Now there is a whole lot about this that seems odd. Why pick on the specifics of "entering into gay or lesbian relationships"? It is not the job of the Charity Commission to decide what any religion should teach about sexual morality -- or indeed about any other tenets of doctrine. And the highlighted "not necessarily" phrase contains a threatening note. It's as though the Commission is trying to bully religious groups into the adoption of a mentality that assumes a particular view of lesbian and homosexual activity as the norm -- which is something that many Christians are not prepared to do, and it is no part of the Commission's work to try to get us to change our minds.
It's also worrying that the Commission appears to assume that something being generally accepted should be the measure of what a religion is allowed to teach. But that is all wrong: A religion cannot define itself by public opinion.
I can imagine readers at this point saying smugly that, of course, it's all very well for a Catholic writer trying to affirm her right to have Catholic organizations that teach the sinfulness of homosexual or lesbian activity. But what about Muslim groups that teach, for example, that wife-beating is acceptable, or that eating pork is wrong?
That is precisely my point: It isn't up to the Charity Commission, or indeed public opinion, to tell Muslims what they may or may not believe and teach. The criminal law already establishes that a man can (and should) be punished for hitting his wife. Eating pork, on the other hand, is not a matter for the law, but can legitimately be taught (erroneously) as being immoral. It would be most unjust if a lobby of pork-butchers were to ensure that Islamic groups were all to be denied charitable status on account of preaching on the subject.
It is frightening, frankly, that the Charity Commission sees its purpose as not merely regulating the activities of community groups -- ensuring that funds raised are used for their advertised purpose, that the criminal law is obeyed, and so on -- but as deciding what should, and should not, be taught and promoted by religious groups.
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And there's more. The Commission refers to a situation where "an organisation advancing religion seeks to actively discourage members of the public in general from seeking medical treatment." This is bothersome. It's already clear in British law that the state can rightly intervene to save a child's life where the parents have , for example, refused -- as Jehovah's Witnesses, say -- to allow a blood transfusion. It is no part of the Charity Commission's role to decide what a religion can preach about refusing medical treatment. Issues about medical treatment must be decided by the courts, and frequently are.
No, there's a sub-text here. The issue seems to be that the Commission would like to penalize Catholic and other groups that help parents who want to protect their children from being given contraceptive drugs and devices or abortions without parental knowledge or consent.
I'm bothered by this Charity Commission document, which came my way because I am active with a number of charities, both Catholic and non-Catholic. If I felt that there was simply an honest attempt to clear up anomalies in the law, or clarify complicated situations in these difficult days where a terrorist group can claim some religious backing, then I'd be confident that the Commission could be thanked and praised for keeping us all up to date.