Pope Benedict XVI said this week that gay marriage poses a threat to "justice and peace." The 85-year-old religious leader went on to suggest that same-sex marriage is "unnatural."
According to the Associated Press, the head of the Roman Catholic Church kicked off the Christmas season on Friday with the traditional lighting of the tree in Vatican City's St. Peter's Square. On the same day, the Holy See released the Pope's message for World Day of Peace 2013.
As Gay Star News reports, the Pope, in his annual address, said that same-sex marriage is "unnatural" and "against human nature."
"There is…a need to acknowledge and promote the natural structure of marriage as the union of a man and a woman
in the face of attempts to make it juridically equivalent to radically
different types of union," the Pope said, according to ANSA.
"Such attempts actually harm and help to destabilize marriage,
obscuring its specific nature and its indispensable role in society.
These principles are not truths of faith, nor are they simply a
corollary of the right to religious freedom. They are inscribed in human
nature itself, accessible to reason and thus common to all humanity,"
he continued.
The Pope went on to suggest that support of gay marriage "constitutes an offense against the truth of the human person, with serious harm to justice and peace."
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