Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Survey: Protestant clergy back gay rights, not marriage

By Cathy Lynn Grossman
USA TODAY
posted May 20, 2009

Most mainline Protestant clergy do not support legalizing gay marriage, even if they're not required to officiate at same-sex ceremonies.

It was the only point on which the majority did not support gay rights, according to a survey of clergy from the seven historic mainline Protestant denominations to which 18% of Americans belong.

The Clergy Voices Survey, conducted by Public Religion Research, is based on 2,658 responses from clergy from the United Methodist Church; Evangelical Lutheran Church of America; Episcopal Church; United Church of Christ, Presbyterian Church USA; American Baptist Church; and the Disciples of Christ.

It asked 60 questions on sexuality and the "the role of (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) people in the church and broader society" as well as theological questions on views on Bible. the rest

FAITH & REASON: Historian: Expect 'two centuries' to settle church-gay issues
NEW ENGLAND:
Same-sex proposals up in less religious states
U.S. RELIGIOUS IDENTITY:
How it's changed over 2 decades

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home