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Bishops in Malawi Announce “peaceful march” to Clarify Stance on Family, Human Sexuality

Members of the Episcopal Conference of Malawi (ECM). Credit: ECM

Catholic Bishops in Malawi have announced “a peaceful march” to clarify their stance on the institution of the family, and the issue of human sexuality. 

In a Thursday, July 6 statement, the Secretary General of the Episcopal Conference of Malawi (ECM), Fr. Alfred Chaima, says that Catholic Bishops in the Southern African nation have felt the need to address discussions around family and human sexuality that they describe “misleading”.

“The Episcopal Conference of Malawi (ECM) is solidly convinced that, amidst the misleading discussions and debates going around in various fora at the moment, it must make its stance known and clear and is therefore, working with leaders of other Mother Bodies and faith groups; and indeed with all people of goodwill, to hold a peaceful march on Thursday, July 13, in all Regions in the country in order to make clear its stand on matters of family and human sexuality,” Fr. Chaima says.

He adds that at the end of the peaceful protest, ECM members will present a petition to the relevant authorities.    

The ECM Secretary General calls upon those at the helm of the Pastoral department in Malawian Catholic Dioceses, Parish Priests, Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (CCJP) officials, and leaders of other faith groups in the Southern African nation to collaborate with the Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat in planning for the July 13 peaceful demonstration. 

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The protest is planned at a time when the Constitutional Court in Malawi is deliberating on a case that seeks to interpret Section 153 (c) of the Penal Code of Malawi, which criminalizes consensual same-sex relations between two consenting adults.

In a May statement, ECM alongside the Malawi Council of Churches (MCC), and the Evangelical Association of Malawi (EAM)  asked Malawians to sit peacefully outside the High Court in Blantyre, “silently praying to the God of heaven that Malawi, as a nation, shall seek to live by God’s righteousness and not depart from His divine laws governing our morality.” 

The Christian leaders in Malawi added that legalizing same-sex unions “would promote moral decay in our society as our children and young people in schools and colleges, including mission Schools, will openly be taught homosexuality as being normal. This is unacceptable behavior.”

In the July 6 statement, the Secretary General of ECM expresses concern about challenges in families, and emphasizes the need “to do much more in supporting and animating families in our country, especially today when they face so many problems.”

“It’s not possible for any society, let alone an ecclesial community, to be strong without strong families which are domestic churches,” says Fr. Chaima.

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He adds that most of the challenges that families in Malawi face “are largely imposed on Africa, Asia and Latin America by foreign societies; taking advantage of abject poverty in our countries as well as high illiteracy levels in the same continents.”

“As we all know, ‘Family, become what you are’ (St. John Paul II). By implication, and from the Catholic perspective, any attack on the Christian marriage/family which Jesus Christ raised to the status of a Sacrament which until then was inscribed on in human nature, is a direct attack on the Church,” the ECM official says.

Magdalene Kahiu is a Kenyan journalist with passion in Church communication. She holds a Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). Currently, she works as a journalist for ACI Africa.