The Presbyterian Church (USA), the largest body of Presbyterians in
the country, approved a change in the wording of its constitution to
allow gay and lesbian weddings within the church, a move that threatens
to continue to split the mainline Protestant denomination.
The 171 regional presbyteries (local leadership bodies within the
PCUSA) have been voting on whether to change the wording to call
marriage a contract “between a woman and a man” to being “between two
people, traditionally a man and a woman.” On Tuesday, the denomination
reached its needed majority of “yes” votes from at least 86 presbyteries
to take effect. The change will be included in the church’s “Book of
Order,” part of its constitution, taking effect on June 21.
The church, which has more than 1.7 million members, voted last
June to allow clergy to perform same-sex weddings. That vote gave clergy
the choice of whether to preside over same-sex marriages in states
where they are legal, an action which is now allowed in 36 state and the
District of Columbia. Clergy will not be compelled to perform same-sex
marriage.
Tuesday’s vote carries significance, writes Leslie Scanlon for
The Presbyterian Outlook, because it will be much more difficult to
reverse.
“Changing the constitutional language regarding the definition of
Christian marriage would take the approval both of an assembly and a
majority vote by the presbyteries,” Scanlon writes. “It also matters to
many Presbyterians that their denomination is willing to put language
affirming marriage equality directly in the denomination’s
constitution.”
The vote comes amid a larger debate over whether gay marriage
conflicts with Scripture and would cause more Presbyterian churches to
break relations with the PCUSA. The church has lost 37 percent of its
membership since 1992. Most of the congregations that depart opt to
affiliate with either the Evangelical Presbyterian Church or a newer
body called Evangelical Covenant Order of Presbyterians. The formality
of Tuesday’s decision could accelerate more departures.
Like other mainline denominations, the PCUSA has grappled with
the issue as gay marriage has become legal in more states. In 2012, the
church’s General Assembly narrowly voted to reject a proposal to
redefine marriage as a union between “two people.” Many of the
congregations that rejected the move in 2012 have since left the
denomination.
The nation’s largest denominations, including the Roman Catholic
Church and most evangelical churches, recognize marriage only as between
a man and a woman. The Episcopal Church, the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America and the United Church of Christ allow same-sex
marriage. The debate has roiled the United Methodist Church, another
mainline denomination. Property disputes and litigation that have
occupied the Episcopal Church in the past decade are now taking place
among some Presbyterian churches.
The Washington Post
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