Last week Print Obama clared ldquo I thk same-sex upl should be able to get married rdquo His public support for gay marriage followed Joe Bin rsquo s remarks a few days prr which the Catholic vice-print said that he had a change of heart over the years and felt pelle
Contents:
- THE POPE’S ‘SHOCKG’ STATEMENT ON GAY MARRIAGE IS G AN UPROAR AMONG CATHOLICS
- CATHOLIC VIEWS ON GAY MARRIAGE
- GAY MARRIAGE: THEOLOGIL AND MORAL ARGUMENTS
- CATHOLICS ON GAY MARRIAGE
- WHAT DID THE VATIN REALLY SAY ABOUT GAY MARRIAGE YTERDAY? CATHOLICS DISAGREE
THE POPE’S ‘SHOCKG’ STATEMENT ON GAY MARRIAGE IS G AN UPROAR AMONG CATHOLICS
The likelihood that the Supreme Court next June will announce s disvery of a nstutnal right to same-sex marriage rais an obv qutn for the Catholic Church: What do we do now?Two steps e to md. First, prs for strong legal protectns for dividuals and stutns nsciently unable to operate wh a legal regime that requir sweepg ncsns to the LGBT agenda. Send, give ser thought to the possibily that the Church should qu servg as the ernment’s agent legimatg firm cisns at the top levels of the Church are urgently need uldn’t be more obv. Consir a Washgton Post edorial trashg Alabama thori for ristg a Supreme Court orr on behalf of gay marriage that state. The urt told Alabama to get crackg even though the urt self remas months away om a nstutnal lg.“The [gay rights] movement is on the verge of a historic victory,” the Febary 11 edorial clared. “But that don’t mean activists and alli have succeed transformg the culture that for so long nied gay men and lbians equal treatment.”Transformg culture? Of urse. The Post edorial noted some steps to take. “Marriage equaly is jt one of many goals. State legislatur and feral lawmakers need to be nvced to enhance civil rights protectns for gay men and lbians—prohibg employment discrimatn, for example, or discrimatn bs transactns. In plac like Alabama, that will take a lot more effort.”One form ’s already taken n be seen not nservative Alabama but libertarian Oregon. There the Christian owners of a bakery were found guilty of vlatg anti-discrimatn law by clg— 2013, before the state even regnized same-sex marriage—to supply a weddg ke for a lbian uple. Bakery owners Aaron and Melissa Kle ced relig nvictns as their reason.Acrdg to the Oregon Bure of Labor and Indtri, the Kles face f as high as $150,000. The actual amount will be cid March. A hundred and fifty thoand for a weddg ke? Is this the Post’s “a lot more effort”? Iron-clad legal protectn agast state ercn to fall le wh gay marriage is sperately need for dividuals like the Kles and stutns like the Catholic Church. It won’t be easy. Catholic News Agency (CNA) reports that the Ford and Arc Foundatns have given several ln dollars to the Amerin Civil Liberti Unn and other groups to vise ways of blockg the relig eedom argument for not operatg wh same-sex marriage. If relig groups want First Amendment protectns, they’ll have to fight.Urgently need, too, is nsiratn of whether the Church should stop registerg marriag for the state. Increasgly, be hard to see how the Church n ntue as ernment’s llaborator this matter once the Supreme Court mak fal that what the ernment means by marriage is opposed to what the Church means.Confn about the meang of marriage is already wispread. It’s the unrlyg issue the crisis of marriage that last fall’s Synod of Bishops on marriage should have nonted and didn’t. But the synod’s omissn is no reason for the Church to persist a relatnship wh ernment that epens the nfn.A two-step procre—e by the urthoe for a civil ceremony that satisfi the state, then e to church for a sacramental marriage—may sound cumbersome, but ’s an opportuny for techis on what marriage means. As secular Ameri heads down the same-sex path, the Church now mt go another, better way. * catholic view of gay marriage *
Pope Francis ma news recently by voicg his support for same-sex civil unns – legal arrangements that give gay and lbian upl many of the same rights as married oppose-sex upl. The statement stck many observers as a shift for the Vatin – which 2003 me out agast any “legal regnn of homosexual unns” – even as Francis did not change his long-standg opposn to gay marriage.
CATHOLIC VIEWS ON GAY MARRIAGE
* catholic view of gay marriage *
Around the world, Catholics vary their support for same-sex marriage and their acceptance of homosexualy general, acrdg to Pew Rearch Center surveys nducted recent years.
GAY MARRIAGE: THEOLOGIL AND MORAL ARGUMENTS
While Pope Francis' ments supportg same sex civil unns were a drastic shift Catholic church guidance, U.S. Catholics have supported gay marriage for about a . * catholic view of gay marriage *
In the Uned Stat, about six--ten Catholics (61%) said a 2019 survey that they favor allowg gays and lbians to marry. In the wake of Pope Francis’ recent ment about same-sex civil unns, Pew Rearch Center nducted this analysis to better unrstand what Catholics around the world thk about legal regnn for same-sex upl and homosexualy general.
Rpons about whether society should be acceptg of homosexualy me om a global survey nducted om May 13 to Aug. The term “homosexualy, ” while sometim nsired anachronistic the current era, is the most applible and easily translatable term to e when askg this qutn across societi and languag and has been ed other cross-natnal studi, cludg the World Valu Survey. In Swzerland and Italy – which allow civil unns but not marriage for gay upl – 76% and 57% of Catholics, rpectively, said 2017 that they support gay marriage.
CATHOLICS ON GAY MARRIAGE
When to Catholics’ views about homosexualy general, a global survey nducted 2019 also pats a mixed picture. Other untri around the world where most Catholics said society should be acceptg of homosexualy clud Spa (91%), Atralia (81%), the Philipp (80%) and South Ai (62%). In Eastern Europe, acceptance was weaker, wh roughly half or fewer of Catholics sayg that homosexualy should be accepted by society Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia and Lhuania.
In some of the other surveyed untri, cludg Ai and the Middle East, large majori of Catholics said homosexualy should not be accepted by society.
The global survey found that Catholics wh many untri generally are as acceptg as their non-Catholic patrts of homosexualy. In Argenta, Brazil, Germany, Mexi and the Philipp, Catholics are somewhat more likely than non-Catholics to say that homosexualy should be accepted by society. And Poland, Catholics are ls likely than non-Catholics to say homosexualy should be accepted by society.
WHAT DID THE VATIN REALLY SAY ABOUT GAY MARRIAGE YTERDAY? CATHOLICS DISAGREE
The Catholic Church teach that “homosexual acts are trsilly disorred” and lls on gay people to practice “chasty, ” though also lls on Catholics to treat gay men and women wh “rpect, passn and sensivy. " The Vatin also said that s refal to give relig approval to same-sex marriage do not preclu givg blsgs to homosexual people. The Vatin's msage ced Francis' own words om 2016, when he wrote, "there are absolutely no grounds for nsirg homosexual unns to be any way siar or even remotely analogo to God's plan for marriage and fay.
Pope Francis has been viewed wh ut optimism by LGBTQ groups bee of remarks like his statement, wily published 2020, that homosexuals are "part of the fay" and that same-sex and other nontradnal upl need a "civil unn law. Followg Pope Francis’s announcement clarg support for civil unn laws for same-sex upl, which breaks wh tradnal Catholic valu that oppose homosexual relatnships, the lear has garnered both cricism and support om people all over the world. Most recently, NBC reports that retired Philippe Bishop Arturo Bast mented that he “had very ser doubts about the moral rrectns” of the Pope’s stance on legalizg gay relatnships.
WHAT IS THE LEGACY OF PETE BUTTIGIEG’S HISTORIC RUN AS AMERICA’S FIRST GAY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE?