Jan 18, 2013
On Jan. 9, Episcopalian leaders of the National Cathedral in Washington D.C. announced that it will honor same-sex weddings. In fact, the Voice of America website reported that the “church recently approved a special marriage rite that specifically blesses same-sex marriage.”
With this new development and three new states legalizing same-sex marriage in the Nov. 2012 elections, an impartial observer cannot deny the gay-rights agenda has the momentum. But with this momentum, an additional threat to religious liberty mounts. We have seen the dim beginnings of it when mayor, Rahm Emanuel of Chicago, and mayor, Thomas Menino of Boston recently opposed Chick-fil-a and its efforts to expand its business.
In order to get a sense of what lies ahead for those who support the sanctity of marriage in America, just take a look across the pond. In Spain, for instance, secular-liberalism is beginning to show its true colors. Catholic News Agency reported that Miguel Angel Vazquez, a member of the Socialist Party and spokesman for the Andalusian provincial government, said that Bishop Demetrio Fernandez of Cordoba should be silenced for leveling attacks against “real and effective equality between men and women.”
Bishop Fernandez rightly pointed out that same-sex marriage “destroys the family and breaks every tie man has with God through his own nature.” After all, man and woman are the image of God through which the child learns about God, the world and himself. But unfortunately, the push for gay-rights has become so universal in public institutions that the gay ideology will undoubtedly be seen as the norm. The bishop goes on to say that a “series of educational, medical and academic programs exist at the service of this ideology in an attempt to force it upon everyone, causing tremendous harm to the consciences of children, teens and young people.”