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Maryland Moving Toward Same-Sex Marriage In Spite of Archbishop

by George P. Matysek Jr.

BALTIMORE (CNS) – Two days before Gov. Martin J. O’Malley announced his decision to sponsor legislation legalizing same-sex marriage in Maryland, Archbishop Edwin F. O’Brien of Baltimore sent him a private letter urging O’Malley, a Catholic, to refrain from promoting the redefinition of marriage.
“I am well aware that the recent events in New York have intensified pressure on you to lend your active support to legislation to redefine marriage,” Archbishop O’Brien wrote, referring to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signing of gay marriage legislation in the Empire State.
“As advocates for the truths we are compelled to uphold,” Archbishop O’Brien said, “we speak with equal intensity and urgency in opposition to your promoting a goal that so deeply conflicts with your faith, not to mention the best interests of our society.”
The archbishop said it was “especially hard to fathom your taking such a step, given the fact that our requests last year for you to sponsor legislation to repeal the death penalty and support students in Catholic and other nonpublic schools went unheeded.”
Archbishop O’Brien was referring to a long-sought business tax credit that would benefit students and teachers in Catholic and non-public schools. O’Malley supports the credit, but did not take a leadership role in trying to pass it.  The measure failed.
In a response to Archbishop O’Brien, the governor cited a long list of items on which the two agree – including repealing the death penalty, reducing the incidence of infant mortality, “promoting the dignity of work and the justice of fair wages,” protecting the environment, feeding the hungry and healing the sick.
“I do not presume, nor would I ever presume as governor, to question or infringe upon your freedom to define, to preach about, and to administer the sacraments of the Roman Catholic Church,” O’Malley said.
“But on the public issue of granting equal civil marital rights to same-sex couples, you and I disagree.”
O’Malley said he was “sworn to uphold the law without partiality or prejudice.”
“When shortcomings in our laws bring about a result that is unjust,” he asserted, “I have a public obligation to try to change that injustice.”