Church Of England Apologizes For “Shameful” Treatment Of LGBTQ+ People
News
Church of England bishops apologized for the rejection and hostility LGBTQ+ people have faced, and the Archbishop of Canterbury acknowledged the Church was still “very divided” on the subject.
The apology comes days after the Church of England set out proposals developed by the bishops that showed it would refuse to allow same-sex couples to get married in its churches, but said priests could bless them in church, Reuters reports.
“We have not loved you as God loves you, and that is profoundly wrong,” the bishops said in an open letter. “We affirm, publicly and unequivocally, that LGBTQI+ people are welcome and valued: we are all children of God. The occasions on which you have received a hostile and homophobic response in our churches are shameful and for this we repent.”
Despite gay marriage being legal in Britain, the Church of England stood by its teaching that marriage is between “one man and one woman” in the proposals.
Image Credit: Pixabay
A spokesperson Stonewall said the CofE had “once again” fallen short on being inclusive and supportive of LGBTQ+ Christians. “An apology only goes so far when so many LGBTQ+ Christians have faced hostility and discrimination for who they are,” the spokesperson told Reuters via e-mail.
The most high-profile supporter for same-sex couples to get married in churches has come from the Bishop of Oxford, Steven Croft, who apologized in November for having been slow to change his views. On Friday, Croft said: “It is very good for us to be able to say today that the church can now offer public services of blessing, but we know that we have further to go.”
Croft’s call for a change has been backed publicly only by a few of his fellow bishops, who along with clergy and laity form the CofE’s governing body, the General Synod.
“We're divided, there's no point in pretending otherwise. The Church of England and the Anglican Communion are very divided,” Welby told reporters on Friday, ahead of a meeting of the synod next month where the proposals will be deliberated further. I'm sure that discussions will continue. But this is an enormously important point, not only within the Anglican Communion and the Church of England, but also across the global church.”
He added, “It's a long journey. I'm sure that the last word hasn't been said.”
Read related myGwork articles here:
Church Of England Bishops Refuse To Allow Same-Sex Marriage
Calls For Church Of England To Allow Same-Sex Marriages
Church Of England's First Nonbinary Priest: Queer People Are A “Blessing To The Church”
Labour MP Challenges Homophobia in Church of England
Keep up to date with the latest myGnews