The Lambeth Commission was appointed by the Archbishop of Canterbury and given a mandate to examine and report to him by 30 September 2004, in preparation for the ensuing meetings of the Primates and the Anglican Consultative Council, on the legal and theological implications flowing from the decisions of the Episcopal Church (USA) to appoint a priest in a committed same-sex relationship as one of its bishops, and of the Diocese of New Westminster to authorise services for use in connection with same-sex unions.
Implementing the dialogue
The Windsor Report said the process of Communion-wide dialogue on homosexuality, specified in Resolution 1.10 of the 1998 Lambeth Conference, should be implemented (¶146). The Secretary General of the Anglican Communion, the Revd Canon Kenneth Kearon, has now appointed the Revd Canon Philip Groves as the facilitator of the ‘Listening Process’ for the Anglican Communion. The task, as defined by the 1998 Lambeth Conference, is setting up ‘a means of monitoring the work done on the subject of human sexuality in the Communion’.
Relevant events
Relevant news items
Changing Attitude England has received a report from a Changing Attitude Nigeria of another violent attack perpetrated against three gay Nigerians. We received this report on the morning when Riazat Butt reports in The Guardian “An unheavenly silence on homophobia” at the Global Anglican Futures Conference.
Inclusive Church has published a paper by Revd Brian Lewis, a member of General Synod and of IC's Executive Committee on the law in relation to services after Civil Partnerships. The paper demonstrates that under the laws of the Church of England - especially Canon B5 - clergy have far greater liberty in this area than is commonly thought.
All Saints Church, Pasadena rector, J. Edwin Bacon, Jr., announced today that the church will treat equally all couples presenting themselves for the rite of marriage. The announcement followed a special meeting of the All Saints Church Vestry, which unanimously adopted a “Resolution on Marriage Equality” [below] in response to the May 15, 2008 ruling of the California Supreme Court.
A report on the web site of Anglican Mainstream claims the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office has announced that its embassies will now be collaborating with local homosexual activist organisations in other countries to promote acceptance of homosexuality overseas.
IDAHO 2008, the International Day Against Homophobia, announced on 16 May that a demonstration would be held outside Rochester Cathedral on Saturday 17 May from 1200-1300 hrs. against the Bishop of Rochester’s homophobia.
Dermot O’Callaghan made a speech to the General Synod of the Church of Ireland which took place in the Radisson SAS Hotel, Galway from Tuesday 13th to Thursday 15th May. In bis speech he attacked Changing Attitude for views expressed in a booklet on Sexual Ethics written by the Lesbian and Gay Clergy Consultation and published on their behalf by Changing Attitude.
Changing Attitude urges the GAFCON leadership team to state categorically that any Christian who threatens or attacks a person because they are lesbian or gay comes under the judgment of God and disobeys God’s law. We ask them to condemn those individual church members who are continuing to threaten Davis Mac-Iyalla and other Nigerian lesbian and gay leaders.
In response to reports of violence and threats towards Christians involved in the debate on human sexuality, the Archbishop of Canterbury issued a statement.
Holy Irrelevant? The Church and LGBT Affirmation. The Revd Colin Coward argues that of course LGBT people are a holy and relevant gift to the church.
Davis Mac-Iyalla, the Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria, Bobby Ikekhuame Egbele, leader of the CAN Group in Benin City, Nigeria, and the Revd Colin Coward, Director of Changing Attitude England, recently visited the seminary of St Nicholas at Cape Coast in Ghana and met final year students and the Principal, the Very Revd Victor Atta-Baffoe.
Integrity Uganda has written to the Mothers’ Union in Uganda, noting failure on the mothers’ side to have dialogue with their LGBTI children and failing to protect and advocate for them. The mothers are failing in their 2001-2010 commitment to achieve a culture of peace and non-violence for all children in the world. Integrity asks them to acknowledge the unique sexuality of their LGBTI children, embrace them with indiscriminate love and help them understand the process of reconciling their sexuality and spirituality.
Changing Attitude suggests that the total number of LGBT Anglicans world-wide could be at least 3.75 million. The figure is based on the probability that in every country, at least 5% of the population will come to identify themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgendered.
What the Archbishop has been unable to doin his Advent Letter is articulate the experience and views of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) members of the Anglican Communion. We are a minority but our numbers are not insignificant. If the Communion has 75 million members, at a conservative estimate there are likely to be 3.75 million LGBT people among them.
The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Revd Dr Rowan Williams, yesterday attended a meeting of the Clergy Consultation. Dr Williams presided and preached at a service of Holy Communion and later addressed the members present, responding to questions.
Bishop Michael Ingham wrote to all diocesan clergy following the announcement from Burlington, Ontario, by the Essentials Network of a formal separation from the Canadian Church.
There is only one possible outcome for the current crisis in the Anglican Communion - the full inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people in the church, in lay ministry, as priests and as bishops, in every Province.
Archbishop Akinola wants to maintain the way in which the church has corrupted the truth of the Gospel from its original meaning rather than seek to establish the genuine truth in its original meaning. Therefore he is himself guilty of the accusations that Martin Luther aimed at the church so long ago.
Changing Attitude Nigeria, after reading the response from the Episcopal Church House of Bishops, thanks them and welcomes their positive response to the commitment made by Lambeth Resolution 1.10 and repeated by the Primates of the Communion in 2005 and 2007 to listen to the experience of GLBT people in every Province.
There is good news in the House of Bishops’ response as well as some disappointment for LGBT Anglicans. The response will help unite the Communion and further progress towards the full inclusion of LGBT people.
A member of Changing Attitude Nigeria (CAN) journeyed to Uyo last weekend to investigate the reports of the offensive language reportedly used about LGBT people by the bishop in an address to the Diocesan Synod.
The news about the homophobic remarks made by Bishop Orama of Uyo continues to develop. It is now clear that the Church of Nigeria office in Abuja didn’t know how to respond to the report, nor how serious the bishop’s remarks would prove to be.
Changing Attitude Nigeria and England ask Bishop Martyn Minns and Archbishop Peter Akinola to issue a statement immediately repudiating Bishop Orama's comments, condemning them as utterly abhorrent.
Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria, commenting on the involvement of Bishop Minns in the Akinola letter, said: “We believe that large sums of money have been received by the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) from sources outside the country. When will Archbishop Akinola openly tell the world the sources the money is coming from to sponsor his frequent travels and the alternative Lambeth conference that he is planning in 2008?"
Changing Attitude is nor surprised by today’s revelation that Archbishop Peter Akinola’s letter to the Nigerian Synods was in fact mostly re-written by Bishop Martyn Minns. This confirms our suspicion that the agenda of Global South is to defeat any attempt to overcome prejudice against LGBT people and accept our full inclusion in the church. This agenda is driven by conservative Americans.
The Rt Revd Gene Robinson, Bishop of New Hampshire and patron of Changing Attitude, is interviewed by Michael Buerk for The Choice, to be broadcast next Tuesday, 28 August on Radio 4 at 9 a.m. He is to contract a Civil Partnership with Mark, his partner of 18 years, in June 2008.
The Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town, Dr Desmond Tutu, a patron of Changing Attitude, has asked all the Primates to put aside their differences in order to deal with the world’s troubles in an open letter sent last week to his successor as Primate of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, the Most Revd Njongonkulu Ndungane.
In an unprecedented show of boldness, the homosexual community in Uganda yesterday came out and addressed their maiden press conference, complaining about discrimination and demanding acceptance by the public.
The leader of the Changing Attitude group in Jos reports that 5 of the 18 gay men arrested at the party in Bauchi last week are members of the CAN group in Jos.
Changing Attitude Nigeria condemns the arrest of eighteen men who have been remanded in prison for alleged sodomy in northern Nigeria.
“It would not be right for the 2014 Commonwealth Games to be held in Nigeria, given the country’s appalling human rights record, including its systematic persecution of lesbian and gay Nigerians,” said Davis Mac-Iyalla, founder and leader of the gay Christian group, Changing Attitude Nigeria.
The judgement issued against the Diocese of Hereford for discriminatoin against Mr John Reaney in not appointing him to the post of Youth Officer is a small but significant step forward for the movement towards the full inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) people in the Church of England.
Canon Akintunde Popoola, Director of Communications for the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) has repeated the allegations of fraud against Davis Mac-Iyalla in a comment posted on 7 July 2007 on the web site TitusOneNine. Once again we ask Archbishop Peter Akinola and bishop Martyn Minns to instruct Canon Tunde to stop publishing false allegations against Davis Mac-Iyalla, allegations which have provoked threats to kill Davis.
Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria met the Bishop of Jos, the Rt Revd Benjamin Kwarshie at an Anglican Mainstream meeting at York General Synod meeting.
Canon Popoola, Director of Communication for the Church of Nigeria has repeated false allegations against Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria. In an open letter to Archbishop Peter Akinola and Bishop Martyn Minns, Colin Coward and Davis Mac-Iyalla have requested them to ask Canon AkinTunde to stop publishing false allegations against Davis, allegations which have led to death threats against him.
Nigerian Anglican Davis Mac-Iyalla, founder of his country's only gay-rights organization, Changing Attitude Nigeria, spoke to the Executive Council of the Epsicopal Church on 13 June 2007
Davis Mac-Iyalla, director of Changing Attitude Nigeria arrives in London on 5 July directly from speaking and preaching at events across the USA. His first engagement will be to attend the General Synod of the Church of England. In York he will talk at a fringe meeting at General Synod on 8 July and meet bishops and members of Synod. Davis Mac-Iyalla’s visit to the UK and USA is a contribution to the listening process to which the Windsor Report committed the Anglican Communion.
Anglican bishops from Latin America and the Caribbean, meeting in San José, Costa Rica, May 18-22, released a declaration reaffirming their call for the Anglican Communion "to preserve its participative nature, diverse, ample and inclusive," characteristics they say are essential to Anglicanism.
Changing Attitude England is a founder-member of InclusiveChurch and is committed to the goals and vision of InclusiveChurch. We take very seriously the challenges that have been extended to InclusiveChurch. We are working for a fully inclusive church, for LGBT people, our friends and families, for conservative evangelicals and everyone who has attacked and vilified us because of our sexuality. We do not believe there is any alternative to this radical challenge to the church, a challenge which took our Lord Jesus Christ to the cross.
The meeting this weekend, 11 to 13 May 2007 in Lome, Togo of 35 lesbian and gay leaders from West African Christian groups was a moment of history for LGBT Christians in Africa. The leaders represented groups from Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Mali, Senegal and Togo met with leaders from Changing Attitude Nigeria.
Leaders from the 9 Diocesan Groups in Nigeria have gathered in a hotel in Togo, West Africa, where they have been joined by the Revd Colin Coward, Director of Changing Attitude England and the Revd Stephen Coles, Vicar of St Thomas, Finsbury Park and member of the General Synod of the Church of England.
Changing Attitude Nigeria receives with gladness the news that Dr Good Luck Jonathan is the Vice-President elect of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and cautions him not to push for the reintroduction of the bill against same-sex marriages, relationships and organisations that was lost in the last Assembly.
The Bishop of Hereford has told an employment tribunal in Cardiff he was complying with Church teachings when he decided not to give John Reaney, 41, from Llandudno, the job as a youth worker. It was his lifestyle, specifically that he was a sexually active man and not married that cost him the job
Changing Attitude welcomes the Archbishop of Canterbury's recent statements in which he has affirmed both the need to respect the human dignity of lesbian and gay people and also his concern for the proper liberties of homosexual people.
Because of the continuing uncertainty, Changing Attitude Nigeria will not celebrate the defeat of the Same-Sex Marriage Bill publicly until after May 29 but we are now quietly confident and feeling more happy that is has been lost.
Changing Attitude welcomes the work undertaken by Canon Phil Groves to produce a preliminary report on what the Communion has done to honour its commitment to listen to the experience of gay and lesbian people. Our aim is clear. We want a proper process of listening to the experience of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people in every province of the Communion.
Changing Attitude England welcomes the statement and resolutions issued by the House of Bishops of The Episcopal Church at their recent meeting. We stand with our brothers and sisters in Integrity who have worked tirelessly for the removal of all discrimination against LGBT people at every level of the life of The Episcopal Church and for the authorisation of a rite of blessing for lesbian and gay relationships.
Changing Attitude Nigeria urges world opinion to urgently condemn further progress on Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act 2006 in the Nigerian House of Representatives. It will make criminals of LGBT people simply for being who they are and we urge all Provinces and Primates of the Anglican Communion to support international action in condemnation of this dangerous and inhuman bill.
Changing Attitude England and Nigeria challenge the Primate of All Nigeria, the Most Revd Peter Akinola, and the CANA bishop in the USA, the Rt Revd Martyn Minns, to issue a statement denouncing church members who are threatening violence against Davis Mac-Iyall and ask both the Archbishop and Bishop to unreservedly demand protection for Mr Mac-Iyalla.
Inclusive Church and Changing Attitude give a cautious welcome to the communiqué issued today by the Primates of the Anglican Communion meeting in Dar Es Salaam. We commend the work that the primates have done to further the mission of the church and to strengthen the bonds of the Anglican Communion. In particular we value the progress achieved on the listening process and the Anglican Covenant.
This evening a meeting took place in one of the first floor conference rooms at the hotel. The dozen-plus people present included Archbishop Peter Akinola, Archbishop Nicholas Oko, Bishop Martyn Minns and his wife Angela (the only woman present), Bishop Robert Duncan and Chris Sugden. It might have been an extended prayer meeting, and it might, of course, have been a strategy meeting attended by a minority of Global South secessionist bishops and their confederates.
The Primates haven’t yet reached a definite conclusion on the Epsicopal Church's response to the Windsor Report, though they had engaged in discussion, debate and an exchange of views. We were told they have real tensions which have still to be worked through. There are clearly strong and desperately held differences between them.
This lunch time, Archbishop Peter Akinola has been observed in the foyer of the White Sands hotel, going upstairs accompanied by Archbishop Oko of the Province of Bandel, Nigeria who was acting as his ADC, Angela Minns and a security guard. There is speculation as to why he has left the company of the other Primates (he is the only Primate to be sighted this lunch time) and what might be happening upstairs. Is a Global South strategy meeting taking place? Are they responding to developments inside the Primates meeting this morning? Inevitably, media speculation is that the Global South strategists are hatching a new plot.
In the realm of the Primates meeting, everyone is still waiting for something to happen. As a result, Davis became the main focus of interest for the media for most of yesterday, continuing this morning.
This afternoon, following the first press briefing prior to the official beginning of the Primates meeting on Thursday 15 February, Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria and Archbishop Peter Akinola, Primate of All Nigeria, met for the first time.
I need to begin with an apology to my brothers David Anderson and Chris Sugden. The discomfort that has occurred between Bishop Martyn Minns, David Anderson, Chris Sugden and myself is not surprising. This whole Primates meeting is about personal relationships being abused and damaged.
Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of CAN, appeals to the Primates in the name of God to add their voices to others who have been calling on the Nigerian Government to stop progress on the bill outlawing LGBT relationships and meetings and withdraw it immediately.
The Revd Colin Coward, Director of Changing Attitude England, Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria and the Revd Caro Denton Hall from Integrity USA arrived at the White Sands Hotel, Jangani Beach, Tanzania on Monday, not with difficulty and minor drama.
Changing Attitude England is disappointed by the message communicated to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) members of our society and the Church of England in the letter to the Prime Minister sent by the Archbishops of Canterbury and York.
What I experience now as a lesbian priest who is struggling to understand and give voice to the issues surrounding homosexuality in the Church of England, is a silencing of my voice and a fragmentation in the movement for change within the Church.
Davis Mac-Iyalla, Director of Changing Attitude Nigeria, received a hand-written letter delivered on 9 January 2006 to the location where he is resident which concludes with the threat to bathe Davis Mac-Iyalla with acid unless he repents.
Changing Attitude London is delighted to be welcoming Ben Summerskill, Chief Executive of Stonewall, and Kathy Galloway, Leader of the Iona Community, as speakers at their conference ‘Caught in the Crossfire’ this Saturday.
Changing Attitude interprets the conservative evangelical Covenant as a further step in the attempt to exclude lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Anglicans who fall in love and commit themselves to faithful, intimate relationship, from the life and ministry of the church.
A survey undertaken by Changing Attitude since the Civil Partnership Act became law on December 21st 2005 has found that 87 couples - 174 lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) members of the Church of England, lay and ordained – have registered their civil partnership. Changing Attitude invites the House of Bishops on this first anniversary of the Civil Partnership Act to dialogue with us and our supporters, to formulate a policy which recognises God’s call to faithful, loving LGBT Anglicans who have, or who wish to, register their partnership.
A partnered gay man is one of three people being ordained deacon on Saturday 4 November in St Paul's Cathedral, Dunedin by the Bishop of Dunedin, the Rt Rev George Connor
According to the reports from Changing Attitude Nigeria (CAN) members, Davis MacIyalla, the Director of CAN, continues to give serious concern to the hierarchy of the Anglican Church.
Changing Attitude Nigeria appeals to everyone who loves our Anglican Communion and supports the Windsor process and the full inclusion of LGBT Anglicans in every Province to help meet our goal of gathering 2,000 members at a second General Meeting in Lagos.
While many parts of the church are engaged in discussion about the impact of the Kigali communiqué published at the conclusion of the Global South meeting and The Road to Windsor document on the future of the Anglican Communion, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Anglicans have been feeling deep anxiety and fear.
Reports from Changing Attitude Nigeria groups in Abuja and Port Harcourt indicate that Archbishop Peter Akinola continues to be deeply worried about CAN and its growing presence in dioceses across Nigeria.
The Deanery Synod of the Nordic and Baltic Countries have expressed their concern at the events at St Saviour's church Riga on 22nd July, support for the Revd Julius Catilis and condemnation of the hostility shown to homosexual people
Tony Fitchett explains why he asked the General Synod of New Zealand to uphold the listening process
Following a recent meeting of the Synod of Bishops of the Church of the Province of Southern Africa, Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndungane spoke about the Anglican Church's position on the Constitutional Court ruling on same-sex marriage and said the Anglican Church was on a "journey" to get to grips with the issue of same-sex partnerships being recognised by law.
Changing Attitude Nigeria is proud to celebrate the first anniversary of our founding. In the first year, we have many achievements to be proud of, including our impact on the life of the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, which had previously denied that lesbian and gay people are members of the church.
The Edo state branch of Changing Attitude Nigeria started a few months ago after the first General Meeting in Abuja. Members share their experiences at every meeting and tell their stories because they have all had different bad experiences.
Davis MacIyalla, director of Changing Attitude Nigeria (CAN) gave a talk about his work and the role of CAN in the development of the West African LGBT Christian community at the first Gay Pride organised in Togo.
Changing Attitude welcomes the nomination of a partnered gay candidate to be Bishop of Newark in the US Episcopal Church, and points out that the Episcopal Church and the Church of England both knowingly appoint gay bishops and clergy.
While conservative Americans are trying to provoke a split in the Anglican Communion, Colin Coward finds enthusiam and calm confidence at General Convention in Columbus and a Consultation at St George's House, Windsor, with a commitment to listen and work together.
The debate on the 1998 Lambeth Conference resolution 1.10 was vitriolic, destructive, and utterly un-Christian. The debate was not enlightened by the presence of the Holy Spirit and it resulted in a dysfunctional, conflicted resolution.
Anglicanism runs the risk of becoming something wholly unattractive and unrecognisable to those who are drawn strongly to its sometimes exasperating breadth, untidiness and inclusiveness. One result is that gay people have become scapegoats in what is a more deep-seated constitutional crisis.
The percentage of LGBT people is almost certainly similar in every country and society. Assuming that the Global South has the same proportion of potentially gay/homosexual/MSM/lesbian/bisexual/transgender people as the West, then the majority of LGBT Anglicans live in the global south.
The launch meeting of Changing Attitude Australia is being held on Sunday 25 June 2006 from 3pm to 5pm at St John’s, Bentleigh, Melbourne, expanding the international network of Changing Attitude groups. A group of thirty two lesbian and gay Christians including eighteen Anglicans, eight Presbyterians and 6 from other denominations has made contact with Changing Attitude England. The work of Changing Attitude Nigeria continues to develop against a hostile Anglican Church background.
The Bishop of Oxford, the Rt Rev Richard Harries has reaffirmed his belief that an openly gay man should be allowed to be appointed a bishop.
The revelation that Bishop John accepted an invitation several months ago to become a patron of Changing Attitude has created a storm in Kenya but the resulting publicity brings information to Kenyan lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Anglican Church members, and to the heterosexual majority.
Esther Mombo, Academic Dean at St Paul’s United Theological College, Limuru, expresses a very different perspective on homosexuality from those of the Archbishop, the Most Rev. Benjamin Nzimbi.
Bishop John Gladwin has been greatly surprised and saddened by the Kenyan response to the news that he is a patron of Changing Attitude and hopes that we can get over this misunderstanding and make clear our determination to carry forward the Lambeth Resolutions, and to learn how God is at work in all his people in England and in Kenya.’
Now the Archbishop of Kenya has discovered through factual, fact finding correspondence the position of Bishop John Gladwin on human sexuality he is unable to continue with advancing the lined up activities in Kenya with the Diocese of Chelmsford.
A local paper Kenyan paper published a story on Sunday 21 May maliciously and totally untruthfully claiming that the Rt Revd John Gladwin, Bishop of Chelsmford is in Kenya to lobby for homosexual deviance having discovered that is a patron of Changing Attitude.
Changing Attitude Nigeria calls on people around the world to support us in putting pressure on the Nigerian Government to withdraw the bill banning same-sex marriage. The bill will make it impossible for any Nigerian bishop to listen to homosexual experience in accordance with commitments made by the Anglican Communion. They will be labelled a supporter of homosexual people and be at risk of prosecution.
Integrity USA salutes the election of the Rt. Rev. Mark Handley Andrus as the eighth Bishop of California. He is great champion for human rights-including equality for LGBT people.
Canada's Anglican bishops unanimously endorsed a motion expressing "grave concern" about proposed legislation in Nigeria that "would prohibit or severely restrict the freedom of speech, association, expression and assembly of gay and lesbian persons" and criticized the (Anglican) Church of Nigeria for its support of the legislation.
LGBT Anglicans will come out, as Lazarus did from the tomb when commanded by Jesus and denounce the iniquitous new law in Nigeria and the obscenity of existing laws under which lesbian and gay people can be sentenced to 14 years in prison, or death.
Two members of Changing Attitude Nigeria have revealed the war that is being waged against lesbian and gay church members by the Church and the effect this is having on their faith and security. Lesbian and gay church members are now living in fear of their lives should their sexual identity be discovered.
Canon Tunde in repeatedly attacking Davis MacIyalla, Direcotor of Changing Attitude Nigeria has given Davis the opportunity to tell his truth to the world and strengthened his reputation. He still fails to address the responsibility of the Church of Nigeria to respond to Lambeth 1.10 and the Windsor Report.
In a letter sent to Bishop Jack Iker of Fort Worth, Archbishop Peter Akinola wrote that he expects to elect and consecrate new Episcopal leadership in the coming months for CANA, the Convocation for Anglicans in North America.
Lay Episcopalians for the Anglican Communion (LEAC) has launched a national petition drive to bring to church trial the 35 bishops involved in the installation of the Rt Revd Gene Robinson, bishop of New Hampshire, including bishop Gene himself.
Michael Burrows, the Dean of Cork in the Church of Ireland, who regularly gives Holy Communion to parishioners in long-standing homosexual relationships has been appointed Bishop of Cashel and Ossory.
Sixty members of the European Parliament’s Intergroup on gay and lesbian rights has strongly condemned the Nigerian government over its proposals to make same sex relationships illegal and to ban gays and lesbians from forming organisations in an open letter calling for the withdrawal of the proposed legislation which would violate human rights.
The executive Bill seeking to ban same sex relationships in Nigeria, the “Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act, 2006” has been introduced to the House of Representatives.
Davis MacIyalla defends lesbian and gay Nigerians against the attack made by the Rt Revd David Onuoha
The statement was unanimously adopted by the Canadian House of Bishops meeting in Windsor, Ont., on April 27.
"The Scottish Episcopal Church has never regarded the fact that someone was in a close relationship with a member of the same sex as in itself constituting a bar to the exercise of an ordained ministry."
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