Church Uses Same-Sex Marriage Issue to Rally Catholics

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Church Uses Same-Sex Marriage Issue to Rally Catholics

Despite Spain’s decision to legalize same-sex marriage, the run-up to the parliamentary vote was frought with mass protests from its Catholic citizens. Other events in Poland and Italy show the increasing power the Roman Catholic Church holds over European politics.

From the rocky heights of the Pyrenees to the fertile plains of Poland, the Vatican has been flexing its political muscle over the past week. In Italy, Spain and Poland, the Roman Catholic Church has supported demonstrations to stop laws from being passed that contradict Catholic dogma.

These demonstrations are more than coincidences—they are a means for the Catholic Church to exert authority in Europe’s political realm.

After a 20-year hiatus in Spanish politics, the Catholic Church condemned an approval by the lower house of parliament of a bill that would legalize homosexual marriage and the adoption of children by homosexual couples. Parliament approved the law June 30 in spite of the fact that many of Spain’s citizens—90 percent of whom claim adherence to Catholicism—hoped it would fail.

Led by 20 Catholic bishops, including the archbishop of Madrid, hundreds of thousands of Spaniards took to the streets in protest the weekend of June 18 and 19. Government figures say 166,000 protested while organizers of the march claimed a participation of 1.5 to 2 million. This march was the third in three weeks.

The demonstration in Spain came at the same time that a march in Warsaw, Poland, took place to protest a homosexual parade that occurred the previous week.

“We are the home of Pope John Paul ii. There is no place for abnormality here,” said Robert Strak, the representative for the nationalist Polish Family League, an organization that provided most of the 800 protestors for the event (Deutsche Welle, June 19).

No doubt these demonstrations have been encouraged by the victory the Catholic Church recently scored in Italy. The Catholic Church, along with conservative politicians, called on voters to abstain from a referendum on June 16 to change Italy’s strict fertility laws. The boycott, endorsed by Pope Benedict xvi, was a success, causing voter turnout to fall well below the 50 percent needed to legalize the referendum.

A newly elected and ambitious pope has made it clear he intends to lead Europe back to its “Christian” roots. By uniting with conservative politicians, a church-state alliance will soon form, and once again the pope will have sway over secular governments. Backing protests is just a beginning.

Continue to watch the church involve itself more in the political affairs of Europe as it seeks to return Catholic dominance to the Continent.