Saturday, 12 January 2013

That Letter


After centuries of persecution, Catholics have, in recent times, been able to be members of the professions and participate fully in the life of this country.

Legislation for same-sex marriage, should it be enacted, will have many legal consequences, severely restricting the ability of Catholics to teach the truth about marriage in their schools, charitable institutions or places of worship.

It is meaningless to argue that Catholics and others may still teach their beliefs about marriage in schools and other arenas if they are also expected to uphold the opposite view at the same time.

The natural complementarity between a man and a woman leads to marriage, seen as a lifelong partnership. This loving union – because of their physical complementarity – is open to bringing forth and nurturing children.

This is what marriage is. That is why marriage is only possible between a man and a woman. Marriage, and the home, children and family life it generates, is the foundation and basic building block of our society.

We urge Members of Parliament not to be afraid to reject this legislation now that its consequences are more clear.

Some of the names that are not on it are as interesting as some of the names that are. 

But the next Labour Government will not touch this with a thousand barge poles. The announcement of the free vote proved that. If the manifesto mentions it at all, then it will promise nothing more than a free vote on any backbench amendment or Private Member's Bill.

No such Private Member's Bill would ever be given Government Time, so it could never be passed. It would just disappear into the parliamentary process and never emerge, like all the rest of them.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you, David. stuff. You say: "Some of the names that are not on it are as interesting as some of the names that are." In fairness, the letter for us to sign arrived around Christmas in the midst of much other mail and other concerns. I can't remember whether it was before or after. I am also aware of at least one priest who would have loved to have signed it and didn't receive a copy. On the whole, though, it was very well organised and those who took the initiative deserve much congratulation.

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