Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Apostasy: Poll finds majority of Australian "Catholics" back same-sex marriage

Apostasy: Poll finds majority of Australian "Catholics" back same-sex marriage
Hate to break the news to you but these people arent Catholic!
Archbishop Denis Hart of Melbourne, Australia, wants the Catholic voice to be heard in an upcoming referendum on legalizing same-sex marriage, but a new poll suggests Australian Catholics are not all saying the same thing. (Credit: Stock image.)
When Australians start receiving ballots in the mail in November for a postal plebiscite on the legalization of same-sex marriage, a new poll suggests it could draw as much as two-thirds support from the country's five million Catholics. That's despite the fact that Australian bishops have called on people to vote no, and one bishop recently warned that Church employees who enter into a same-sex marriage could be fired.
 
Just days after the head of the Australian Catholic bishops’s conference said that employees of Catholic institutions could be fired for entering same-sex marriages, a new poll shows that a majority of Australian Catholics are in favor of legalizing those marriages.
In November, Australia will hold a postal plebiscite that will ask citizens whether same-sex marriage should be legalized in the country.
Unlike a referendum, where the citizens’ vote often changes the law or at least cannot be easily dismissed, the plebiscite is only a sampling of public opinion and is not legally binding.
The poll, commissioned by the “Equality” campaign, found that 66 percent of Australians support legalization overall, including 58 percent of people of faith. That number, however, rises to two-thirds of Catholics in support of same-sex marriage.
Strikingly, Catholic support was roughly the same as among followers of non-Christian religions, and higher than other Christian groups such as Anglicans, the Uniting Church and the Church of England. However, it’s not entirely clear how wide the gap actually was since the poll comes with an eight percent margin of error within each specific category.
The overall results echoed a survey by the firm of Crosby/Textor in 2014, which also found two thirds of Catholics backed same-sex marriage, and put the overall level of support at 72 percent.
In a recent interview, the campaign’s executive director, Tiernan Brady, argued that this plebiscite is limited to the question of civil marriage.
“Allowing lesbian and gay couples to have access to civil marriage will not interfere in any way with any religious sacrament, and nor should it,” he said.
There are five million Catholics in Australia, and recently Archbishop Denis Hart of Melbourne issued a warning that Catholic employees would be expected to live according to teaching, regardless of the outcome of the vote.
“Our teachers, our parish employees are expected totally to uphold the Catholic faith and what we believe about marriage. People have to see in words and in example that our teaching of marriage is underlined,” he said.
A pamphlet published by the Australian Bishops’ Conference earlier this month argues that insisting that marriage is a relationship between a man and a woman is “not a criticism of other kinds of relationships.
“The recognition that marriage is between a man and a woman is not the assertion of bigotry, religious dogma or irrational tradition, but a recognition of human ecology,” they said.
Monica Doumit, spokeswoman for the “Coalition for Marriage,” said despite the poll results, people of faith will “continue to be concerned” about the implications of same-sex marriage for religious freedom in Australia.
“This is about more than the narrow protections offered to professional clergy,” she told the Sydney Morning Herald. Rather, she said, it’s about the ability for religious people to express their view on marriage without fear of intimidation.