Do not condemn your children for their sexual orientation, Pope Francis tells parents

Francis says parents of gay children should give them support, not condemnation, in unscripted comments during his weekly audience.

Pope Francis during the vespers in the Roman Basilica of Saint Paul.

Pope Francis during the vespers in the Roman Basilica of Saint Paul. Source: IPA/Sipa USA

Parents of gay children should not condemn them but offer them support, Pope Francis said.

He spoke in unscripted comments at his weekly audience in reference to difficulties that parents could face in raising offspring.

Those issues included "parents who see different sexual orientations in their children and how to handle this, how to accompany their children, and not hide behind an attitude of condemnation", Francis said on Wednesday.

He has previously said LGBTIQ+ people have a right to be accepted by their families as children and siblings.
He has also said that while the church could not accept same-sex marriage, it can support civil union laws aimed at giving partners joint rights in areas of pensions, health care and inheritance issues.

Last year, the Vatican's doctrinal office issued a document saying that Catholic priests cannot bless same-sex unions, a ruling that greatly disappointed LGBTIQ+ Catholics.

In some countries, such as the United States and Germany, parishes and ministers had begun blessing same-sex unions in lieu of marriage, and there have been calls for bishops to de facto institutionalise these.
Conservatives in the 1.3 billion-member Church have said the Pope, who has sent notes of appreciation to priests and nuns who minister to LGBTIQ+ Catholics, is giving mixed signals on homosexuality, confusing some of the faithful.

Last month, a Vatican department apologised for "causing pain to the entire LGBTQ community" by removing from its website a link to resource material from a Catholic gay rights advocacy group in preparation for a Vatican meeting in 2023 on the Church's future direction.

The Church teaches that LGBTIQ+ people should be treated with respect and that, while same-sex acts are sinful, same-sex tendencies are not.

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2 min read
Published 27 January 2022 7:47am
Updated 23 February 2022 3:03pm
Source: Reuters, SBS



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