will not merely protect homosexual or gender-confused Americans from tangible harm. Rather, it will require churches to recognize same-sex “marriages”; force photographersflorists, and bakers to participate in same-sex “weddings”; compel employers to fund drugs and surgeries to help people imitate members of the opposite sex; and make women and girls to share sleeping quartersshowers, changing areas, and restrooms with gender-confused males (or men simply claiming trans status to get close to vulnerable women).

Counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway addressed the ruling a bit more directly on Fox News, praising Alito’s dissenting opinion and declaring that “it’s very important though to stick to a statute or a law as it is written when that is before the United States Supreme Court. If people want to change the law, they should go to the Congress.”

(Excerpt from Life Site News. Article by Calvin Freiburger.)

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Mel Teoh
June 17, 2020

Father God, I pray that the true church will walk and talk the Gospel in order to be able to help people who are confused of their sexual identity to know You and they may accept Your salvation and REPENT and walked away from their current lifestyle.

Man made law is not final such as SCOTUS ruling on gender. Only Your law is final. Nothing is impossible with You, Lord. Your will be done. In Jesus’ name we pray and thank you.

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Suzy
June 17, 2020

Almost 5 years ago, 6/26/2015, homosexual marriage was approved by the Supreme Court. Now we get another ruling from the Supreme Court that draws us closer to the days of Noah (Matt. 24:37-39; Luke 17:28-30). The media no longer portrays marriage between a man and a woman as normal. Television and movies routinely highlight relationships between lesbians and homosexuals as the norm. It won’t be long before transgenderism will also take center stage. In the end, the Church will be seen as the main persecutors if we don’t allow homosexual marriage, transgender individuals as pastors, apostles, evangelist, preachers and teachers. May the Body of Christ continue to stand strong, while still standing in love, but not giving in to evil being called good and vice versa. May Pastors continue to remind their congregations of God’s definition of marriage (Gen.2:24). May we reach out to those confused about their identity and point them to find their identity in Christ (2 Cor. 5:17; Gen. 1:27; Ephesians 4:24)

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Alma
June 17, 2020

We pray for discernment Lord. Let us not be deceived into giving the devil any consideration. “lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so our minds be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ” (2 Corinthians 11:3). for God created us male and female. We pray that this judgement be challenged for its legality of separation of powers and for its ramifications of coercion of god fearing believers to support immortality. In Jesus’ name, Amen!

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Pamela Derrer
June 17, 2020

This is so sad. I know that God is crying, Jesus did not cry much while He was on earth, Jesus is crying NOW. But everyone can control their own destiny. And God says so be it

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