Bob:
The Bible is clear (see Romans) that there are two spheres of authority in life--civil and religious/spiritual.
The Bible is clear (see Rom. 13) that in civil matters as it pertains to the 2nd table of the Decalog, the civil authorities are God's ministers. It therefore seems quite out of line for civil authorities in the U.S. to pervert what those precepts state. Simply because God uses civil authorities to punish violators of those precepts, does that give those authorities license to abolish or pervert or alter those precepts?
Another matter is honesty. A judge should not lie. He cannot call two people of the same gender married when they are only pretending to be married. And that's the only thing it will ever be able to be is pretending.
The U.S. Constitution prohibits religious tests for office. So now are we going to start prohibiting people from holding federal office if they refuse to lie and call two people of the same gender married?
What if Massachusetts now decides that it wants to allow three people of the same gender to marry? Or 50 year olds and 2 year olds? Or people and baboons? Must the principles of federalism prohibit the U.S. Congress from intruding into a state's right to regulate marriage if Congress decides that it doesn't want to extend the federal benefits of marriage to polygamous "marriages," pedophilic "marriages," and "marriages" with baboons?
(I suppose that Congress might "arbitrarily" specify that marriage has to be within the same species, despite the fact that one's pet baboon may be a very dear companion. But then the evolutionists might retort that the baboon is a close cousin.)
Consider for a moment the situaiton that would exist if judges were to decided on the basis of religous/spiritual considerations. So, an Islamic judge would consider the teachings of the Koran. A Hindu judge would consider on the basis of the ancient Indian writing from whihc Hinduism arose. Would you want that?
Excellent point. But then, what are our civil precepts that regulate interaction between man and man based upon in the U.S.? What moral precepts are the statutes and case law here based upon? It's all based on the 2nd table of the 10 Commandments, is it not? That would help explain why the 10 Commandments appear on the Supreme Court building.