Canadian Court Rules Christian Law School Must Embrace Homosexuality to Keep Accreditation

Carrie Dedrick | Updated: Jul 09, 2015

Canadian Court Rules Christian Law School Must Embrace Homosexuality to Keep Accreditation

A Christian law school in Canada must change its code of conduct to embrace homosexuality to keep its accreditation, a court ruled this week. 

Charisma News reports Trinity Western University in British Columbia had planned to open a law school next year which followed a Christian “community covenant.” According to the covenant, students would not be permitted to engage in “sexual intimacy that violates the sacredness of marriage between a man and a woman.” 

However, the Law Society of Upper Canada claimed the policy was anti-LGBT and the school should not receive accreditation. The Ontario Divisional Court sided with the Law Society.

According to the court decision, "In order to attend TWU, (LGBTQ persons) must sign a document in which they agree to essentially bury a crucial component of their very identity, by forsaking any form of intimacy with those persons with whom they wish to form a relationship.” 

"Contrary to the contention of the applicants, that requiring persons to refrain from such acts does not intrude on the rights of LGBTQ persons, it is accepted that sexual conduct is an integral part of a person's very identity. One cannot be divorced from the other."

Trinity Western University said that the ruling violated their rights as a religious institution; the school plans to appeal the ruling. 

Publication date: July 9, 2015



Canadian Court Rules Christian Law School Must Embrace Homosexuality to Keep Accreditation