Tuesday, July 27, 2010

From Zimbabwe: Polygamy is In … Homosexuality is Out

With a hat-tip to Louie Crew for finding this incredibly hypocritical story from Zimbabwe.


Ecumenical News International (26 July 2010)
Daily News Service


Mugabe condemns churches that allow gay marriages

Harare, 26 July (ENI)--Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has lashed out at churches that allow same-sex marriages, and said gay rights would not be included in a new constitution being written for the southern African country.

"Some of the churches have very beautiful buildings but go against the Bible," Mugabe told tens of thousands attending the annual pilgrimage of the Johane Masowe religious group on 17 July. The pilgrimage is one of the largest annual religious gatherings in Zimbabwe.

"Is it still the church of God?" asked Mugabe, who has led Zimbabwe since its independence from Britain in 1980. He described same-sex marriages as being, "similar to dog behaviour".

The Zimbabwean president once said homosexuals are, "worse than pigs and dogs".

Mugabe told Johane Masowe members, whose organization allows polygamy and resists western medicine, that they had a right to practise polygamous marriage.

"Our constitution allows polygamy," he told the gathering. "We will not force people into monogamous marriages. Even in the Bible, polygamy is allowed. King Solomon was not only blessed with a lot of wealth but he also had many wives."

In recent years, divisions over homosexuality have torn apart the worldwide Anglican Communion, and created discord in many other Christian denominations.

While some Christians in the northern hemisphere have been more accepting of homosexuals in partnerships, much of the opposition comes from the global South, including from African churches.

Nolbert Kunonga, the deposed former Anglican bishop of Harare and an avid supporter of Mugabe, has formed his own self-styled Church of the Province of Zimbabwe, ostensibly in protest over what he termed the pro-gay stance of the Anglican church in Central Africa.

Homosexuality is illegal in Zimbabwe, although there is an association that promotes gay rights.

Mugabe told the Johane Masowe pilgrims that he would ignore calls to have gay rights in Zimbabwe's new constitution. "We say no to gays. We will not listen to those advocating for their rights in the constitution," the president said.

Zimbabwe is set to craft a new constitution in 2011 as part of an agreement that led to the formation of a power-sharing government in 2010.

Teams of lawmakers and representatives of rights groups are holding meetings across the country to collect people's recommendations for the new constitution.

LF: Emphases added.

Comment:

Oh, my! Where to begin?

Let me acknowledge that Mugabe is not an Anglican leader. He is a nut-case demagogue with political power. Similarly, the deposed lunatic “Anglican” Archbishop Kunonga supports Mugabe’s view. There's a long history there between them.

Sadly, it seems to me that their views are consistent with the prevailing views of many vocal African Anglican leaders. I have seen and heard voices like his – voices that think polygamy is healthy and natural, whereas same-sex relationships are “worse than pigs and dogs.”

For the life of me, I cannot understand their reading of Scripture … except that they never moved beyond a dim and literal reading of the Hebrew Scriptures.

Of course, those two “will not listen to those advocating for their rights” – i.e., the rights of gay men and lesbians – “in the constitution.” No surprise there. But much grief for the Zimbabweans who live in that horrible society.

It will be interesting to see what, if anything, the Archbishop of Central Africa (which encompasses Zimbabwe) has to say about this.

Fortunately, I have very low expectations. I expect to hear nothing more than the chirping of crickets from the archbishop of Central Africa or the tongue-tied archbishop residing in Canterbury.

5 Comments:

Blogger keith nethery said...

Mugabe and cohorts rule by deception, lies, power brokering, and wide spread corruption. In hearing from Bishop Chad (the rightful Bishop of the Diocese) supporters of Mugabe and deposed Bishop Norbert use police and government officials to harrass those who oppose them and block access to churches and worship. Not one word from the mouth of Mugabe can be believed and he has no interest in Christianity, rather he is focused 100 per cent on his own self interest. If the winds of power and money shift, he will turn 180 degrees in a minute. We cannot deal with him as a person of faith nor expect him to follow faith based justice because the only thing he believes in is his own self interest. It seems to me we promote ignoring Mugabe and try to work with those struggling to bring democracy and faith to the people

7/28/2010 8:46 AM  
Blogger Karen said...

Polygamy is clearly the subject of the day, as they next item I read was:
http://www.salon.com/life/broadsheet/2010/07/28/polygamy/index.html

7/28/2010 10:14 AM  
Blogger Lisa Fox said...

No argument from me, Keith. Mugabe is as much a war criminal as the president of Sudan.

What I do not hear is a clear, strong voice from the Anglican leaders in Zimbabwe.

7/28/2010 9:41 PM  
Blogger keith nethery said...

Bishop Chad, who visited Canada before Christmas last year, is the rightful Bishop of the Diocese and he tries to make statements and take a stand. The problem is that much of the media, police and justice system are controlled by Mugabe and friends. We live in a world were just about anyone can get on the 6 o'clock news if they make enough noise. For Bishop Chad and others making statements can bring violence, and still the statements don't make the news

7/29/2010 8:24 AM  
Blogger Lisa Fox said...

Thanks for this, Keith.

I would like to hear more about the bishop. Can you provide a Weblink where I can follow the news there?

7/30/2010 10:04 PM  

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