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SAME-SEX MARRIAGE… NOT! — Black ministers in Maryland oppose new law, Obama’s support for it

Posted By AL Forman On 'Monday, May 14th 2012 @ 6:30 AM' @ 6:30 AM In Top Stories | 8 Comments

 

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Maryland Delegate, Pastor Emmett C. Burns is a staunch opponent of same-sex marriage.

AFRICAN-AMERICAN PASTORS SPEAK OUT
ON FIRST SUNDAY AFTER  PRESIDENT’S
DECLARATION OF SUPPORT FOR GAYS

African-Americans believe in Adam and Eve,
not Adam and Steve
   — Kenneth N. Oliver,
Baltimore County Councilman (D—4th District)
on former  ‘All Politics Is Local’ radio show
 
By Alan Z. Forman
 
On the first Sunday following the President’s announcement of support for same-sex marriage in America, African-American ministers throughout the State of Maryland spoke out against Barack Obama’s declaration and that of his Vice President on the subject.

Most notably outraged was Del. Emmett C. Burns Jr., a Baptist minister who represents the state’s 10th District in the House of Delegates, who accused the President of saying to his black constituency: “I am going against your beliefs and your thoughts.”

Burns is pastor of the Rising Sun First Baptist Church in Baltimore County, on St. Luke’s Lane in the Gwynn Oak area of Woodlawn. His legislative district, which he has represented since 1995, is home to one of the highest percentages of African-American residents in the state.

In fact, Burns told his church members Sunday, he is so heavily opposed to same-sex marriage he will no longer support the President for reelection and predicted that Obama will lose in November because of his position.

A little over a year ago, a Baltimore County Council member from the same area told Voice of Baltimore on WCBM-Talkradio-680-AM that blacks in his district were adamantly opposed to the legalization of gay unions altogether.

On the former Sunday night election-cycle call-in show, “All Politics Is Local,” hosted by Attorney Jay L. Liner, a former counsel in the administration of ex-Baltimore County Executive James T. Smith Jr., Councilman Kenneth N. Oliver (D-4th) declared:

“African-Americans believe in Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve.”

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According to Baltimore County Councilman Ken Oliver, ‘African-Americans believe in Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve.’

BLACK CONSTITUENCIES STRONGLY OPPOSED

Black constituencies nationwide, especially in the South, are known to be strongly opposed to same-sex union. In Maryland these constituencies represent some 30 percent of the state’s population, leading to speculation an expected referendum on the legislation recently passed by the General Assembly legalizing gay marriage may well put the new law in jeopardy.

One of the few black ministers who support same-sex marriage is Rev. Delman Coates, senior pastor of Mt. Ennon Baptist Church in Clinton, Md., where he has served since 2004.

Coates told his congregation Sunday he considers this to be “an issue of the separation of church and state” and that Americans “should not allow our subjective theological understandings to prevent other citizens of this country from having equal rights.”

Prodded by Vice President Joseph R.“Joe” Biden Jr.’s unexpected declaration of support for gay marriage early last week the President was forced to announce his own support much sooner than he had intended to do, having hoped to wait till close to Election Day to broach the sensitive issue, which now promises to be a major point of contention between him and the prospective Republican nominee, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who is a staunch opponent.

At present, it is unclear whether the announcement has hurt or helped the President vis-à-vis the general population, but there is no question that it runs contrary to the beliefs of the majority of African-Americans, his core constituency.

30 STATES HAVE REJECTED SAME-SEX MARRIAGE

To date, a total of 30 states have rejected same-sex marriage, with just six — Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New Hampshire, New York and Iowa — plus the District of Columbia granting licenses, along with Oregon’s Coquille and Washington State’s Suquamish Indian Tribes.

California legalized same-sex marriage in 2008, only to have the law rescinded by Proposition 8, a referendum prohibiting it in that year’s November election.

Maryland and Washington State legislatures both passed authorizing legislation this year, either or both of which could be overturned by referendum in the 2012 presidential election.

A day before Obama’s declaration, voters in North Carolina joined other southern states by overwhelmingly (61 percent) banning not only gay marriage but same-sex civil unions as well.

Obama has said his view is “evolving.”

Delegate Burns is currently collecting signatures to get the Maryland referendum on the November ballot.

“We will get the requisite number of signatures and we will have it on the ballot and they [supporters of the legislation] will lose badly,” he told the media in February.

“The end is not here. It ain’t over till it’s over.”
 
alforman@voiceofbaltimore.org
 


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