Anglican Church of Canada clergy agitate to legalise prostitution

Canada’s Bill C-36 proposes the oddly asymmetrical arrangement of criminalising the buying and advertising of a prostitute’s services but not criminalising selling them. This, we are told, will help protect “exploited persons” and “communities”.

I’m not particularly convinced that it will work – if it’s illegal to buy something, how can it legal to sell it? – but it seems to me that at least the intention behind it is benign.

According to a collection of over 30 Anglican clergy, nuns and academics, though, the bill itself is the immoral component in all this: not the prostitutes, the customers, the pimps or the act of prostitution itself, but the bill. They have written an Open Letter, the most potent agent of social change known to man –  especially when it’s signed by clergy. Read the whole thing but, to summarise: the bill infringes on prostitutes’ rights; it will drive prostitution “underground” – by that argument everything should be legal; no-one asked prostitutes what they wanted – better not ask this ex-prostitute, and – now we get to the nub of the matter – poverty compels women to become prostitutes, so it’s all the Harper government’s fault for not ushering in Instant Utopia.

If anyone is wondering what the ecclesiastical solution is, it’s to legalise all aspects of prostitution:

Rev. David Opheim, who runs a drop-in centre for women and transgender sex workers at the All Saints Church-Community Centre in Toronto, says that prostitution must be legalized in order to make the sex trade safer. “You don’t bring about change by over-regulating and over-legislating and not listening to people,” he says.

How in heaven’s name legalising prostitution with its attendant horrors of sex trafficking makes any sense from a Christian perspective is entirely beyond the reach of sanity and reason – just like the signatories to the open letter.

The real problem, apparently, is that we are uncomfortable with talking about “unconventional types of sexual expression”, although “we like to do it”. By “we” Rev. Opheim must mean his fellow clergy:

One of the main reasons for the differences of opinion among Christians is that they aren’t typically comfortable with unconventional types of sexual expression, Opheim says. “It’s one of the tragedies of the ways Christian theology has unfolded through the ages. We like to do it, but we don’t like to talk about it.”

Those who have signed the letter all adhere to a dogma-free version of Christianity, particularly, in this context, any discernibly coherent standard of sexual mores – we well know how the clergy loath them:

“There’s a large number of people who follow a particular Christian doctrine who feel they must impose all of their dogma on everybody else. From my perspective and the friends of mine who have signed this letter, we don’t come from that place.”

As a rector friend of mine likes to remind anyone who will listen, the ’60s were not about principles at all: they were about everyone screwing around. The Anglican Church of Canada has finally caught up to the ’60s.

6 thoughts on “Anglican Church of Canada clergy agitate to legalise prostitution

  1. If you remember the sixties, you weren’t there.
    As for approving the legalization of prostitution, it would seem they have taken being dead to the law to far, and
    the wrong way. Who would of thought when we youngsters, when Mom and Dad took us to church to learn and obey the Ten Commandments, with love and obedience to God, and taught us right from wrong, the sanctity of life and the human body, and warned us of the dangers and evils of drug addiction, that we would grow up to live in a nation of legalized abortion, legalized drugs, legalized prostitution, and churches that cater to the theme of the sixties; “Tune in, turn on, and drop out” , and if it feels good – do it!
    Time to preach – “Then many false prophets will rise up and deceive many. And because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold. But he endures to the end shall be saved.” (Matt. 24: 11-13).
    May God give us the strength to endure.

      • I fear that you are correct. Those of us who remain Faithful to God will find ourselves being persecuted. We shall become the outcasts and be derided and vilified by those who have fallen to the wants and desires of this sinful world.
        But we may remain strong in the Faith and be uplifted by the encouraging Word of God, that those who suffer in this world for His sake shall be rewarded in Heaven.

  2. According to the law of the land, gay marriages, casinos, racetrack betting, the selling of lotto tickets, cigarettes and alcohol are allowed. Some people are in favour of legalized prostitution. But, Christians do not have to accept all these practices.

  3. It is long past the time for true Christians to make a firm stand. Because a behaviour is in accordance with the law of the land does not make that behaviour right in the eyes of our Lord and should definitely NOT be promoted by any true Christian, clergy or otherwise. As Christians we are called to witness to the true Gospel and not to fall in line simply because the law of the land makes something legal.

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