Vatican document on family revises language on homosexuals

Pope Francis greets a cardinal as he leaves at the end of a mass to mark the opening of the synod on the family in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican Oct 5, 2014. The final version of a controversial Vatican document issued on Saturday radically rev
Pope Francis greets a cardinal as he leaves at the end of a mass to mark the opening of the synod on the family in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican Oct 5, 2014. The final version of a controversial Vatican document issued on Saturday radically revised its earlier wording on homosexuals, eliminating language that had talked more positively of them than ever before in church history. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

VATICAN CITY (REUTERS) - The final version of a controversial Vatican document issued on Saturday radically revised its earlier wording on homosexuals, eliminating language that had talked more positively of them than ever before in church history.

The document, called a "relatio", was issued at the conclusion of a two-week assembly, or synod, of some 200 Roman Catholic bishops from around the world.

After an initial version was released on Monday, conservative bishops vowed to change the language, saying it had created confusion among the faithful and threatened to undermine the traditional family.

The two-paragraph section of the final document dealing with homosexuals was entitled, "Pastoral attention towards persons with homosexual orientations".

The previous, three-paragraph version had been called "Welcoming homosexuals."

The earlier version spoke of "accepting and valuing their (homosexuals') sexual orientations" and giving gays "a welcoming home".

The final version eliminated those phrases and most of the other language that church progressives and gay rights groups had hailed as a breakthrough.

The new version used more vague, general language, repeating earlier church statements that gays "should be welcomed with respect and sensitivity" and that discrimination against gays"is to be avoided".

The final version stressed that "there is no foundation whatsoever" to compare homosexual marriage to heterosexual marriage, calling heterosexual marriage "God's plan for matrimony and the family".

The earlier version said the Church should acknowledge that couples in same-sex relations offered "mutual aid" and "precious support" for each other in times difficulty.

While the original text did not signal any change in the church's condemnation of homosexual acts or gay marriage, it used less judgmental and more compassionate language than that seen in Vatican statements before the 2013 election of Pope Francis.

The Vatican document will now serve for further reflection among Catholics around the world ahead of another, definitive synod next year.

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