The 1.75 million-member Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has
updated its constitution to recognize same-sex marriage, bringing the laws of
the nation’s eighth-largest Protestant denomination in line with its already
accepted practice.
Individual churches will still be able to decline to perform
such marriages if they believe them inappropriate, the church said Tuesday.
The General Assembly of the PC(USA), the largest of several
U.S. Presbyterian denominations, OK’d the amendment to its Book of Order last
year, but the change had to win the approval of a majority of the 171 local
governing bodies, or presbyteries, to become official. The church said Tuesday
that the Palisades Presbytery, based in Rochelle Park, New Jersey, had become
the 86th local body to approve the amendment.
The Book of Order currently defines marriage as “a civil
contract between a woman and a man.” The new wording reads: “Marriage involves
a unique commitment between two people, traditionally a man and a woman, to
love and support each other for the rest of their lives.”
PC(USA) pastors — traditionally known as “teaching elders” —
have already been allowed to perform same-sex marriages in states where they’re
legal since last June. The new amendment leaves the discretion of whether to
conduct such ceremonies with individual ministers.
“There is nothing in the amendment to compel any teaching
elder to conduct a wedding against his or her judgment,”the Rev. Gradye
Parsons, the church’s stated clerk, or top ecclesiastical official, said
Tuesday.
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