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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

United Church of Christ votes to approve gay marriages

Associated Press

ATLANTA – The United Church of Christ’s rule-making body voted overwhelmingly Monday to approve a resolution endorsing same-sex marriage, making it the largest Christian denomination to do so.

The vote is not binding on individual churches, but could cause some congregations to leave the fold.

Roughly 80 percent of the representatives on the church’s 884-member General Synod voted to approve the resolution, a day after a smaller committee recommended it.

The Rev. John H. Thomas, president of the United Church of Christ, said with the vote on Independence Day, the rule-making body “acted courageously to declare freedom.”

The resolution calls on member churches of the liberal denomination of 1.3 million to consider wedding policies “that do not discriminate against couples based on gender.”

It also asks churches to consider supporting legislation granting equal marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples and to work against laws banning gay marriage.

A small group of conservative congregations had proposed an alternative resolution defining marriage as between a man and a woman, and suggested that supporting gay marriage could lead to the church’s collapse.

The Rev. Brett Becker, who represents a group of the UCC’s more conservative churches, said it’s possible his congregation at St. Paul United Church of Christ in Cibolo, Texas, will leave the church over the resolution.