NEWS
Vatican waging new offensive against same-sex marriage
July 28, 2003
VATICAN CITY - Alarmed by growing legal acceptance of gay marriages, the
Vatican is issuing new instructions to bishops and Catholic
politicians in an effort to halt the trend.
The instructions are in a document prepared by the Church's
guardian of orthodoxy, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, that will be released Thursday, the Vatican said.
It is titled, "Considerations Regarding Proposals to Give Legal
Recognition to Unions Between Homosexual Persons."
Pope John Paul II and top Vatican officials have been speaking
out for months against legislative proposals to legalize same-sex
marriages in Europe, North America and elsewhere.
In January, the pope approved guidelines for Catholic
politicians that said church opposition to abortion, euthanasia and
same-sex marriage was not up for negotiations.
It said laws safeguarding marriage between man and woman must be
promoted and that "in no way can other forms of cohabitation be
placed on same level as marriage, nor can they receive legal
recognition as such."
But legal acceptance is growing.
Two Canadian provinces -- Ontario and British Columbia -- have
legalized homosexual marriage under recent court rulings, a move
that has attracted gays from across the border in the United
States.
Earlier this month, a top German cardinal condemned Germany's
same-sex marriage law after it was upheld by the country's supreme
court, calling it a blow to the family.
"Now the associations of homosexuals have a potent arm to obtain
further concessions on the road toward full equality with married
couples, including the right to adoption," Cardinal Karl Lehman
complained in a Vatican Radio interview.
The Vatican is particularly worried about the waning influence
of the church in Europe. Drafters of a proposed constitution for
the European Union ignored Vatican requests to include explicit
mention of Europe's Christian roots.
On Sunday, the pope lamented that the church's message was being
watered down in Europe, risking to sound like atheism.
Vatican officials said the document -- which is 12 pages long
and available in seven languages -- is devoted entirely to the
issue of same-sex marriages. -Sapa-AP
Related stories
Bush: Constitutional ban on gay marriage not necessary - yet
US politics: Is marriage the next major gay issue?
TV pastor urges 'prayer offernsive' against US Supreme Court
Gay couple unites in Argentina, a first for Latin America
Canadian govt seeks Supreme COurt advice on gay marriages
Wal-Mart extends anti-discrimination policy to gays
|