News for the ‘Human Rights’ Category

Council supports gay marriage

Rabbi David Hoffman and High Priestess Lisa Morgenstern

OFFERING THOUGHTS – Rabbi David Hoffman with the Beth Knesset Bamidbar synagogue in Lancaster, and Chaplain Lisa Morgenstern with First Pantheistic Center, Antelope Valley weigh in Tuesday on their beliefs about the recent same-sex marriage ruling. The two were at a press conference put on by the Antelope Valley Interfaith Council in Lancaster to share its resolution on same-sex marriage.

Faith group urges leaving law in place

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
Wednesday, July 2, 2008.

By NORMAN SHOAF
Valley Press Religion Editor

LANCASTER – Members of the Antelope Valley Interfaith Council, “concerned about the impression that there is no support among religious and spiritual leaders for same-sex marriages,” issued a resolution Tuesday calling on “all Californians of conscience” to “leave in place (the) human right to marry equally under the law” regardless of sexual orientation.

About 40 council members and observers gathered in front of the Lancaster Library for a public reading of the “Resolution on Same Sex Marriage.”

“As a religious body comprised of various spiritual traditions, the Antelope Valley Interfaith Council is united in our belief of the God-given dignity of all people and in our pursuit of justice, compassion and human rights for all,” council President Deborah Shelton read from the document.

“We do not support nor will we join religious or spiritual organizations, regardless of their size, in pressing for a referendum to amend the state Constitution, for we do not believe that this is the role of religious or spiritual organizations,” the resolution said.

Proposition 8, on the November ballot, would amend California’s constitution to limit marriage to one man-one woman unions. Gay marriages began to be legally consecrated on June 17 after the Republican-dominated state Supreme Court upended previous prohibitions on such unions. The decision reverberated across the United States. Only California and Massachusetts legally license gay marriages.

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Edited: July 6th, 2008

Antelope Valley Interfaith Council Resolution on Same Sex Marriage

(Adopted on July 1st, 2008,18 members with 14 in favor, 3 abstentions and one nay.)

The Antelope Valley Interfaith Council, representing 18 faith communities in the Antelope Valley, is deeply concerned about the impression that there is no support among religious and spiritual leaders for same sex marriages.

As a religious body comprised of various spiritual traditions, the Antelope Valley Interfaith Council is united in our belief of the God-given dignity of all people and in our pursuit of justice, compassion, and human rights for all.

We recognize that some spiritual and religious doctrine does not support same sex marriage. We realize that for some clergy to come out in favor of same sex marriage could cost them their credentials. We also know that there are clergy who do on a personal level support same sex marriage, but can only express this opinion privately or in a supportive atmosphere. We recognize that this issue is divisive for congregations who may not be ready as a whole body to accept same sex marriages. We also insist that it is the right of any religious or spiritual organization to choose not to perform same sex marriages, because of their doctrine or the beliefs of congregational members.

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Edited: July 1st, 2008