(LifeSiteNews)â Liberal Member of Parliament Marc Miller made it as clear as a Liberal can: if he gets the opportunity, he is coming for your Bibles.
Miller is the chair of the House Justice Committee, and last Thursday he wondered whether Canadaâs Criminal Code allows too much space for people to defend âhate speechâ when they refer to the Bible. As LSN reported previously, the context was a discussion about Bill C-9, the governmentâs âCombatting Hate Act.â
Canadian MP @MarcMillerVM says the Bible is âHATEFULâ against homosexuals.pic.twitter.com/73JrIjRyuW
â LifeSiteNews (@LifeSite) November 3, 2025
Miller, in responding to several witnesses on the committee, pushed back against the idea that âgood faithâ defenses of âhate speechâ were defensible under Canadian law. In a revealing moment, his go-to example was passages from Scripture.
âIn Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Romansâthereâs other passagesâthereâs clear hatred towards, for example, homosexuals,â Miller claimed. âI donât understand how the concept of good faith can be invoked if someone were literally invoking a passage from, in this case, the Bibleâthere are other religious texts that say the same thingâand somehow say that this is good faith.â
âClearly there are situations in these texts where these statements are hateful,â he added, directing his question at Derek Ross of the Christian Legal Fellowship. âThey should not be used to invoke, be a defense, and there should perhaps be discretion for prosecutors to press charges. I just want to understand what your notion of good faith is in this context where there are clearly passages in religious texts that are clearly hateful.â
 Miller was asking for context, but his own remarks are badly in need of context. He spent much of the weekend attempting to add context on X, asserting that he himself is a Christian; emphasizing that he is not referring to the quotation of Scripture itself as âhate speech,â but using the Bible as a means of âpublicly inciting hatredâ; and responding to Conservative MP Jamil Jivaniâs statement that âLiberals want the power to decide which Bible verses you can read at church by stating that people âshouldnât be able to invoke them as a defense to the crime of public hate speech.â
The Liberal governmentâs view of what precisely constitutes âpublic hate speechâ is very much in question here. Miller, in his remarks, stated quite unambiguously that âthere are clearly passages in religious texts that are clearly hateful.â His cited examples, although he delicately allowed that there are other religious texts that would fall into the same category, were all from the Bible. So would citing those texts publicly constitute âpublic hate speechâ? What if a pastor or priest cited those texts in a sermon condemning LGBT ideology?
Even if we were to take Miller at his very murky word, neither he nor the government can be trusted on this file, as MP Andrew Lawton made crystal clear recently.
Consider the fact that the Liberal Party has presided over a country in which over 100 Christian churches have been vandalized or burned to the ground in the past five years, and has responded primarily by launching new initiatives to combat Islamophobia. In fact, the Liberal government funded a study recently titled the âRainbow Faith and Freedom Report,â which systematically made the case for targeting places of worship that are not LGBT-affirming, and recommended concrete action be taken against these churches.
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Indeed, Jamil Jivani sounded the alarm last December about increasing discrimination against Christians in Canada. Garnett Genuis, an Edmonton MP, has also been drawing attention to a progressive campaign to remove charitable status from Christian institutions, including churchesâa threat that, despite being included as a recommendation from the Standing Committee on Finance last fall, has gotten very little attention, despite the fact that studies like the âRainbow Faith and Freedom Reportâ were conducted to build the governmentâs case for doing so.
When someone makes claims about the Bibleâespecially that it contains âhate speechââit is important to analyze not just what is being said, but who is saying it. Considering the Liberal track record, we should treat Millerâs words like the threat that they are. It is also worth noting that the Liberal government is justifying the need for their âhate speechâ bill in part because they wish to combat antisemitismâand yet, two of the three books of the Bible cited by Miller as constituting âhate speechâ come from the Torah.
Miller rather gave the game away when he retweeted on X, as a defence and explanation of his words, a famous clip from the American political drama The West Wing in which the president mocks a Christian radio host for her condemnation of homosexuality by portraying the Old Testament as blatantly immoral. It is a clever and well-crafted piece of propaganda, and it reveals precisely what Millerâs state of mind is and what he actually thinks of Christians who happen to believe what Christians have believed for 2,000 years. We should take Marc Miller at his word.
News Source : https://www.lifesitenews.com/blogs/if-this-canadian-liberal-mp-gets-the-chance-hes-coming-for-your-bibles/
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