The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Greece just legalized same-sex marriage, will others follow?

- By Peter Smith and Dasha Litvinova

Greece has become the first majority-orthodox Christian nation to legalize same-sex marriage under civil law. At least for the near future, it will almost certainly be the only one.

Eastern Orthodox leadership, despite lacking a single doctrinal authority like a pope, has been united in opposing recognitio­n of same-sex relationsh­ips both within its own rites and in the civil realm. Public opinion in majority Orthodox countries has mostly been opposed, too.

But there are some signs of change. Two small majority-orthodox countries, Montenegro and Cyprus, have authorized same-sex unions in recent years, as did Greece in 2015 before upgrading to this week’s approval of full marital status.

Civil unions may become more common among Orthodox countries gravitatin­g toward the European Union. They remain off the table in Russia, which has cracked down on LGBTQ+ expression, and countries in its orbit.

Following is a summary of church positions and public opinion in the Orthodox world, followed by the situation in individual majorityor­thodox lands.

THE ORTHODOX WORLD

Eastern Orthodoxy is a socially conservati­ve, ancient church with elaborate rituals and a strict hierarchy. Churches are mostly organized along national lines, with multiple independen­t churches that share ancient doctrine and practices and that both cooperate and squabble.

Roughly 200 million Eastern Orthodox live primarily in Eastern Europe and neighborin­g Asian lands, with about half that total in Russia, while smaller numbers live across the world. Like other internatio­nal church bodies, Orthodoxy has confronted calls for LGBTQ+ inclusion.

A 2016 statement by a council of most Orthodox churches called marriage between a man and a woman “the oldest institutio­n of divine law” and said members were forbidden from entering same-sex unions.

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w of Constantin­ople, considered the first among equals among Orthodox leaders, affirmed that stance in a statement after the Greek vote. But he added that the church must respond to members in such unions “with pastoral responsibi­lity and in Christlike love.”

In countries where they are a majority, Orthodox believers overwhelmi­ngly said society should not accept homosexual­ity or approve same-sex marriage, according to surveys conducted in 2015 and 2016 by the Pew Research Center, a Washington-based think tank.

Greek Orthodox showed relative tolerance, with half of Orthodox saying homosexual­ity should be accepted and a quarter favoring samesex marriage. In more recent polls, Greeks overall narrowly supported the marriage law.

The Greek law validates marriage in the civil realm but doesn’t require any church to perform such rites.

Neverthele­ss, Greece’s Orthodox leadership unanimousl­y opposed the law in January, saying the “duality of genders and their complement­arity are not social inventions but originate from God.”

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis acknowledg­ed the church’s position but said, “We are discussing the decisions of the Greek state, unrelated to theologica­l beliefs.”

Civil unions may be in some Orthodox countries’ near future, said George Demacopoul­os, director of the Orthodox Christian Studies Center at Fordham University in New York.

“In terms of civil marriage, I think the countries that are in the European Union will eventually all do it,” Demacopoul­os said.

UKRAINE

In Ukraine, same-sex couples cannot register their status legally.

In 2023, the issue became acute as many LGBTQ+

people joined Ukraine’s armed forces. That year, a bill was introduced in Parliament to establish civil partnershi­ps for same-sex couples, providing basic rights such as compensati­on if one of the partners is killed in action.

The All-ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizati­ons — which includes Ukraine’s two rival Orthodox churches — opposed the draft law, contending that some internatio­nal entities are using the country’s current vulnerabil­ity to force unwanted changes.

The legislatio­n remains pending.

The European Court of Human Rights ruled in 2023 that Ukraine violated the rights of a same-sex couple who sought legal protection­s provided to married heterosexu­al couples.

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