(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) When I talked with everyone from business owners to average joes in downtown Phoenix and pastors across the valley, I found people who were for it very opposed and a lot of people who are also just indifferent to this ruling. Take a listen. If someone wants to get married, get married. It doesn't matter who it is. We recognize marriages for all kinds of people and there's no reason to single out gay. I'm totally against it. I think that homosexuality is disgusting. And that was Pastor Steven Anderson. He runs Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe. He was very upset and mad about today's ruling. He says it's not just about his religion, but it's also about his right as an American citizen who already voted against a gay marriage. I don't even think that this is what the people of Arizona want. You know, forget me as a pastor, as a bible-believing Christian. If you took a poll of Arizona, I guarantee you that probably more than half of the people are not okay with this, but it's just the federal government cramming it down our throat. And we reached out to numerous pastors across the valley. They did not want to go on camera, but said that if a gay couple came to them and asked them to marry them, that most of them not talked with says they wouldn't marry them, that they would explain why, but they didn't want to do an interview because they want to focus on loving people in the community, not just about condemning what they're doing. So Stephanie, it's going to be very, very interesting to see how all this plays out in the next couple months. Sure. Well, Katie, thank you. In addition to Arizona today, the federal government is also recognizing same-sex marriages in Indiana, Oklahoma, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, Nevada, and Colorado.