Religious leaders call for fast in support of gay marriage ban
09.25.2008 9:40am EDT
(San Francisco, California) Hundreds of pastors have called on their congregations to fast and pray for passage of a ballot measure in November that would put an end to gay marriage in California.
The collective act of piety, starting Wednesday and culminating three days before the election in a revival for as many as 100,000 people at the San Diego Chargers’ stadium, comes as church leaders across California put people, money and powerful words behind Proposition 8.Some pastors around the state and nation are encouraging their flocks to forgo solid food for up to 40 days in the biblical tradition.
Jim Garlow, the pastor of the evangelical Skyline Church in San Diego County, said he expects up to 100 young adults to spend five-plus weeks on his campus, subsisting on soup, juice and the promise of societal salvation.
“This is not political to us. We see it as very spiritual,” said Garlow, a leader of an interfaith coalition that has held monthly teleconferences, shared sermons and solicited donations for the ballot measure.
Alarmed by a California Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage, churches of many faiths have banded together in support of a measure that would amend the state constitution to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman. They have become the single largest force behind the measure, recruiting volunteers, raising money, registering voters, manning phone banks and distributing campaign literature.
Under federal law, religious organizations cannot endorse political candidates but are free to campaign on social issues without endangering their tax-exempt status.
Along with evangelical Christian groups such as Focus on the Family and Family Research Council, the leaders of Roman Catholic, Mormon, Southern Baptist, Orthodox Jewish and Seventh-Day Adventist congregations have endorsed the measure and urged the faithful to give.
The Knights of Columbus have given nearly $1.3 million, making the Catholic fraternal organization the largest single contributor to Yes on 8. Donations from individual Mormons account for more than $6.4 million of about $17.3 million raised so far, according to Mormonsfor8.com, a Web site set up by a church member.
Religious leaders have addressed the issue from the pulpit, in Sunday schools and Bible study meetings, and through telephone calls, letters and visits to parishioners.
The California Conference of Catholic Bishops has given the state’s 1,600 parishes Sunday bulletin inserts about Proposition 8, and every diocese is holding workshops in English and Spanish.
“This Supreme Court decision was a huge wake-up call for Catholics. It was shocking,” said Bill May of San Francisco, leader of Catholics for Protect Marriage. “The sense is that this is the last chance to restore the definition of marriage, and if unsuccessful, it is going to have serious ramifications for California and across the country.”
Mormon congregations in California are taking marching orders straight from Salt Lake City. A June 29 letter in which the Mormon president asked members to lend support to the proposed amendment has been read repeatedly at church services, along with a 1995 church proclamation that warns: “The disintegration of the family will bring … the calamities foretold by ancient and modern prophets.”
Thousands of same-sex couples have tied the knot in California in the three months since the nation’s most populous state legalized gay marriage. Massachusetts is the only other state to allow gays to wed.
Liberal congregations also have entered the Proposition 8 debate, though not as vigorously as their conservative brethren.
A coalition of religious leaders called California Faith for Equality has been working to persuade people of faith to oppose the ballot measure on spiritual and social justice grounds. California’s Episcopal bishops also have come out against the measure, which a Field Poll reported last week was opposed by 55 percent of likely voters.
“Everybody understands that Jesus, in his own culture, was notorious and persecuted for consorting with outcasts,” said the Rev. Peter Laarman, a United Church of Christ minister who opposes the gay marriage ban. “When Jesus said all are welcome at the table, I think he really meant all.”




I’m not sure I’m a Christian anymore. I’m gay, and 64 years of “hits” from the Church has pretty much burned me out. I agree with Juan: over 5 million American kids will go to bed tonight without adequate food, clothing, shelter, or medical care. Are they fasting and praying for THAT? No. Over 4 thousand troops have died in the BuschReich’s Oil Wars, and countless innocent civilians … men, women, and children. Are they praying for an end to THAT? No. GLBT people are beaten to death every day all over the world BECAUSE of the teachings of radical Islam, radical Judaism, and radical “Konservative Kristianist Kults.” Are they praying for an end to THAT? No. Teenagers, egged on by the same teachings, kill schoolmates they THINK *might* be gay because they’re “different.” Are they praying for an end to THAT? No. They’re praying for the RIGHT to discriminate against GLBT people for something we have no more control over than our hair and eye color. Sinclair Lewis said that when fascism arrives in America, it will come marching behind the Cross. Google “Dominionist” and compare their manifesto with the Republican Party Platform.
Cheers,
Bud Clark
San Diego CA USA
LOL, that was so awesome, had I been drinking milk, it would have shot out of my nose! That is the best comeback I have read in a long time!
I am curious that with over $17mil in the coffers, that becomes more than a few dollars for a “social cause” to not pay any taxes on…the people that contribute should be ineligable to write that off on their taxes as well. Just how much of that money goes toward the campaign, and how much of it lines the pockets of those behind the drive to discriminate? Judge, lest ye be judged, the good book says, so they will be all going “down under” when their day comes.
With so many kids without food on the table we witness these kind of absudity. It’s pitiful and so not religious.
Fast!?!?!?1 Make it a hunger strike.
Hopefully they starve to death.
It is incredulous to read of the “dire ramifications across the nation” , should Prop 8 fail in California. Here in Canada the same ‘dire predictions’ were made by the religious right. In the two years that marriage equality has been in place , nothing has changed & the sky didn’t fall. Conservatives kew full well that there would be no negative impact on the country , & have remianed very silent on the issue ever since passage.They don’t want to call attention to their glaringly apparent errors in judgement.
Just keep on fasting, and starve to death!
If anyone wonders why we call them fanatics, well wonder no more.
Pray and starve, this will accomplish a lot. Hopefully they’ll be to weak to vote. It didn’t rain for Obama’s speech, doubt this ploy will work either.
I suggest they build an Ark and sail to Lesbo, they may be welcome by the people there. Least we’d be rid of them.
Im fasting too!! I wanna fit in my pink chiffon wedding dress! heeheehee These so called christians are beyond silly. I hope they like “warm climates”
wow,
can anyone else see a problem here I think these christian groups need some serious therapy and maybe a little jesus in their lives what do ya think? and these are the same people accusing us of not being stable LOL
I hope they all starve.
No, no. What needs to happen is to hold a COUNTER-Demonstration… e.g. in the parking lots of the SD Stadium
a huge tailgate BBQ Buffet.. (lots of good mesquite smoke!)
Celebrating the EQUAL RIGHT OF MARRIAGE FOR EVERYONE.
Even better hold some hetero and homsexual Weddings..use
food as ‘reception.’
Their GOD is weak. To ask for more than a constitutional ban on same sex marriage in California would destroy him.
Let them eat cake.
During the tough times in this world, we can always count on the church to pray and fast. Right? Of course. Hundred of pastors and church leaders are calling upon their congregations in these tough times to pray and fast. For the economy? No. For the election? No. For an end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan? No. For the housing market, job market, or even the supermarket? No. These congregations are being called upon to pray and fast so that California passes a Constitutional Amemdment to ban gay marriage! WTF??? This week has been such a ridiculous news week and yet, I continue to be even more shocked by each new story that comes out.
Seriously? Bishop, Reverend, Pastor… is THIS the thing that we want to pray for? Imagine, having the opportunity to get God’s intervention on the situations affecting the world today and all you can think to ask Him for is to ban gay marriage? The church has really lost its way and I am convinced that relgion and common sense do not belong in the same sentence.