Is the Christian Legal Society's Loss a Loss for Everyone?
On June 28th, the U.S. Supreme Court—in a bitterly divided 54 vote—upheld a public university's right to enforce an "all-comers" antidiscrimination policy against a student group affiliated with the Christian Legal Society (CLS).
As president of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship USA—and as a former professor of law—I have concerns about how this decision may impact our 860 chapters and other campus ministries.
1. Legal Impact
Narrowly construed, the court upheld Hastings Law School's right to require all recognized student organizations to abide by its "all-comers" antidiscrimination policy. This unusual policy mandates that all school-approved groups "allow any student to participate, become a member, or seek leadership positions in the organization, regardless of [her] status or beliefs."
To date, I am aware of only one other public university—a regional school in Maine—that has a similar policy. On its face, the policy seems logically inconsistent and impossible to enforce. Will Democratic student clubs really accept Republicans as leaders? Will Hillel, a national Jewish campus group, embrace Muslim students as voting members? Will Sierra Club chapters follow student leaders who deny global warming?
It is difficult to imagine a large university like Ohio State adopting an "all-comers" policy. Student groups representing affinity groups such as sororities, Latinos, atheists, or the LGBT community would be required to admit anyone and everyone into their inner circles. Sororities, for example, would have to admit male students. The result would be chaotic.
Two factors make this decision particularly disconcerting. First, despite the technical narrowness of the holding, the majority opinion contains sweeping language in support of antidiscrimination policies—particularly as related to religious beliefs and sexual orientation—and in affording broad latitude to university administrators.
The second major disappointment rests in Justice Kennedy's concurrence. Considered the swing vote on the court, he compares CLS's requirement that all members sign its statement of faith with a political loyalty oath. His conclusion—"the era of loyalty oaths is behind us"—is both a disturbing misunderstanding of faith statements and an odd blurring of spiritual and political spheres.
2. Cultural Significance
CLS v. Martinez raises many questions. If religious student groups hold fast to their beliefs and adhere to sexual holiness standards, will they be relegated to second class status? Does this case represent yet another step in the secularization of American society? Will questions of faith be further marginalized vis-à-vis the public square?
The ruling runs counter to four decades of Supreme Court decisions. Over that period, the court has been a protector of students' First Amendment rights to believe, associate, and speak. It has ordered public universities to recognize radical political groups (1972), to open public university buildings to religious student clubs (1981), and even to fund a student-run Christian student newspaper via student fees (1995).
In Martinez, the majority opinion turns the student fees argument on its head, making it a wedge issue against CLS. Let me be perfectly clear on this matter: the vast majority of campus ministries regard such fees to be an irrelevant side show. What really counts is having access to students, facilities, and communications on par with secular student groups.

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Steve Skeete
Alec Hill is my kind of Christian. The Church must make whatever society or state provides as aids to getting the gospel message out. However, in the final analysis it is neither secular society nor the state that has the final say in whether or not people are won for Jesus Christ. A campus is, obviously, the ideal place for meeting other students, but it is not the only place. If they refuse to allow you use of campus facilities, then use dormitories. If they kick you off the campus hold your bible studies in rented facilities, private homes. Whatever you do, do not allow them to dictate whether or not students get to hear the gospel. Fight for what is rightfully yours as students, but don't forget the fight is not about facilities nor funding, but about the right for the gospel to be heard in the marketplace of ideas. That's the spirit Alec! I wish there were more like you and IVCF.
Ranil Dhammapala
Mike Gibbons, yes that could be done, but is it prudent? Does it do anything to communicate the love of Christ to anyone, or does it alienate people further, resulting in even more legalism? Our calling is to proclaim the love of Christ, to "use whatever gifts we have received to serve others, faithfully administering God's grace in it's various forms" (1 Pet 4:10). We need to carefully consider if our responses to issues like these would help or keep us from being true to God's calling.
Brad Graves
I don't understand. Wouldn't a student group whose goal is to spread the word of Christ want anyone to join who was interested? Don't we want anyone to be welcome to bear witness to the glory of God and all that He provides? This is the best time to convert young people, when they want to change their lives and become more than what they are already. This case isn't a travesty, this is an opportunity.