Organisers behind the Manhattan Declaration, an ecumenical document
that upholds the traditional understanding of marriage, among other
things, are urging Apple to restore its iPhone app.
The Manhattan Declaration app was reportedly pulled from the App
Store some time over the Thanksgiving holiday after some denounced it as
anti-gay.
"We are waiting on an explanation from Steve Jobs as to why our app
was pulled," the conservative group stated on their Facebook page
Tuesday. The group faxed a letter to Jobs on Monday.
The app was initially accepted by Apple and rated as a 4+, which indicated that it contained "no objectionable material".
But opponents of the Manhattan Declaration started a petition on
Change.org demanding that Apple remove the "anti-gay, anti-choice"
application.
"Want to join the hate fest? There's an app for that!" the petition
reads.
"Applications that support hate and division have no place in the
iTunes Store. Let's send a strong message to Apple that supporting
homophobia and efforts to restrict choice is bad business."
More than 7,700 signatures were added to the petition.
The Manhattan Declaration was unveiled last November, outlining
principles that uphold the sanctity of life, the historic understanding
of marriage, and religious liberty.
It was drafted by Dr Timothy George of Samford University,
evangelical leader Chuck Colson, and Dr Robert George of Princeton
University who were concerned about growing efforts to marginalise the
Christian voice in the public square.
They drafted the document to
affirm fundamental truths and to encourage Christians to be
uncompromising in their faith.
The document has been endorsed by prominent evangelical, Orthodox and
Catholic leaders and so far nearly half a million signatures have been
added to it.
An Apple spokeswoman told CNET that the app was removed "because it
violates our developer guidelines by being offensive to large groups of
people".
Those behind the Manhattan Declaration rejected the call that the document is homophobic or anti-anything.
"We emphasise with great sincerity that 'disagreement' is not
'gay-bashing'. Anyone who takes the time to read the Manhattan
Declaration can see that the language used to defend traditional
marriage, the sanctity of human life, and religious liberty is civil,
non-inflammatory, and respectful.
"The Manhattan Declaration clearly calls its signers to reject
'disdainful condemnation' of those who disagree and declares that all
people are worthy of respect, because all are loved by God."
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