Gay marriage a threat to world peace, says Pope
VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The pope took his opposition to gay marriage to new heights Friday, denouncing what he described as people manipulating their God-given gender to suit their sexual choices - and destroying the very "essence of the human creature" in the process.
Benedict XVI made the comments in his annual Christmas speech to the Vatican bureaucracy - one of his most important speeches of the year. He dedicated it this year to promoting family values in the face of vocal campaigns in France, the US, Britain and elsewhere to legalise same-sex marriage.

"People dispute the idea that they have a nature, given to them by their
bodily identity, that serves as a defining element of the human being,"
he said. "They deny their nature and decide that it is not something
previously given to them, but that they make it for themselves."
"The manipulation of nature, which we deplore today where our
environment is concerned, now becomes man's fundamental choice where he
himself is concerned," he said.
It was the second time in a week that Benedict has taken on the question
of gay marriage, which is dividing France after proponents scored big
electoral wins in the United States last month. In his recently released
annual peace message, Benedict said gay marriage, like abortion and
euthanasia, was a threat to world peace.
After the peace message was released last week, gay activists staged a small protest in St Peter's Square.
Church teaching holds that homosexual acts are "intrinsically
disordered," though it stresses that gays should be treated with
compassion and dignity. As pope and as head of the Vatican's orthodoxy
watchdog before that, Benedict has been a strong enforcer of that
teaching: One of the first major documents of his pontificate said men
with "deep-seated" homosexual tendencies shouldn't be ordained priests.
For the Vatican, though, the gay marriage issue goes beyond questions of
homosexuality, threatening what the church considers to be the bedrock
of society: a family based on a man, woman and their children.
But the Vatican's opposition has been falling on deaf ears. Under
then-Socialist leader Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, the largely Roman
Catholic Spain legalised gay marriage. Earlier this month, the British
government announced it will introduce a bill next year legalizing gay
marriage, though it would ban the Church of England from conducting
same-sex ceremonies.
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