Bishops clarify Pope’s stance on same-sex marriage

Pope Francis waves from the window of the apostolic palace overlooking St. Peter’s square(Photo by Vincenzo PINTO / AFP)

The Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) has said the recent pronouncement by the Pope on same-sex marriage does not in any way change the church’s teaching on marriage.

According to the clerics, the declaration seeks to clarify the different forms of blessing that can be given to persons and objects in the church, including the possibility of blessing persons in irregular unions.

In a statement jointly signed by the president and secretary, Bishops Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji and Donatus Ogun, CBCN restated that the teaching of the Catholic Church on marriage remains the same.

They explained: “There is, therefore, no possibility in the Church of blessing same-sex unions and activities as that would go against God’s law, teachings of the Church, laws of our nation and cultural sensibilities of our people.”

The clergies observed that the Pope’s declaration acknowledged and distinguished between ritual, liturgical and informal blessings.

The statement reads: “While ritual or liturgical blessings are imparted according to the established norms of the Church, informal blessings refer to prayers over people who ask for them outside the liturgy or any formal celebration in the Church.

“Such unions include but are not limited to divorced and remarried couples whose previous marriages had not been annulled, those living in same-sex unions, those in polygamous unions, in concubinage, among others.

“The declaration offers a consideration of the possibility of extending the informal blessing to all God’s children, irrespective of their moral condition, when they ask to be blessed. Nevertheless, the declaration insists that the blessing of persons in irregular unions – and never the union itself – can only take a non-liturgical form to avoid confusion. It should not be imparted during or in connection with a civil wedding ceremony or with clothing, words and signs associated with a wedding.”

The bishops said the declaration reiterated the Catholic Church’s perennial teaching on marriage as an “exclusive, stable and indissoluble union of a man and woman, naturally open to the generation of children” and emphatically stated that the Church does not have the power to impart a blessing on irregular unions.

The statement added that the declaration also reinforced the truth about God’s mercy.

It added: “For one to willingly ask for a blessing demonstrates one’s trust in God and the desire to live according to God’s commandments. Asking for God’s blessing is not dependent on how good one is. Imperfection is the reason for seeking God’s grace. Therefore, those in irregular unions are invited never to lose hope, but rather to ask for God’s grace and mercy while remaining open to conversion.

“The CBCN thanks all the priests for their accompaniment of married couples, asking them to continue in all they do to sustain the sacrament of holy matrimony and never to do anything that would detract from the sacredness of this sacrament.”

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