The British government said today it will introduce a bill next year to legalise so-called same-sex marriage.
Opponents of the plans say that the decision to raise the issue has been made without proper consultation.
Both the Catholic Church and the Church of England have announced their opposition to the proposed bill. In response to Tuesday’s announcement London’s two Catholic Archbishops, Vincent Nichols of Westminster and Peter Smith of Southwark, released a statement strongly opposing the bill. “The meaning of marriage matters,” they said. “It derives that meaning from its function as the foundation of the family.”
Noting that “The government has chosen to ignore the views of over 600,000 people who signed a petition calling for the current definition of marriage to stay,” the Archbishops went on to criticise the process undertaken to advance the Bill.
Archbishops Nichols and Smith concluded their statement with an appeal to “everyone who cares about upholding the meaning of marriage in civil law to make their views known to their MPs clearly, calmly and forcefully, and without impugning the motives of others . . . It is not too late to stop this Bill.”