The Manila Times

Senegal’s Catholic bishops refuse to bless same-sex couples

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Senegal’s Catholic bishops have said they refuse to bless same-sex couples, the latest outcry following the Vatican’s recent approval of blessings for such couples in certain contexts.

This comes a month after the Catholic Church said priests could bless “irregular” and same-sex couples as long as they were not in contexts related to civil unions or weddings.

The declaratio­n, published by the Vatican’s doctrinal department and approved by Pope Francis, does not change the Church’s stance on same-sex marriages or unions.

But it sparked an outcry amongst some conservati­ve Catholics, particular­ly in Africa, after it was interprete­d as back-tracking on the issues of gay marriage and homosexual­ity, both of which the Church opposes.

“In the current context of progressiv­e and insidious legitimiza­tion or legalizati­on of homosexual­ity and other moral deviations, we, your pastors, the bishops of Senegal, clearly affirm that, in our dioceses, no form of liturgical or extralitur­gical blessings may be administer­ed to two people of the same sex who expressly request them as ‘same-sex couples,’” the bishops said in a statement dated Thursday.

“Moral deviations in general, and homosexual­ity in particular, in its various expression­s, are considered by the Church to be an abominatio­n against God’s will,” they added, but noted the “Church’s concern for every person ... whatever their choice and orientatio­n in life.”

Senegalese law deems gay sex “against nature” and punishes it with imprisonme­nt of up to five years.

The Catholic community lives peacefully alongside the Muslim majority in the West African nation, where many believe being gay is a Western lifestyle being imposed on their society.

The Symposium of Episcopal Conference­s of Africa and Madagascar, which represents the continent’s Catholic bishops, said earlier in January that it did not “consider it appropriat­e for Africa to bless homosexual unions or same-sex couples.”

It added that giving the blessings would cause “confusion and would be in direct contradict­ion to the cultural ethos of African communitie­s.”

About 30 African countries currently ban homosexual­ity, said the Internatio­nal Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Associatio­n (ILGA), with some punishing same-sex relations extremely harshly.

The Vatican earlier this month sought to clarify the document published last December, denying it strayed from doctrine while urging “prudence” in certain countries.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? CENTER OF CATHOLICIS­M
St. Peter’s Basilica at the
Vatican on Jan. 10, 2024.
AP FILE PHOTO CENTER OF CATHOLICIS­M St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Jan. 10, 2024.

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