Trying to preach sexual morality in Britain has become “like arguing
with an alcoholic” because of the angry reaction in the face of reason,
an English bishop said.
“After a while, they won’t argue with you on grounds of reason, they
just become furious and respond that way,” Bishop Philip Egan of
Portsmouth told Catholic News Service Jan. 11. “There is something in
our culture increasingly like that.”
Two days earlier, Dame Louise Casey, a senior government adviser on
integration, told politicians that U.K. Catholic schools should not
teach same-sex marriage as wrong.
In oral evidence to the communities committee of the House of
Commons, Casey said religious extremism was a continuing problem in some
British schools.
“It is not OK for Catholic schools to be homophobic and anti-gay
marriage,” added Casey, dubbed the “integration czar” by the British
media after she was appointed director general of a team commissioned by
the government to investigate opportunity and integration.
“I have a problem with the expression of religious conservatism
because I think often it can be anti-equalities,” she said in remarks
reported by the London-based Daily Mail newspaper.
Bishop Egan said any attempt to stop Catholic schools from teaching
the faith would be worthy of the pages of “1984,” the George Orwell
novel that introduced the term “thought crime” into the English
language. He said it was increasingly difficult to engage in reasonable
discussion and argument over anything to do with sexuality.
The Catholic Church must develop new apologetics to address such
intolerance, he said, and would also benefit internationally from a
papal or magisterial document on anthropology to counter emerging
ideologies about the person.
The Catholic Education Service, an agency of the Bishops’ Conference
of England and Wales, said in a Jan. 11 statement to CNS that Catholic
schools in Britain were not guilty of homophobia.
“Catholic education focuses around the formation of the whole person,
and all Catholic schools must be a safe, open and tolerant environment
for all pupils,” the statement said.
“As such, we expect all Catholic schools to have a zero tolerance approach to homophobic bullying,” it said.
Casey gave her evidence to Parliament a month after she published a major review on social integration in Britain.
Her report proposed that migrants should swear an “oath of
integration with British values and society” before they become British
citizens.
It recommended that children should be taught British values of
tolerance, democracy and respect in schools and that all public office
holders swear an “oath of integration enshrining British values.”
In comments to CNS Jan. 11, Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury said Britain’s Christian heritage shaped the country’s values.
“These values would be undermined if an ‘equalities agenda’ in
schools became the vehicle for an increasing intolerance of Christian
teaching,” Bishop Davies said.
He added: “Strangely, it is the historic teachings of Christianity
and the Christian vision of marriage which might be in need of
toleration.”
Catholic lawyer Neil Addison, director of the Thomas More Legal
Centre in Liverpool, told CNS in a Jan. 10 telephone interview that
British values required citizens to obey laws and not necessarily agree
with them.
The danger of using oaths to make people agree with a law, he said,
lay in turning “law-abiding citizens into potential criminals,”
representing a “threat to the idea that people can have differences of
opinion.”
“A healthy society should accept differences of opinion,” Addison said.
Should Catholic schools be forbidden to teach the faith in areas of
sexuality then “the church would have to question whether it was worth”
funding such institutions, Addison said.
Same-sex marriage was legalized in the U.K. by the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013, which came into force a year later.