ZENIT - The World Seen From
Rome
Code: ZE03080103
Date: 2003-08-01
Why Has The Holy See Written a Document Against Homosexual
Unions?
Secretary of Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Responds
VATICAN CITY, AUGUST 1, 2003 (Zenit.org).- Why has the Holy See
published a document, clearly articulating its negative ethical
judgment on those laws that give legal recognition to homosexual
unions?
Salesian Archbishop Angelo Amato, secretary of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and, together with
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, signatory of the document, answered the
question in this interview with Vatican Radio.
The document
"Considerations Regarding Proposals to Give Legal Recognition to
Unions between Homosexual Persons," of a "doctrinal character," was
published by the Holy See on Thursday.
Q: What are the
essential points of the document?
Archbishop Amato: There
are three. First of all, there is a reaffirmation of the essential
characteristics of matrimony, which is founded on the
complementarity of the sexes. This is a natural truth, confirmed by
revelation, so that man and woman can have that communion of
persons, through which they participate in a special way in God's
creative work, receiving and educating new lives. There is no
principle whatsoever to assimilate or establish analogies between
homosexual unions and God's plan for matrimony and the family.
Matrimony is holy, while homosexual relations are in contrast to the
natural law and are intrinsically disordered.
Q: But, with
this document, isn't there a risk of discriminating against
homosexual persons?
Archbishop Amato: The Church respects
men and women with homosexual tendencies, and invites them to live
according the law of the Lord, in chastity. It must be kept in mind,
however, that the homosexual inclination in itself is objectively
disordered and that homosexual practices are grave sins against
chastity.
Q: What were the other two points mentioned?
Archbishop Amato: The second point affects the attitudes
that must be assumed given these homosexual unions. The civil
authorities adopt three attitudes: of tolerance, of legal
recognition, or of genuine comparison with matrimony as such,
including the possibility of adoption. In face of a policy of
tolerance, the Catholic faithful is called to affirm the immoral
character of this phenomenon, requesting that the State circumscribe
it with limits which will not endanger the fabric of society and
will not expose youth to an erroneous conception of sexuality and
matrimony. However, in face of the legal recognition or comparison
with heterosexual matrimony, there is a duty to oppose in a clear
and motivated manner, even claiming the right to objection of
conscience.
Q: How is this clear rejection justified?
Archbishop Amato: This is the third point of the document,
which offers the arguments of rational order, biological and
anthropological order, social order, and juridical order which
justify the Catholics' rejection.
Right reason cannot
justify a law that is not in keeping with the natural moral law: if
it does so, the State no longer fulfills its duty to defend
matrimony, an essential institution for the common good.
One
thing is a homosexual union as a private phenomenon, and quite
another its legal recognition, as a model of social life, which
would devalue the matrimonial institution and cloud the perception
of some fundamental moral values. Moreover, in homosexual unions,
the biological and anthropological conditions of matrimony and the
family are missing.
As regards the hypothesis of the
integration of children in homosexual unions, such an adoption would
be violent for the children, as it would deprive them of a proper
environment for their full human development. From the social point
of view, it would change the concept of matrimony, with its task of
procreation and education and would cause great harm to the common
good, especially if its incidence in the social fabric increases.
Lastly, speaking juridically, married couples guarantee the order of
generations and, therefore, are of eminent public interest. This is
not so in the case of homosexual couples.
Q: What should be,
concretely, the attitude of Catholic politicians in this respect?
Archbishop Amato: Faced with a first draft law favorable to
this recognition, the Catholic parliamentarian has the moral duty to
express his disagreement clearly and publicly, voting against it. A
vote in favor would be a gravely immoral act.
In face of a
law that is already in force, he must make known his opposition. If
it is not possible to abrogate the law, he could mobilize and
support proposals directed to limiting the harm of such a law and
decrease the negative effects at the level of public culture and
morality, on the condition that his opposition to laws of this type
is clear and avoids the danger of scandal.
This is a
principle expressed in the encyclical "Evangelium Vitae" (1995).The
leading cultures of the world have always given great institutional
recognition not so much to friendship between persons as to
matrimony and the family, a condition of stable life favorable to
the common good: procreation, survival of society, education, and
socialization of children.
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