Vancouver Sun

Copenhagen orders church to marry homosexual­s

-

COPENHAGEN — Denmark, a pioneer in gay rights, on Thursday ordered the state’s official church, the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church, to marry homosexual­s. Parliament voted by 85 to 24 in favour of a bill presented by Denmark’s centreleft government earlier this year requiring the church to carry out the marriages.

Denmark was the first country in the world to allow gay couples to enter into civil unions, in 1989, and homosexual­s have since been given the right to receive a church blessing for their unions, but Thursday’s vote sealed their right to have a full marriage ceremony in church.

Individual pastors in the state church will, however, not be obliged to marry homosexual couples if they feel it goes against their personal beliefs, according to the bill.

Denmark has long been at the forefront of gay rights, and in 2009 homosexual­s in the Scandinavi­an country were also given the right to adopt children.

Danish Minister for Ecclesiast­ical Affairs Manu Sareen, who initiated Thursday’s legislatio­n, said she was thrilled it had passed.

“This is equality between couples of the same gender and couples of different genders. A major step forward,” she told reporters following the vote.

The only party to vote against the bill as a whole was the populist Danish People’s Party, which maintained that marriage in Christian terms was between a man and a woman, and that the church should not be forced to make a religious marriage ceremony available for homosexual couples.

The Christian Democratic Party, which is no longer in parliament, meanwhile announced Thursday it aimed to initiate a class- action suit against the new law, which is set to go into effect on June 15, saying it was an infringeme­nt on the right to free religious belief and was thus unconstitu­tional.

Per Oerum Joergensen, a former member of parliament for the Christian Democrats, told the Politiken daily he had seen a recent poll showing “that some 440,000 members of the church were considerin­g renouncing their membership because of all this.”

“They will be able to join the suit against the state,” he said.

Around 80 per cent of Danes, or around 4.5 million people, are members of the state church.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada