According to Sky News, When laws went into effect in
three states for same-s*x couples to marry, many were quick to line up at their
city halls to exchange vows. Now they may do so in one of the nation’s most
prominent churches – the Washington National Cathedral.
Most
Americans know the house of God, also called the Cathedral Church of St. Peter
and St. Paul, as a place where sacred rites are carried out on behalf of the
nation. It has been host to the funerals of numerous presidents and of
inaugural prayer services for four presidents, including Barack Obama. But it
is also an active house of worship in the Episcopalian Church, said the
Cathedral’s dean, Gary Hall. The denomination has developed a blessing rite
that mirrors current wedding ceremonies for heterosexual couples and allows
each bishop to decide to allow same-s*x marriages in their churches or not.
Bishop Mariann Budde decided to allow the rite, since same-s*x marriage is
legal in the District of Columbia and now in neighboring Maryland as well, Hall
said. It was Budde’s decision that led Hall to create the same-s*x rite. He
sees it as “another historic step toward greater equality.” the states of
Washington, Maine and Maryland all legalized same-s*x marriages in referendums
during the 2012 general election. It was already legal in the nation’s capital.
In March, the Supreme Court will hear oral
arguments in two appeals cases related to same-s*x marriage — California’s
Proposition 8, which bans same-s*x marriage and the federal Defense of Marriage
Act, which denies federal benefits to same-s*x couples. The American Episcopal
Church is intimately connected with the Church of England, which last week
approved the advancement of male priests in same-s*x committed relationships to
the position of bishop. But those relationships must be celibate. City halls in
Baltimore; Portland, Maine; and Seattle erupted in celebration as the first
same-s*x couples tied the knot in December and January. Seattle’s ceremony
included 133 couples, who walked outside and down rain-slickened steps
afterward, where they were greeted by cheers, confetti and a brass band celebrating
the first day same-s*x couples could marry in Washington. To wed at the
National Cathedral, one member of the couple must be baptized into the Church,
and both must commit to a Christian marriage of “lifelong faithfulness, love,
forbearance and mutual comfort.
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