Anglican Church Says No to Inaugural Gay Wedding
Anglican Church Says No to Inaugural Gay Wedding at St Matthew’s in the City
18 July – ZM’s Fabulous Gay Wedding, scheduled to take place in St Matthew’s in the City on 19 August, (the day the bill becomes law), is now looking for a different church to hold the inaugural gay wedding in New Zealand.
ZM’s Content Director, Christian Boston says
the station received an email from St Matthew’s Vicar,
Glynn Cardy, late yesterday saying it was no longer
possible.
“St Matthew’s have been incredibly
supportive of our competition but it appears that the higher
powers in the church have been looking at the Anglican
Church policy and have concluded that they can’t marry a
gay couple.”
ZM’s celebrity breakfast host, Polly Gillespie assures finalists and the public, that there will be a church wedding.
“This is a momentous occasion for New Zealand. If we went with a civil service and then a blessing in St Matthew’s as the Anglican Church has suggested, we’d effectively be saying everyone’s equal but some are more equal than others. That’s not good enough for us at ZM. We want our royal themed wedding to be a proper wedding, which means a marriage ceremony, not a blessing or anything less than that. ZM will deliver on this. We are left with no alternative but to move the ceremony elsewhere, so we’re on the hunt for another church!”
Gillespie says interest in ZM’s Fabulous Gay
Wedding has attracted international attention.
“World
media contacted us when we announced it on air and I have no
doubt they will be following this most recent development
closely. I feel for Vicar Glynn and St Matthew’s in the
City, as they have been hugely supportive, I love their
courage and approach to life as we know it in 2013.”
Email issued by St Matthew’s in the
City
We are sorry that we were unable to
negotiate a way to hold the first same gender wedding
ceremony here at St Matthew’s. Anglican policy allows us
to only have a religious ceremony with a same gender couple
after they have been married in a civil ceremony elsewhere.
At St Matthew’s we think that policy is discriminatory and
we are committed to working to change it; although
realistically such change may take many years.
We wish
the couple well, and wish ZM all the best as you support
them.
Regards Glynn
Cardy
ENDS