The New York legislature’s passage of a gay “marriage” bill will
undermine families and will enable efforts to sanction those who preach
the true nature of marriage, the state’s Catholic bishops said June 24.
The bishops of New York said they were “deeply disappointed and
troubled” by the legislature’s passage of the bill on June 24 by a 33-29
vote.
“We worry that both marriage and the family will be undermined by
this tragic presumption of government in passing this legislation that
attempts to redefine these cornerstones of civilization,” they said.
The definition of marriage “cannot change,” they explained, “though
we realize that our beliefs about the nature of marriage will continue
to be ridiculed, and that some will even now attempt to enact government
sanctions against churches and religious organizations that preach
these timeless truths.”
The bishops said society must regain “a true understanding of the
meaning and place of marriage, as revealed by God, grounded in nature,
and respected by America’s foundational principles.”
One Democratic senator opposed the bill and four Republicans voted
for it. Similar legislation had failed in a 2009 vote by a vote of
38-24.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Catholic and a Democrat, signed the bill into
law on Friday. He said the state has “finally torn down the barrier that
has prevented same-sex couples from exercising the freedom to marry and
from receiving the fundamental protections that so many couples and
families take for granted.”
The Republican-controlled Senate could have prevented the vote but
chose not to. Several wealthy Republican donors had also funded a
campaign to pass the legislation.
In a separate statement, Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn said
Gov. Cuomo and the state legislature have “deconstructed the most
important institution in human history.”
He said Gov. Cuomo “has opened a new front in the culture wars that are tearing at the fabric of our nation.”
“Republicans and Democrats equally share responsibility for this
ruinous legislation and we as Catholics should hold all accountable for
their actions,” he added.
In protest of the decision and the “corrupt political process in New York State,” Bishop DiMarzio said he has asked all Catholic schools to refuse any distinction or honors granted by the governor or any member of the legislature who voted to support the legislation.
In protest of the decision and the “corrupt political process in New York State,” Bishop DiMarzio said he has asked all Catholic schools to refuse any distinction or honors granted by the governor or any member of the legislature who voted to support the legislation.
He has also asked all pastors and school
principals not to invite any state legislator to speak or be present at
any parish or school celebration.
The bishop said that the governor and the legislature have “demonized
people of faith” and “identified them as bigots and prejudiced.”
“It is mystifying that this bill would be passed on the last day of an extended session under the cover of darkness,” he said.
“That there was virtually no public debate on the issue and that the
entire matter was concluded in just over thirty-minutes late on a Friday
evening is disgraceful,” the bishop added in an editorial in the New
York Daily News.
An amendment to the gay “marriage” bill granted some religious
freedom protections to religious groups, but not to those working in
wedding-related industries.
New York Catholic Conference director Dennis Poust told EWTN News
June 15 that if the bill passed “there is very little that can be done”
since New York does not have a system of voter initiatives and referenda
like California and some other states.