Spirituality Life
HOMOSEXUALITY: Pope Francis, in Shift for Church, Supports Lesbians, Homosexuals, Same-Sex Marriage

- /home/tracungz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 27
https://i0.wp.com/trackingtimes.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/IMG_20201022_213508.jpg?resize=1000%2C600&ssl=1&description=HOMOSEXUALITY: Pope Francis, in Shift for Church, Supports Lesbians, Homosexuals, Same-Sex Marriage', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
- Share
- Tweet /home/tracungz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 72
https://i0.wp.com/trackingtimes.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/IMG_20201022_213508.jpg?resize=1000%2C600&ssl=1&description=HOMOSEXUALITY: Pope Francis, in Shift for Church, Supports Lesbians, Homosexuals, Same-Sex Marriage', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
(New York Times) ROME — Pope Francis expressed support for same-sex marriage in remarks revealed in a documentary film that premiered on Wednesday Oct. 21, 2020, a significant break from his predecessors that staked out new ground for the church in its recognition of gay people.
The remarks, coming from the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, had the potential to shift debates about the legal status of same-sex couples in nations around the globe and unsettle bishops worried that the unions threaten what the church considers traditional marriage — between one man and one woman.
“What we have to create is a civil union law. That way they are legally covered,” Francis said in the documentary, “Francesco,” which debuted at the Rome Film Festival, reiterating his view that gay people are children of God. “I stood up for that.”
Many gay Catholics and their allies outside the church welcomed the pope’s remarks, though Francis’ opposition to gay marriage within the church remained absolute.

His conservative critics within the church hierarchy, and especially in the conservative wing of the church in the United States, who have for years accused him of diluting church doctrine, saw the remarks as a reversal of church teaching.
“The pope’s statement clearly contradicts what has been the longstanding teaching of the church about same-sex unions,” said Bishop Thomas Tobin of Providence, R.I., adding that the remarks needed to be clarified.
ALSO READ: Pope Francis wants our Lord’s prayer changed
There was little doubt that Francis, recorded on camera, made the statements during his pontificate. But there was confusion on Wednesday about when he had said them and to whom. The Vatican dismissed them as old news.
Francis has a tendency for making off-the-cuff public remarks, a trait that maddens both supporters and critics alike. The comments shown in the film are likely to generate exactly the sort of discussion the pope has repeatedly sought to foster on issues once considered forbidden in the church’s culture wars.
Francis had already drastically shifted the tone of the church on questions related to homosexuality, but he has done little on policy and not changed teaching for a church that sees its future growth in the Southern Hemisphere, where the clerical hierarchy is generally less tolerant of homosexuality.
The remark “in no way affects doctrine,” the Rev. Antonio Spadaro, a Jesuit priest and close ally of Francis, told the television channel of the Italian bishops conference on Wednesday evening.
The remarks in the documentary were in keeping with Francis’ general support for gay people, but were perhaps his most specific and prominent on the issue of civil unions, which even traditionally Catholic nations like Italy, Ireland and Argentina have permitted in recent years.
The director of the documentary, Evgeny Afineevsky, told The New York Times that Francis had made the remarks directly to him for the film. He did not reply to a question about when the remarks were made by the pope.
The Vatican and allies of Francis publicly cast doubt on the notion that the pope said the remarks to Mr. Afineevsky, asserting that the pontiff instead had made them to a Mexican journalist, Valentina Alazraki, in an interview in the Vatican in May 2019. Earlier on Wednesday, Ms. Alazraki had told The Times that she did not recall the pope making the comments to her.
In 2010, as Argentina was on the verge of approving gay marriage, Francis, then cardinal archbishop of Buenos Aires, supported the idea of civil unions for gay couples.
As pope in 2014, he told the Corriere della Sera, Italy’s largest newspaper, that nations legalizing civil unions did so mostly to give same-sex partners legal rights and health care benefits and that he couldn’t express a blanket position.
“You have to see the different cases and evaluate them in their variety,” he said then.
But Francis’ remarks in the documentary, explicitly supporting civil unions as pope and on camera, had the potential for much greater impact on the debate over the recognition of gay couples by the church.
“Homosexuals have a right to be a part of the family,” Francis says at another point in the documentary. “They’re children of God and have a right to a family. Nobody should be thrown out, or be made miserable because of it.”
Church teaching does not consider being gay a sin, but it does consider homosexual acts as “intrinsically disordered” and by extension holds that a homosexual orientation is “objectively disordered.”
Church doctrine also explicitly states that marriage is between a man and a woman, a teaching Francis unwaveringly supports.
Francis’ predecessors had also expressed their opposition, though, to civil unions.
In 2003, under the pontificate of Pope John Paul II, the church’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, its doctrinal watchdog then led by the future Pope Benedict XVI, issued “Considerations regarding proposals to give legal recognition to unions between homosexual persons.”
The document read, “The Church teaches that respect for homosexual persons cannot lead in any way to approval of homosexual behavior or to legal recognition of homosexual unions.”
Those views were not incorporated into church teaching, but bishops and some bishops conferences, which can be politically influential in certain countries, often opposed civil unions as a threat to the church’s view of traditional marriage.
Advocates within the church for civil unions seized on the pope’s remarks in the documentary as a major blow to those efforts and as a breakthrough in the church’s long-painful relationship with gay people.
“This is a major step forward in the church’s relationship with L.G.B.T.Q. people,” said the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest who has written a book on how to make gay Catholics feel more welcome in the Church, and who has met with the pope and served as a consultor for the Vatican’s Secretariat for Communications.
“It’s going to be harder for bishops to say that same-sex civil unions are a threat against marriage,” he said. “This is unmistakable support.”
Some of the pope’s most consistent critics inside the Catholic hierarchy agreed that the pope seemed to support civil unions, and they were vexed by it.
“The church cannot support the acceptance of objectively immoral relationships,” said Bishop Tobin of Providence.
But the pope’s remarks do not mean he has altered church teaching on the subject, and Francis has a track record of making encouraging remarks for gay people.
Starting in 2013, on a papal flight back from Brazil, his openness to gay people stunned the faithful inside the church, and secular fans outside of it, who were more accustomed to doctrinaire scoldings about homosexuality and gay marriage.
“Who am I to judge,” Francis famously answered when asked about a supposedly gay priest on that flight.
In his landmark 2016 document on the theme of family — titled “Amoris Laetitia,” or “The Joy of Love” — Francis rejected same-sex marriage, yet called on priests to be welcoming to people in nontraditional relationships, such as gay people, single parents and unmarried straight couples who live together.
He also once told Juan Carlos Cruz, a Chilean sexual abuse survivor and gay person whom he befriended, and who is featured in the documentary, that “God made you this way and loves you this way, and the pope loves you this way.”
But under Francis, the church also rejected what it cast as the notion that individuals can choose their gender, and he also told the leaders of seminaries that it was better not to admit gay candidates.
“If you have the slightest doubt, it’s better to refuse them,” he once said. “Better that they live the ministry or their consecrated life than that they live a double life.”
Critics pointed out that his church’s rules forced gay priests into a double life.
But those who support the church being more welcoming of gay couples were pleased by the pope’s remarks in the film.
“A pope sets the tone for the church and what he is doing is signaling to bishops and church leaders that a welcome for gay and lesbian couples has to go forward,” said Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, an organization of L.G.B.T. Catholics.
He noted that in the United States, the Supreme Court was poised to weigh whether Philadelphia may exclude a Catholic agency that does not work with same-sex couples from the city’s foster-care system. In Germany’s more liberal Catholic hierarchy, bishops had built momentum in their push to bless same-sex unions. Those deliberations and others, he hoped, would be influenced by the pope’s remarks.
“They will ripple through the church and legislatures and courts and the personal and spiritual lives of Catholics who have been waiting for years and decades for an affirming word from their church leader,” Mr. DeBernardo said. “The significance is immense.”
News & Politics
Catholic Bishops Across Nigeria Meets To Discuss State Of The Nation, Others
The Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria is the highest decision-making body of the Catholic Church in Nigeria and holds its plenary meeting twice in a year where matters of the Catholic faith and society are discussed…

About 180 Catholic Bishops drawn from various Archdioceses and Dioceses across the country, in the second plenary meeting of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) from August 22 to 30, 2024, will converge in Auchi, Edo State to discuss the state of the nation and other issues.
The Chairman of the Local Organising Committee, Rev. Fr. Peter Egielewa, disclosed this in a statement on Monday.
The 2024 Second Plenary of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria, is being hosted by the Catholic Diocese of Auchi, with Most Rev. (Dr) Gabriel Dunia as the Local Ordinary.
The Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria is the highest decision-making body of the Catholic Church in Nigeria and holds its plenary meeting twice in a year where matters of the Catholic faith and society are discussed and resolutions in the form of a communique are communicated to the Catholic faithful of Nigeria, leaders of the nation and Nigerians in general.
The meeting is coming on the heels of the recent hunger protest by the #EndBadGovernance group and the Take It Back Movement.
This is the first time the Bishops are meeting since the protests took place from August 1 to August 10, 2024, even as the protesters had vowed to continue on October 1.
READ ALSO: The Anglican Synod Lafia Points Out Factors Weakening Naira, Rising Inflation In Nigeria
Insecurity Also Fueling Hike In Food Stuff’s Prices In Nigeria
Biafra: Justice Binta Nyako Directs Tinubu-led Fed. Govt. And Nnamdi Kanu To Pursue Reconciliation
According to Daily Sun, the bishops will discuss political, economic and religious issues affecting the nation.
The Chairman, Local Organizing Committee, Rev. Fr. Peter Egielewa, in a statement made available to Daily Sun, said: “The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Auchi, Edo State, Most Rev. Dr Gabriel G. Dunia, together with the entire faithful of the Diocese are set to host the second plenary of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) for the year 2024 from 22nd to 30th August 2024.
“The meeting hopes to bring together, the over 80 Catholic Bishops to Auchi Diocese, also called Afenmai land, which is made up of the six local Government Areas of Edo North Senatorial District of Edo State.”
Egielewa further said the meeting is the first time the Catholic Diocese of Auchi will be hosting the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria in its 21-year history after its Erection as a Diocese on 22nd February 2003 with Bishop Dunia as its first and current Bishop.
Egielewa quoted Bishop Dunia to have said that “all catholic faithful of the Catholic Diocese of Auchi, at home and in the Diaspora, as well as friends and well-wishers of the Diocese are invited to take part in this epoch-making event in welcoming the fathers of the Catholic Church in Nigeria, particularly to the opening Mass at the Immaculate Conception Cathedral Auchi on Sunday 25th August 2024, and the general opening ceremonies at Uyi Grands Hall, Auchi.”
News & Politics
The Anglican Synod Lafia Points Out Factors Weakening Naira, Rising Inflation In Nigeria

The Anglican Synod organised by Lafia Diocese in Nasarawa State, has pointed out some factors that have been weakening the naira, causing persistent high inflation in the country.
This was revealed during its 3-day of the 9th synod of the Anglican Church of Nigeria, organised by the Diocese of Lafia, held at St. James Cathedral in Lafia, the capital of Nasarawa State.
A case was made of the major factors potentially threatening Nigerians’ survival, since the beginning of the administration of incumbent President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
The removal of fuel subsidies by the Tinubu-led federal government and the continued dollarization of the country’s economy by certain government’s policies, CBN and some Nigerians.
“These factors are not only contributing to the weakening of Nigeria’s currency, heightening inflation and the japa syndrome but are wholly responsible for the present economic crisis, characterized by hunger, suffering and its attendant consequences on Nigerians across the board” the Synod stated.
In a communique issued to newsmen at the end of the Synod and signed by Godwin Adeyi Robinson, the Anglican Bishop of Lafia Diocese, said being the most populous democratic country in the African continent, Nigeria is still wandering around issues, that potentially posed a threat to Nigeria economy.
The Synod, therefore commended President Tinubu for the steps being taken in addressing the challenges eluding Nigeria and its citizens.
The communique reads in part: “The Synod commends the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Ahmed Bola Tinubu GCFR, for the efforts being made to tackle the many problems in Nigeria, including economic stability, security and social wellbeing of Nigeria, as the most populous democratic country in Africa.
“The Synod observes that the removal of fuel subsidy leads to the present hardship in Nigeria, cascading into hyperinflation of goods and services, thereby impacting negatively across the board in Nigeria.
“The Synod appeals to Nigerians to stop the Dollarization of Nigeria economy which has potentially weakened the Naira and further heightened inflation and encourage the migration of young Nigerians out of the country, that is JAPA syndrome, with the devastating impact on brain drain of medical and academic personnel out of the country,” its added.
News & Politics
Hajj: More Than 1,300 Pilgrims Dies In Mecca, Saudi Arabia Amid Scorching Heatwaves

The 2024 Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia has become a religious observance and ritual of death fatalities with records above 1,300, as a result of extreme high temperatures at the holy sites.
Death fatalities are common in yearly Hajj pilgrimages in Madinah, Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi authorities announced on Sunday that the death fatalities of above 1,300 occured as the pilgrimage faithful faced extreme high temperatures.
The 15 Nigerian pilgrims who died during the spiritual exercise of pelting/stoning the Devil-one of the rites at Jamurat, including a female pilgrim who committed suicide, were pilgrims from Kwara, Lagos, Kano, Kaduna, Katsina, and Kebbi states.
About 17 other pilgrims from Nigeria suffered severe heatstroke at the holy sites as a result of the high temperature which triggered several casualties while four pilgrims with pregnancies were uncovered, with two suffering miscarriages.
Recall that on 25 Jun 2023 abou six Nigerian pilgrims participating in the 2023 Hajj in Saudi Arabia were confirmed dead by the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria.
On 30 July, 2019 The Chairman Medical Committee of the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) Dr Ibrahim Kana, confirmed the death of about five Nigerians during the year’s Hajj in Madinah Mecca.
ALSO READ: Nigeria: 2,545 security personnel and 17,886 civilians killed in four years-ACD
FALSE: The Guardian Nigeria Makes False Publication of Soldiers’ Killing In Aba
According to AP Reports, Saudi Health Minister Fahd bin Abdurrahman Al-Jalajel said that 83% of the 1,301 fatalities were unauthorized pilgrims who walked long distances in soaring temperatures to perform the Hajj rituals in and around the holy city of Mecca.
Speaking with the state-owned Al Ekhbariya TV, the minister said 95 pilgrims were being treated in hospitals, some of whom were airlifted for treatment in the capital, Riyadh. He said the identification process was delayed because there were no identification documents with many of the dead pilgrims.
He said the dead were buried in Mecca, without giving a breakdown.
The fatalities included more than 660 Egyptians. All but 31 of them were unauthorized pilgrims, according to two officials in Cairo. Egypt has revoked the licenses of 16 travel agencies that helped unauthorized pilgrims travel to Saudi Arabia, authorities said.
The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief journalists, said most of the dead were reported at the Emergency Complex in Mecca’s Al-Muaisem neighborhood. Egypt sent more than 50,000 authorized pilgrims to Saudi Arabia this year.
Saudi authorities cracked down on unauthorized pilgrims, expelling tens of thousands of people. But many, mostly Egyptians, managed to reach holy sites in and around Mecca, some on foot. Unlike authorized pilgrims, they had no hotels to return to to escape the scorching heat.
In a statement Saturday, Egypt’s government said the 16 travel agencies failed to provide adequate services for pilgrims. It said these agencies illegally facilitated the travel of pilgrims to Saudi Arabia using visas that don’t allow holders to travel to Mecca.
The government also said officials from the companies have been referred to the public prosecutor for investigation.According to the state-owned Al-Ahram daily, some travel agencies and Hajj trip operators sold Saudi tourist visas to Egyptian Hajj hopefuls, violating Saudi regulations which require exclusive visas for pilgrims. Those agencies left pilgrims in limbo in Mecca and the holy sites in scorching heat, the newspaper said.
The fatalities also included 165 pilgrims from Indonesia, 98 from India and dozens more from Jordan, Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria and Malaysia, according to an Associated Press tally. Two U.S. citizens were also reported dead.
The AP could not independently confirm the causes of death, but some countries like Jordan and Tunisia blamed the soaring heat. AP journalists saw pilgrims fainting from the scorching heat, especially on the second and third days of the Hajj. Some vomited and collapsed.
Historically, deaths are not uncommon at the Hajj, which has seen at times over 2 million people travel to Saudi Arabia for a five-day pilgrimage. The pilgrimage’s history has also seen deadly stampedes and epidemics.
But this year’s tally was unusually high, suggesting exceptional circumstances.
In 2015 a stampede in Mina killed over 2,400 pilgrims, the deadliest incident ever to strike the pilgrimage, according to an AP count. Saudi Arabia has never acknowledged the full toll of the stampede. A separate crane collapse at Mecca’s Grand Mosque earlier the same year killed 111.
The second-deadliest incident at the Hajj was a 1990 stampede that killed 1,426 people.During this year’s Hajj period, daily high temperatures ranged between 46 degrees Celsius (117 degrees Fahrenheit) and 49 degrees Celsius (120 degrees Fahrenheit) in Mecca and sacred sites in and around the city, according to the Saudi National Center for Meteorology. Some people fainted while trying to perform the symbolic stoning of the devil.
The Hajj, one of the five pillars of Islam, is one of the world’s largest religious gatherings. More than 1.83 million Muslims performed the Hajj in 2024, including more than 1.6 million from 22 countries, and around 222,000 Saudi citizens and residents, according to the Saudi Hajj authorities.
Saudi Arabia has spent billions of dollars on crowd control and safety measures for those attending the annual five-day pilgrimage, but the sheer number of participants makes it difficult to ensure their safety.
Climate change could make the risk even greater. A 2019 study by experts at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that even if the world succeeds in mitigating the worst effects of climate change, the Hajj would be held in temperatures exceeding an “extreme danger threshold” from 2047 to 2052, and from 2079 to 2086.Islam follows a lunar calendar, so the Hajj comes around 11 days earlier each year. By 2029, the Hajj will occur in April, and for several years after that it will fall in the winter, when temperatures are milder.
-
News & Politics5 years ago
$800m oil fraud: resign as Petroleum Minister – Frank tells Buhari, asks for probe
-
Finance & Business8 years ago
NEWS PAPER HEADLINES FOR TODAY THURSDAY 28 SEPT 2017
-
Biafra5 years ago
PROPHECY: Powerful Prophecies for Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and Chief John Nnia Nwodo by Pst. Maxwell Nnawuihe (Text & Video)
-
Biafra5 years ago
BREAKING: Dragon Flag Can’t Come Down, You Must Allow Our Brave Men To Do Their Job – Nnamdi Kanu
-
Finance & Business4 years ago
FUEL: PPPRA removes new petrol price post as NNPC insists no hike
-
Finance & Business7 years ago
Suspected Fulani militia kill two in fresh Taraba attacks
-
Biafra5 years ago
VIDEO: Powerful Prophecies for Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and Chief John Nnia Nwodo by Pastor Maxwell Nnawuihe
-
News & Politics6 years ago
A fatal accident along Benin/Auchi express way has claimed the lives of an entire family while traveling for Christmas.
Pingback: SAME-SEX: Pres. Joe Biden threatens financial, visa sanctions against Nigeria, others over anti-gay laws – Tracking Times