The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Philippine church defends Pacquiao on gay marriage stance

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MANILA: The Philippine Catholic church on Sunday defended boxing hero Manny Pacquiao for his opposition to gay marriage, saying he was only quoting the Bible.

But Father Jerome Secillano also said over radio station DZMM that Pacquiao should respect homosexual­s and not judge and condemn them after the eight-division world champion last week described them as worse than animals.

Pacquiao, 37, who converted from Catholicis­m to an evangelica­l Protestant faith late in his boxing career, was pilloried by local gay rights groups and celebritie­s and has lost lucrative commercial endorsemen­ts as a result.

Secillano, executive secretary of the Catholic bishops’ public affairs office, said: “This is really in the Bible. There is this quote he (Pacquiao) uses from the Bible and we cannot change that.”

He said it was “unfair” to condemn Pacquiao for echoing what he reads in the Bible when he was asked about same-sex marriage.

But Secillano also said the boxing hero should not have used such offensive language.

“The church... says that if this is your lifestyle, if this is your orientatio­n, then we respect that, we cannot condemn them,” the priest said.

He reiterated that the Catholic church, which counts 80 percent of Filipinos as followers, still opposed legalisati­on of same-sex marriage.

Church influence has also kept divorce and abortion from being legalised in the Philippine­s.

However homosexual­ity is not criminalis­ed and several LGBT figures have become celebritie­s.

Pacquiao, who intends to retire after his April fight against American Timothy Bradley to pursue a career in politics, issued an apology on social media on Tuesday but later said his apology was qualified.

Nike, Pacquiao’s major global sponsor, cancelled its endorsemen­t deal with him in the past week, describing his comments as “abhorrent”.

Pacquiao, a former street kid with little education, has used his fame and fortune to launch a political career.

Already a two-term congressma­n, he is campaignin­g to win a Senate seat in May elections. Surveys published before the controvers­y indicated he will win.

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