VATICAN
CITYWorried about the spread of laws that recognize same-sex couples,
the Vatican on Thursday urged Roman Catholic lawmakers and others to fight back,
calling support for such legislation ‘‘gravely immoral.’’
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That unwavering appeal came in a strongly
worded, 12-page document that was approved by Pope John Paul II and devoted to
homosexuality, gay marriage and adoption by gays and lesbians, issues that have
stirred fervent debate recently in North America and Europe.
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‘‘There are absolutely no grounds for
considering homosexual unions to be in any way similar or even remotely
analogous to God’s plan for marriage and family,’’ the document says, asserting
repeatedly that marriage should be reserved for heterosexual couples.
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‘‘Marriage is holy, while homosexual acts
go against the natural moral law,’’ it says.
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The document, published in several
languages including English, also contains a special admonition for Catholic
lawmakers in legislative bodies that are considering laws to recognize same-sex
unions or permit gays and lesbians to marry or adopt children.
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‘‘To vote in favor of a law so harmful to
the common good is gravely immoral,’’ the document says.
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Although the document had been in the
works for months and reiterates positions that the pope had already made clear,
it represents an unusually thorough and emphatic presentation of those
viewpoints.
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It also comes at an especially charged
moment.
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President George W. Bush announced on
Wednesday that his administration was looking into ways to ensure that the term
‘‘marriage’’ would apply only to unions between men and women. Republican
congressional leaders have floated the idea of a constitutional amendment to do
just that.
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Those developments reflect some
lawmakers’ concern over an apparently growing acceptance of homosexuality,
evident in American public opinion polls, a profusion of gay characters and
themes on American television and legal developments in some states.
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The acceptance has limits. A Gallup Poll
in May showed that Americans were evenly split on the question of whether gay
couples should be allowed to enter into legally recognized unions, with 49
percent of respondents in favor and 49 percent against. But two Canadian
provinces recently have legalized same-sex marriages. So has the Netherlands.
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Other European governments have formally
recognized same-sex unions or are moving in that direction, an example of a
widening chasm between Catholic teaching and European law that the pope has
frequently decried.
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Homosexuality is the dominant issue at a
convention this week of the Episcopal Church USA, which is part of the worldwide
Anglican Communion. The convention is deliberating whether to confirm an openly
gay bishop in New Hampshire and whether to create a blessing for same-sex
unions.
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Conservative Episcopalians and Anglicans
have threatened a schism if the convention votes in favor of those measures. A
final resolution is expected within the next week.
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The practical effect of the Vatican
document is uncertain, as one Vatican official acknowledged Thursday.
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‘‘We have to preach our principle, even
if we know that many people won’t abide by it,’’ said the official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity. ‘‘The Vatican is worried, because we think marriage
should be between a man and a woman.’’
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Many Catholic lawmakers in the United
States and Europe have long bucked the church on a range of issues, including
abortion rights, which the church opposes.
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Additionally, many of the estimated 65
million Roman Catholics in the United States — almost one in four Americans —
pick and choose which of the pope’s pronouncements to obey.
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‘‘Vatican officials seem to think that
they still have the same kind of credibility they once had, and they don’t,’’
said the Reverend Andrew Greeley, a leading Catholic sociologist in the United
States.
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‘‘I’m not saying that’s good or bad, but
that’s certainly what the evidence seems to show,’’ Greeley said, adding that
there is much greater acceptance of homosexuality among American Catholics today
than there was a decade ago.
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He was not certain, he added, if that
acceptance went as far as approval of same-sex unions.
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Congress is unlikely to entertain any
legislation that supports such unions.