Sweden: Christians express sadness over Lutheran gay marriages

Fr. Fredrik Emanuelson, who heads ecumenical affairs for Catholics of Sweden, expressed 'sadness' along with his Orthodox counterpart over the Lutheran Church's decision to hold homosexual union ceremonies in churches.

Article Tools

The Catholic and Orthodox Churches of Sweden have responded with “sadness” to the Swedish Lutheran Church General Synod’s decision to hold homosexual “weddings” in churches, saying the move departs from the Christian tradition and will widen the gap between the churches.

Fr. Fredrik Emanuelson, head of ecumenical efforts in the Swedish Catholic Church, joined Orthodox representative Fr. Misha Jaksic in a statement that said the churches learned of the Lutherans’ decision “with sadness.”

“It is a swing away not only from Christian tradition but also from the point of view on the nature of marriage which is typical of all religions,” they said, according to SIR News.

The Lutherans’ General Synod expresses a “radically different vision” from the way in which the Church and Christians understand marriage, they added.

The spokesmen said they were not surprised by the decision because it had been preceded by a long debate.

sponsored by
Sponsored by ClearKitchen.com -- new products for cooking and entertaining.
Related Articles

Cardinal still hopeful for ecumenism

Cardinal Walter Kasper spoke in the town where in 1517 Martin Luther nailed his theses to the cathedral door. He responds to comments by a Protestant leader about "difficulties" in dialogue, allegedly caused by Catholics.

First woman to head German church

A survivor of breast cancer, Bishop Margot Kassmann is the first woman to lead the Evangelical Church of Germany. A Catholic archbishop congratulated her and noted her devotion to ecumenism.
According to SIR, the church debate started at the beginning of 2009 after a Swedish law that granted civil marriage to homosexuals took effect.

“None of us want to annul ecumenical dialogue with the Swedish church,” the joint Catholic-Orthodox statement continued. “However, this decision of the Church of Sweden widens the gap.”

The statement concluded by saying that talks are “more important than ever” to fulfill Christ’s desire for Christian unity.

The Church of Sweden is the largest Christian denomination in the Nordic country



Europe RSS
Comments
Your E-mail Address:

Privacy Statement
 


© Copyright Spero, All rights reserved. RSS
Spero News on Twitter
Submit a tip
Advertise
Terms of use
Privacy Policy
Contact
This page took 0.2227seconds to load