Friday, August 5, 2016

UNFPA Teaming Up With This Church to Convince Religious Leaders to Promote Abortion


By Rebecca Oas
Life News


(CFAM) – For many years UNFPA leadership has maintained that religion is one of the biggest barriers to people’s enjoyment of their “sexual rights.” The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has teamed up with the Church of Sweden to convince religious leaders to accept abortion, contraception, and the sexual autonomy of children.

A recent joint event in Sweden named “Women, Faith and Human Rights,” was ostensibly aimed at proving there is no incompatibility between faith and human rights. A closer look reveals deep fault lines between religion as practiced by most of the world’s believers and human rights as interpreted by UN agencies.

A report of the event was co-published with UNFPA by the Church of Sweden, a Lutheran denomination based in one of the least religious countries in the world, with less than a tenth of its members attending services once a month. The Church of Sweden, which performs same-sex marriages and supports legal abortion, published a position statement supporting sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR). This term, supported by UNFPA, does not enjoy consensus at the UN due to concerns about its inclusion of abortion and homosexuality.

The vast majority of people in the world identify as religious, but in many developing countries, religious or faith-based organizations are the major providers of quality health care.

UNFPA frequently partners with religious leaders who support its aims—sometimes in opposition to the teaching of their own religion. In 2009, UNFPA prominently joined forces with the pro-abortion group Catholics for Choice, a dissenting splinter group that provides no health services, rather than one of the myriad Catholic organizations delivering medical care to the world’s poorest.

The UNFPA report was excerpted from a larger document with more detailed discussion of topics like abortion, absent from the shortened version.

Participants in the Swedish conference providing expertise on Catholic teachings included Scottish professor Julie Clague, who ended her critique of the Church with this call: 
“Strong advocacy is required to press for change.” Swedish Dominican sister Madeleine Fredell began by stating her conviction that she does not need to accept all Church teachings, and expressed disappointment that the then-ongoing Synod on the Family did not seem to be moving toward greater acceptance of homosexuality.

Evangelical Protestantism was barely mentioned in the report at all.

Life News article continues


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1 comment:

  1. the church of church is not a church,but a pagan organization,is a invented church.

    ReplyDelete