Bill C-9 and Religious Expression
December 17, 2025
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Bill C-9 passed its final vote in the House of Commons on March 25, 2026. The version of the bill that passed included the changes made in the Justice Committee, including the removal of the religious belief defence.
The religious belief defence acts as a safeguard to make sure the hate speech provisions – which are meant to protect identifiable groups from hate - aren’t used to silence or suppress the sincere beliefs of religious minorities that others may find objectionable or offensive.
Pray for the Senators, who will debate and study the bill next. Pray that they would work collaboratively to resolve the legitimate concerns raised by removal of the religious belief defence. You can contact Senators to communicate concerns about the removal of the religious belief defence and to ask Senators to include strong, clear language in Bill C-9 that protects religious expression.
Watch for updates and resources at www.TheEFC.ca/C9. Above all, pray that God would be lifted up and honoured in our witness. That his grace, truth and mercy would be evident to all.
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The Canadian government is currently working through Bill C-9, legislation introduced in response to the rise in hate-motivated incidents, including a significant increase of antisemitism in Canada.
The CRCNA is an affiliate member of the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada (EFC), which has been engaging in this matter on our behalf in significant ways.
We are in support of strong protections for Jewish communities and all who face hate. However, questions have been raised about aspects of the bill that might interfere with religious speech. While willfully promoting hatred towards groups of people is a criminal offense, there has been a defense to being criminally charged if a person’s speech or actions were based on a good-faith interpretation of their religious beliefs. Bill C-9 would remove this good-faith religious belief defence in the Criminal Code.
On December 11, 2025, Al Postma, Executive Director of the Christian Reformed Church in Canada, attended a policy briefing hosted by the EFC. Some of the key take-aways include:
This content was originally posted in December 2025 and was updated in March 2026.
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Comments
Thank you for writing about Bill C-9 being amended and debated by the parliament's Justice Committee. I appreciate that you identified addressing antisemitism as the main goal of the Bill. It is scandalous how often in church history, certain Bible passages have been used to fan the flames of antisemitism.
But antisemitism is not what brought Bill C-9 into the public spotlight recently. The debate on Bill C-9 in the Justice Committee grabbed headlines because of comments in the committee meetings by MP Marc Miller. He said "In Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Romans… there’s other passages… there is clear hatred towards, for example, homosexuals. I don’t understand how the concept of ‘good faith’ can be invoked if someone were, literally invoking a passage from, in this case, the Bible." You can find MP Miller's remarks in a longer quotation in an EFC article.
The article from the EFC makes a good (and sadly necessary) point about how Christians ought to live up to a godly standard when participating in debates. But neither the EFC article, nor the Network's article above seems to address how MP Miller characterized certain passages the Bible as "clear hatred" during debate on Bill C-9. While Bill C-9 might have the goal of protecting people against religious hatred in general and antisemitism in particular, it seems that this bill will (intentionally or unintentionally) affect Christian freedom to preach and teach what the Bible says about human sexuality.
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