07 May 2015, The Tablet

Threat to church counselling service by vote in favour of gay marriage


THE ARCHBISHOP OF Armagh has expressed concern about the future of the Church’s marriage counselling service in Ireland and whether Catholic schools could continue to uphold church teaching if voters back same-sex marriage in a referendum on 22 May, writes
Sarah Mac Donald.

Archbishop Eamon Martin was one of a number of Irish bishops who issued statements last weekend urging people to vote “no” to the proposal to give gay couples the right to marry.

In his message entitled “Care for the Covenant of Marriage”, the Primate of All Ireland questioned if Catholic schools would be allowed to uphold the Church’s teaching on marriage if it is redefined. In an interview with RTE Radio, he asked whether state funding would be withdrawn from the Church’s counselling service, Accord.

Archbishop Martin referred to how the Church had been forced to withdraw from adoption services in the United Kingdom because it was not prepared to place children with same-sex couples.

In the first debate on national television this week, a member of the “yes” campaign appeared to support withdrawing funding from Accord as its services cater only for male-female couples.

In his statement last Saturday, Archbishop Martin highlighted how many people will not even raise these issues within their families and workplaces for fear of being ridiculed or condemned as homophobic.


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