The Supreme Court Could Revisit Same Sex Marriage and It All Traces Back to Obergefell

The U.S. Supreme Court has quietly scheduled a conference for November 7, 2025 to decide whether to hear a case that could reopen one of the most defining rulings of our time, Obergefell v. Hodges. That 2015 decision forced every state in the nation to recognize same sex marriage and, in doing so, redefined the very foundation of marriage in America.

Now, Kim Davis, the former Kentucky county clerk who refused to issue same sex marriage licenses on religious grounds, is asking the Court to revisit the ruling. Davis argues that Obergefell “has no basis in the Constitution” and that her religious liberty should have been protected.

If the Court were to take up this case, and especially if it were to overturn Obergefell, it would represent a seismic shift in the moral and cultural landscape of our nation.

The Ripple Effect of Obergefell

It’s impossible to ignore that much of the radical gender ideology that has infected our schools, government, and even our churches can be traced back to Obergefell. When the Court redefined marriage, it didn’t just change a word, it changed the worldview.

That ruling opened the floodgates for a new cultural dogma built on personal feelings instead of biological truth. It blurred the lines between male and female, mother and father, and created the ideological soil where gender confusion has since taken root.

Today’s battles over pronouns, “gender transitions” for minors, and men in women’s sports all flow downstream from that same moment in 2015 when truth was replaced by emotion.

Why This Matters for Missouri

This moment serves as a reminder of just how high the stakes are. Courts can create or dismantle decades of cultural understanding with a single vote. That’s why Missouri must act now to protect our children, families, and values through Amendment 3, a constitutional safeguard ensuring that truth and decency cannot be rewritten by activist judges.

Amendment 3 isn’t just about protecting children from chemical and surgical mutilation. It’s about reaffirming the natural order, that male and female are real, marriage matters, and children deserve to grow up in a society grounded in truth, not ideology.

The Moment Is Now

Whether or not the Supreme Court takes up this case, one thing is clear: the tide is turning. People are waking up to the destruction that began when we stopped calling things what they are. If the Court does take this case, it could mark the beginning of a much needed national course correction.

Until then, Missouri must lead the way. Let’s pass Amendment 3, protect our children, and restore sanity to a world that’s lost its bearings.

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