The Masterpiece Cakeshop Decision and the Clash Between Nondiscrimination and Religious Freedom
Oklahoma Law Review
Volume 71 | Number 4
2019
The Masterpiece Cakeshop Decision and the Clash
Between Nondiscrimination and Religious
Freedom
Klint W. Alexander, Ph.D, J.D.
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Recommended Citation
Klint W. Alexander, Ph.D, J.D., The Masterpiece Cakeshop Decision and the Clash Between Nondiscrimination and Religious Freedom, 71
Okla. L. Rev. 1069 (2019),
https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/olr/vol71/iss4/4
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THE MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP DECISION AND THE
CLASH BETWEEN NONDISCRIMINATION
AND RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
KLINT W. ALEXANDER, PH.D, J.D.*
I. Introduction
During the past decade, individuals identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual,
or transgender (LGBT) have made significant progress in obtaining legal
protections under federal and state law.1 The Supreme Court’s landmark
decision in Obergefell v. Hodges to recognize same-sex marriage was a
turning point and catalyst for extending civil rights protections to LGBT
people.2 Since Obergefell, the general prohibition against “sex”
discrimination found in many federal and state statutes addressing
employment, education, housing, and public accommodations has been
interpreted rather liberally by some courts to include sexual orientation and
gender identity, thus emboldening LGBT people to seek legal redress when
they are fired, refused promotion, or denied goods and services in the
marketplace. In response to this trend, lawmakers opposed to the expansion
of LGBT rights have enacted religious exemption laws aimed at protecting
individuals who claim that certain LGBT anti-discrimination laws violate
their religious or moral beliefs. Today, two-fifths of all U.S. states have
anti-discrimination laws that specifically protect LGBT people against both
sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination, while several others
have passed religious exemption laws protecting individuals, churches, nonprofit organizations, and corporations from anti-discrimination laws that
burden their religious beliefs.
Against this backdrop, U.S. courts have increasingly become the
battleground for resolving disputes over discrimination against LGBT
people in employment, education, housing, and public accommodations
where the principles of religious liberty and nondiscrimination are in
conflict. Both principles are important pillars of American democracy, and
laws enacted by the government and interpreted by the courts should
consistently affirm these basic rights. The key question for this Article,
then, is which of these principles prevails over the other in the context of
* Dr. Klint W. Alexander is Dean and Professor of Law at the University of Wyoming
College of Law.
1. This article uses the acronym “LGBT” to describe the universe of individuals who
identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer.
2. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 135 S. Ct. 2584 (2015).
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Published by University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons, 2019
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OKLAHOMA LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 71:1069
LGBT rights when there is a conflict between the two? The highly
anticipated Supreme Court case of Masterpiece Cakeshop vs. Colorado
Civil Rights Commission3 was supposed to answer this question. The
expectation among legal scholars was that this case would provide
important guidance concerning the uneven recognition of LGBT rights
under federal and state antidiscrimination laws and the role of religious
liberty and free expression in this calculus.
The purpose of this Article is to analyze the legal implications of the
recent Masterpiece Cakeshop decision for LGBT rights and future judicial
decision-making surrounding the issue of whether the principles of
religious freedom and nondiscrimination can co-exist in the post-Obergefell
era. In particular, this Article will examine whether the Masterpiece
Cakeshop decision supports or undercuts the recent trend by courts to
expand LGBT rights to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation
and gender identity in the face of religious exemption laws. Part I will
discuss the history and meaning behind the First Amendment’s “free
exercise” of religion clause and the major laws prohibiting sex
discrimination in employment, public accommodations, and education. This
Part will also address some of the key federal and state cases where courts
have interpreted anti-discrimination laws more broadly to include claims
based on sexual orientation and gender identity, notwithstanding religious
freedom justifications for discriminatory treatment. Part II will analyze the
recent Masterpiece Cakeshop decision and its legal implications for LGBT
rights and First Amendment jurisprudence. This Part will show that though
the Supreme Court, in the end, failed to resolve the conflict between the
principles of religious freedom and nondiscrimination in this particular
case, it did provide useful guidance for courts to consider in cases involving
the denial of goods and services to LGBT people in public
accommodations. The Article will conclude by arguing that the Supreme
Court may have temporarily dodged a bullet by punting on the question of
where to draw the line in disputes involving LGBT discrimination and
religious freedom claims when the two are in conflict. Nonetheless, the
Masterpiece Cakeshop decision will be remembered as an important
stepping stone in the struggle for LGBT rights and the effort to promote
greater tolerance in society.
3. Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Comm’n, 138 S. Ct. 1719
(2018).
https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/olr/vol71/iss4/4
2019]
THE MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP DECISION
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II. The Heart of the Debate: Freedom of Religion v. Freedom
from Discrimination
A. The Meaning of “Free Exercise” of Religion
The First Amendment’s religion clauses provide that “Congress shall
make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof.”4 The first clause, known as the Establishment Clause,
was derived from the Enlightenment idea held by several of the Framers of
the American republic that religious beliefs should not intertwine with
affairs of the state. Thomas Jefferson declared in his famous speech before
the Danbury Baptist Church that the Establishment Clause creates a “wall
of separation between church and state.”5 Because some of the Framers
viewed religion as a divisive force in the aftermath of the religious wars in
Europe, they wrote the Establishment Clause with the intent to keep church
and state completely separate.6 In the words of Theodore I.T. Plucknett,
“[a]though some things were Caesar’s, oth (...truncated)