Religion
Related: About this forumPride Parade to put faith at the forefront
Religious groups given higher priority in this year's marching order
By Manya A. Brachear, Chicago Tribune reporter
June 24, 2012
Seeking to heal historic rifts between religious congregations and the gay community, organizers of this year's Pride Parade have moved the faithful closer to the front lines.
More than a dozen religious organizations Protestant, Jewish and, for the first time, Mormon will lead the 2012 Pride Parade down its new route Sunday to show onlookers that despite the "love the sinner, hate the sin" approach in some pulpits, many people of faith not only love the gay community, but support whom they love too.
"I felt deeply grateful to be part of something where I felt like I was letting people know in a very public way that they were loved," said Rabbi Shoshanah Conover of Temple Sholom, about marching alongside a float in the parade last year. "It felt good to me that collectively here we are in this huge parade, all of us together, to show this openness and welcoming. It was truly pride."
Parade organizer Richard Pfeiffer said religious leaders requested the more prominent position in this year's march to offset tension after Chicago's Cardinal Francis George, in an interview last December, compared participants in the event to the Ku Klux Klan. George's comments came in response to questions about whether the parade's timing and new route would interrupt morning services at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church in the Lakeview neighborhood. Unbeknownst to him, the issue had been resolved, and the cardinal later apologized.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-gay-pride-parade-religion-20120624,0,5946622.story
cbayer
(146,218 posts)roody
(10,849 posts)This makes it sound like gay people are not people of faith. How offensive to those who are people of faith.
From a person of no faith
mitchtv
(17,718 posts)for all the good that it will do (0). As long as Dykes on bikes is first.