The 75-year-old Maguire said it was his duty to help people in need,
including homosexual couples and would perform such a ceremony – but not
in a church.
He realised Catholic leaders would not want a gay ceremony
in a Catholic Church so he would arrange a private event.
Australian Marriage Equality national secretary Peter Furness said it
was encouraging that a Catholic priest should speak publicly about the
issue.
"There are many priests who support and want the right to marry same
sex couples," Furness said, adding that a number of religious leaders
made submissions to a 2009 Senate inquiry advocating gay marriage, but
were not willing to go public with their views.
"The Australian Christian Lobby would have us think that there is one viewpoint from the church, but there’s not," Furness said.
The media-savvy Maguire later stressed on his blog and on Twitter
that whatever his opinion was: “I will not do gay weddings. I cannot do
gay weddings. The H/S headliner is wrong.”
Maguire said
in the interview he has no personal view on gay civil unions but
stressed he can’t break the law of either state or church.
“However, if the law changed, then I would be the first to perform such a ceremony,” he said.
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