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United States: Baptists, Episcopalians, Buddhists, Unitarians, Muslims, Jews and representatives of other faiths gathered to urge repeal of a state law defining marriage as the union of a man and a woman.
A Baptist leader called for social justice, an Episcopalian insisted that all couples get equal treatment, and a Lutheran — citing Washington's long history of civil rights leadership — exhorted other religious leaders across the state to stand up in support of same-sex marriages.
They gathered yesterday with 100 Buddhists, Unitarians, Methodists, Muslims, Presbyterians, Jews and representatives of other faiths to urge the repeal of a 1998 state law defining marriage as the union of a man and a woman, and to decry President Bush's attempt to ban gay and lesbian unions within the U.S. Constitution.
I see this clearly as a justice issue,said the Rev. Robert Taylor of Seattle's St. Mark's Cathedral.The president of our country has said he would like to enshrine in our Constitution the fact that some people should be denied equal rights. Quite frankly, this is breathtaking in its disregard for the freedom and justice our Constitution sets forth.
Taylor, one of the highest-ranking openly gay deans in the national Episcopal Church, was one of 160 religious leaders from Blaine to Vancouver, Wash., who signed a statement casting the struggle for same-sex marriage in a light similar to African Americans' fight for civil rights. Many marched yesterday from Plymouth Congregational Church to the King County Administration Building to present it to government officials.
Just as religious leaders before us have spoken to end slavery and ensure equal rights to all persons regardless of gender or race, so we oppose any legislation that discriminates,said the statement, which called the denial of same-sex marriage rightsa national shame.As always, there's a clueless voice amidst the sea of reason.
But the group was as notable for its skin tone — nearly all white — as for the force of its rhetoric. In Atlanta, 30 black pastors rallied to oppose same-sex unions and disputed the notion that gay marriage shared the history of their struggle for equality.
I don't see this as anything near what blacks went through,said Ken Hutcherson, a black pastor at Antioch Bible Church in Redmond, who like many evangelical church leaders was not present at the Seattle gathering.I can never live the policy 'don't ask, don't tell,' so it's offensive to me to say this is similar to what we went through. It doesn't even come close. We don't see it as a civil rights issue. We see it as a sexual behavior issue.Fortunately, not everyone is a bigoted moron with a stick up their arse.
One of the few African American pastors who attended the Seattle gathering was the Rev. Shayne Flowers of All Pilgrims Church, who said later that the issue came down to one's understanding of homosexuality. Flowers, who is gay, believes being a lesbian was inborn, not a matter of choice.
I do think of this as a civil rights issue,she said.I didn't wake up one morning and decide to be African American, just as I didn't wake up and decide to be a woman, and I didn't wake up and decide to be gay. When I hear my African American brothers and sisters say otherwise, it's very alienating to me, like I'm choosing to be discriminated against.
Washington's legislators are in recess for the rest of the year, so it is unlikely they will take any immediate action on the state's Defense of Marriage law. But on March 8, the Northwest Women's Law Center filed suit on behalf of six same-sex couples, asserting the law violates the state's constitution. A response is due from county prosecutors Sunday.
Lisa Stone, executive director of the law center, said whatever the initial ruling, she expected the case would take at least a year to resolve.
Around the country, an initial flurry of activity heralding same-sex marriages has been met with a backlash. Under pressure from Oregon Attorney General Hardy Myers, Benton County, which had planned to issue same-sex marriage licenses starting today, reversed itself. Yesterday, a judge in New Mexico stopped the Sandoval County clerk from issuing licenses to gay and lesbian couples.Religious leaders urge gay-marriage support - Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 24th March 2004.
Posted in Church and State and Pooves and closet cases at 06:20. Last modified on October 15 2007 at 10:09.
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Comments
1: Posted by: philippa | February 25, 2005 5:01 PM
what is that all about? Its a lot of rubbish. okay, people are allowed their views and allowed to be gay but i think its their own choice. the catholic church wont support abortion so why gay? okay, half the population of priests are gay but please? its sick.
2: Posted by: Feòrag | February 25, 2005 8:32 PM
Phillipa, would you like to try explaining that again, but in English this time?
3: Posted by: Red Wolf | February 25, 2005 9:57 PM
Well, now that I have Phillipa's permission, I might just go out and be gay. Hell, I may even get an opinion of my own.
I'm still not sure exactly what Phillipa thinks is sick. Bigotted men who think its quite fine thank you to deny a group of people equal rights because they personally think they're icky or the wrong colour or the wrong gender. Why yes, that is sick.
But trying to make sense of Phillipa's alcohol fuelled drivel, it looks like she may well be in favour of hate-mongering, homophobic scum. People who, given the chance, would quite happily see Phillipa confined to the kitchen and bred to death.
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