It is exactly on point. If the law society was penalizing this school regarding their teachings in law I could understand, but they are targeting them specifically because they are a religious school who has asked their students to observe the religious doctrine. I know that's hard to understand, but if you think about it, it really isn't.
Again, that is simply wrong. It is not because they are religious, it is because the policy is discriminatory.
There is a huge amount of disparity between what different people think the bible says they should do. Saying something is a religious belief is not a blanket get out of jail free card.
This has nothing to do with their (TWU) curriculum and everything to do with discrimination. You can't have it both ways. You can't tell one group its okay to do this and another its not. This is a free country and whether some like it or not we aren't all going to march to the same tune.
That is exactly what you guys are saying right now. You say it is ok for TWU to discriminate in admissions based on their beliefs, but it is not ok for the law society to discriminate in admissions based on their beliefs of how a law school should operate.
Just because TWU thinks what they are doing is ok doesn't mean everyone else has to agree and endorse them.
Some people have religious beliefs and want to be educated in a school like this. Sh!t, some people home school and that is bloody recognized as long as you pass your damned exams.
I'm not even religious and I get that.
You must also get that there is no home school option for law school.
There are options to be educated in a religious environment, but there are standards that these paths need to meet. Obviously as you get more advanced and specialized, the standards need to be tighter.