Australian Bishops oppose efforts
remove religious freedoms
Loyola college, Melbourne, Australia. (Johntorcasio) |
The Bishops of Australia respond to the Shadow Attorney
Generals announcement of the introduction of a bill repealing an exemption for
religious schools necessary for an authentic presentation of Catholic sexual
moral ethics.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
On Tuesday, Archbishop Peter Comensoli of Melbourne, the
spokesperson for the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference on
religious freedom, responded to an announcement by the Shadow Attorney General
of the introduction of a bill by the Opposition. The bill seeks to repeal
exemptions in place in the Sex Discrimination Act.
The exemption is not used by Catholic schools to
discriminate against students or to expel students based on “sexual orientation
or gender identity”, the Archbishop said. Rather, “these exemptions are
important to us because schools want to maintain the capacity to teach a
Christian understanding of sexual ethics and marriage according to our faith
tradition. Our right to continue to teach Catholic beliefs is threatened by
proposals to repeal existing faith-based exemptions for religious schools and
institutions”.
Furthermore, having the exemption in place protects the
Church against claims that its beliefs are discriminatory. “We need to have the
assurance that we can pursue our religious mission without legal risk”,
Archbishop Comensoli said.
Archbishop Comensoli further proposed that “the law
recognise religious freedom in a positive way”. This would allow religious
schools to continue to educate based on religious principles while leaving the
exemptions in place since “they have the benefit of established acceptance and
meaning in law”, he said.
Finally, the Archbishop said that attempts to repeal these
protections should be rejected by Parliament, “particularly without
establishing other positive protections in place to allow religious schools to
continue to operate according to their faith”.
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