The Church of England has urged its priests to be more flexible in
helping gay couples achieve a "closer approximation" to marriage.
A report by the church's Faith and Order Commission - its doctrinal
watchdog - said priests should "devise accommodations" for same-sex
couples in their parishes but stopped short of encouraging formal public
blessings of gay civil partnerships.
Revd Colin Coward of the pro-gay Changing Attitude group said the
Church's refusal to encourage same-sex blessings was "deeply offensive".
But Revd Dr Giles Fraser, a former canon chancellor at St Paul's
Cathedral, said the report, Men and Women in Marriage, gave clergy a green light to conduct blessings for same-sex couples in all but name.
The Church of England, along with the Catholic Church, oppose the
Government's plans to legalise same-sex marriage, although the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has referred to gay couples he
knows as having a "stunning level of commitment" to each other.