Make Text Larger Make Text Smaller Email this Article to a Friend Print this Article

Marriage not realm of MPs, says Perth archbishop

Published: October 07, 2012

Perth's recently installed Catholic Archbishop has weighed into the same-sex marriage debate for the first time, saying politicians who attempt to change the law to have it recognised are misusing their power, reports Yahoo7.

Archbishop Timothy Costelloe, writing in Catholic newspaper The Record, said governments did not have the right to "dismantle" the institution of marriage because they had not created it.

"Marriage is perhaps the oldest human institution we know of," he said. "It certainly pre-existed modern Australia and its parliamentary system and, indeed, pre-existed all parliaments.

"This essential link between marriage and the family, and the right of children to be raised by their mother and father in a loving and stable family, are the basis for the state's role in regulating marriage.

"It follows that any attempt to redefine marriage in such a way as to sever the link between the love of the partners in the marriage and the rights and needs of their children is a misuse of our state's power.

"Our government did not create the institution of marriage and they should not seek to dismantle it by altering its fundamental character."

Archbishop Costelloe, who succeeded Barry Hickey this year, had previously refused to be drawn publicly into the same-sex marriage debate.

Archbishop Costelloe also took aim at critics of same-sex marriage opponents, saying accusations of homophobia were unfair because they were premised on the idea marriage should be open to anyone, which he said was wrong.

FULL STORY Marriage not realm of MPs, says new archbishop (Yahoo7)

 

Response to articles is welcome. Simply follow the prompts to post your comment. No posting of more than 250 words will be published. While critical comment on stories and issues is welcomed, postings that descend to personal attacks on or impugn the integrity of other commentators will be blocked. Please use your own name, or initials, eg John Brown, or JB, or JAB, or Johnny. You are also required to add your location - as in, Sunshine, Victoria. Please provide your email address in the line supplied, followed by your contact phone number. These are requested for identification purposes only and will not be published. If you have any problems, please email news@cathnews.com


 


Recent Comments

  1. Use of such inflammatory words as dismantle is not helpful, and reveal an emptiness of argument from those that wield them.
    What is the purpose of using language that does nothing more than obscure, and also instills fear and loathing?
    Marriage is not being dismantled. In fact the very opposite.
    If the archbishop is sincere in taking anything more than a merely cursory glance at the history of marriage, he would see that marriage has in fact undergone many, many changes. Even Vatican 2 altered the emphasis of marriage from that intended to procreate (with actual love a neglected aspect) to a focus upon the love and mutuality of those being married.
    This is not necessarily a legitimation of same sex marriage, rather simply showing the radical change that our understanding of marriage has undergone and nevertheless flourished.
    People still marry. They want to, despite it not being that same institution that it was a century ago, or the one before that, and before that.
    Divorce laws too have not in fact shaken marriage.
    We marry, but might not be condemned to loveless and violent contexts as we once were.
    If we focussed more on listening deeply to the Gospel (in which marriage is hardly a focus) and less to words of fear and emptiness, then we might all come to appreciate the integrity of truly loving relationships - not just those that conform to notions of what should be.

  2. Well said Archbishop Costelloe!
    Marriage, the union of the two genders in our nature, provides the community with stability and continuity just as gravity and time does for our physical world. It is a phenomenon as natural as the other two.
    One keeps society going; the other two keeps our world going.
    Take away one from the equation and we can be sure that catastrophe will follow. It was tried in Noah's time.

  3. We are in deeply and desperately muddied waters when we assert basic social realities to be other than what they are and proceed to invoke distorted egalitarian rhetoric to legitimise them.
    Well said, Archbishop Costelloe.

  4. Mark: Marriage was never so variegated as you make it out to be. Overwhelmingly in history it has been regarded and persisted as a union of male and female, and has been inherently connected across durable cultures with the natural procreation and upbringing of children.
    Vatican II nowhere relegates procreation to a secondary status as you suggest it does, and the Council maintains the traditional understanding of marriage between a man and woman.
    Moreover, marriage is a very important metaphor and reality throughout the Old and New Testament, especially in representing covenant fidelity.

Bookmark and Share

More from this section

  1. Evangelisation needs women who are 'proud' to be Catholic

    New evangelisation will never be possible without women who are proud and happy to belong to the Catholic Church, the president of the Belgian bishops' conference told the Synod of Bishops, reports the Catholic News Service.

  2. Pope Benedict opens Year of Faith

    Pope Benedict XVI opened the Year of Faith yesterday at a Mass in St Peter’s Square attended by 14 surviving Fathers of the Second Vatican Council, reports the Catholic Herald.

  3. Philippines bishop urges rejection of pro-mine candidates

    A bishop in Mindanao, Philippines, has called on the faithful not to vote for politicians who back mining in next year’s mid-term elections, reports Ucanews.

  4. CatholicCare's jobs role for mentally ill to be expanded

    CatholicCare’s program that includes finding jobs for people with mental health problems is expanding its role in Sydney, reports The Catholic Weekly 

  5. Hospitallers hold first international meeting in Australia

    One of the Church’s oldest lay religious orders, the 900-year-old Sovereign Military Order of Malta, has for the first time held an international meeting in Australia, reports The Catholic Weekly.

Church Resources provides a range of services for the Church and not-for-profit sector, including aggregating buying power for a wide range of products and services used by health, welfare, aged care, education and parish organisations. More »

Mass streamed live daily

From Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral, Waitara, in the Broken Bay Diocese.
Weekdays live at 9.30am
Saturdays live 9.30am (followed by Adoration and Benediction)
Sundays live 9.30am
Click on this link at the appropriate time to connect.

Subscribe

To receive headlines from our faith-based news services, please subscribe below.

Email address

Newsletter


 

News Feed

Subscribe to the CathNews RSS feed to get the daily edition automatically delivered to you.
Subscribe to Faith Project RSS.