It's good SCOTUS ruled correctly on this issue, but apparently for a completely different reason than the crux of the issue itself. Ultimately it would not have mattered if it ruled the other way either.
When everything regarding the usurpation and diminishment of our liberties hangs on what 9 people in black robes have to say is a total bastardization of what the Founders intended for us. So when the courts begin to make law by judicial fiat as they have on countless issues (i.e.: carbon dioxide is a declared pollutant) - they have nullified their legitimacy. I find it unfortunate that the key and fundamental issue of whether or not someone can be compelled by force and punishment to violate their conscience to create and serve behaviors they find evil, was ignored to make this ruling based on the the technical dynamics of the Colorado Commission's bias.
From a Christian and orthodox position, once the institutions of government contravene the laws of God that govern a people beholden to them, then those institutions and that government no longer have any legitimate authority. The maxim of 'better to obey God than men' is our directive from scripture itself.
None of us should live life by the leave of government permission and license, but that is where we are arriving.