9 November, 2006

Vatican urges Israel to ban Jerusalem gay parade

A posição do Vaticano sobre a marcha do orgulho gay em Jerusalém foi notícia na Reuters:

    By Robin Pomeroy
    VATICAN CITY, Nov 8 (Reuters) - The Vatican has condemned a gay pride parade due to be held in Jerusalem on Friday as offensive to religious believers and urged Israeli authorities to stop it taking place.
    "It is with bitterness that we have learned that the day after tomorrow, Nov. 10, 2006, there is scheduled in Jerusalem a so-called ‘gay pride parade’," the Vatican said in a statement issued on Wednesday.
    In a letter to Israel’s Foreign Ministry, the Vatican urged authorities to withdraw permission for the parade which is expected to attract up to 8,000 people.
    "The Holy See has reiterated on many occasions that the right to freedom of expression, sanctioned by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, is subject to just limits, in particular when the exercise of this right would offend the religious sentiments of believers," the letter said.
    "It is clear that the gay parade scheduled to take place in Jerusalem will prove offensive to the great majority of Jews, Muslims and Christians, given the sacred character of the City of Jerusalem."
    Gay pride festivals have been held each year in Jerusalem since 2001, but this year’s, bigger and with international participation, has caused greater outrage than before.
    Ultra-Orthodox Jews, dressed in black suits and hats, have protested in the city, burning tyres and pelting the police with stones. Organisers say the parade will promote understanding, tolerance and open-mindedness.
    The Vatican has often criticised the rise of gay rights as a potential threat to the traditional model of the family.
    In June, it said gay marriage, abortion, lesbians wanting to bear children and a host of other practices it saw as threats to the traditional family, were signs of "the eclipse of God".

Fonte: REUTERS

5 November, 2006

Uma mulher à frente da Igreja Episcopal

Perante uma assembleia de mais de 3.000 fieis, a catedral de Washington foi ontem palco de um acontecimento histórico no mundo cristão: a entrada em funções da primeira mulher - Katharine Jefferts Schori - a ocupar o cargo de arcebispo da Igreja Episcopal, um ramo dos anglicanos, com cerca de 2,5 milhões de membros, presente nos Estados Unidos da América.

Katharine Jefferts Schori, de 52 anos, foi ordenada aos 40, é casada e tem uma filha. Era, até agora, bispo de Nevada. Os sinais de divisão que se fazem sentir nesta Igreja por uma série de decisões recentes pode abservar-se no facto de a sua eleição para a presidência da Convenção Geral Episcopaliana ter acontecido por escassa margem: 95 votos a favor e 93 contra. (Crédito da foto: Reuters)