Primate criticises hate speech law amendment

 — Jan. 12, 202612 janv. 2026

Archbishop Shane Parker, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, has written an open letter asking the Canadian government to reconsider an amendment to an upcoming bill that would remove religion as a defence against hate speech charges — while other critics describe the bill itself as an attack on free speech.

The primate otherwise expressed his support for Bill C-9, which he described as intended to address a growing number of incidents involving hateful speech or conduct, including antisemitism and Islamophobia.

Parker said his concern is that removing protections for speech grounded in opinions on or interpretations of religious texts will introduce uncertainty about the legal boundaries of religious education and practice. It may also unintentionally “deter the kind of open and healthy discourse that is central to spiritual and religious communities—including some of the communities the Bill intends to protect,” he added.

Bill C-9, introduced by the minority Liberal government, proposes four new criminal offences that the Liberals say are designed to address hate-motivated crimes and protect access to religious and cultural spaces.

These offences criminalise intimidating behaviour intended to provoke fear and impede the target’s access to a place of worship or a building associated with a religious, cultural or other identifiable group; the intentional obstruction of such a site; and the display of certain hate or terrorist symbols in public for the promotion of hate.

The bill also creates an offence for hate crime, to be appended to charges for other crimes in cases where they are judged to be motivated by hate. It includes a definition of hate to be used in determining which offences would be subject to the additional charge.

Section 319 of The Criminal Code of Canada outlaws the promotion or incitement of hatred against any identifiable group of people and lays out acceptable defences against such charges. Among these is a clause that states, “No person shall be convicted of an offence … if, in good faith, the person expressed or attempted to establish by an argument an opinion on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text.” The Liberal government agreed to remove the religious defence as part of a deal to gain support for the bill from the Bloc Québécois.

Parker asked the government to reconsider the amendment and retain the defences currently laid out in the code. Bill C-9 has drawn criticism from both religious and secular organizations, including the Canadian Labour Congress, the Coalition for Charter Rights and Freedoms and Independent Jewish Voices Canada (IJV). The latter, a Jewish organisation that frequently criticises Israeli policies, wrote its own submission to Parliament in October.

Much of the discussion of the bill has described it as aimed at addressing antisemitism, the submission says. But IJV argues that many of the Jewish organisations MPs have cited as supporting the bill label almost any criticism of Israel as antisemitic. They use the accusation to scare and silence potential critics, IJV says.

The IJV submission uses the example of disagreements over what did or did not constitute antisemitic expression at the University of Toronto’s Palestine solidarity encampment to illustrate how the expressions Bill C-9 seeks to limit are not clear-cut.

Removing defences and further limiting criticism of religious institutions puts too much discretion in the hands of government and law enforcement to decide what constitutes prosecutable speech, it says.

Parliament’s Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights remains in the process of considering Bill C-9.

Primate writes to leaders about proposed amendment to Bill C-9

To:
The Right Honourable Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada
The Honourable Pierre Poilievre, leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
Yves-François Blanchet, leader of the Bloc Québécois
The Honourable Sean Fraser, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada

Dear Prime Minister Carney, Mr. Poilievre, Mr. Blanchet, and Minister Fraser,

The Anglican Church of Canada upholds our common commitment in Canada to being a country where every person and community is free to live without facing hate-based discrimination and violence. We support initiatives, such as Bill C-9, intended to address the growing number of incidents of hate-motivated speech and conduct, especially including antisemitism, Islamophobia and the incitement of hatred towards any other identifiable or vulnerable groups and persons.

I write to you on behalf of Anglican Christians across Canada with respect to the proposed amendment to Bill C-9, advocating the removal of the “in good faith” and “religious text” defence exemptions from Criminal Code Section 319(3)(b). We stand with many others who have expressed concerns about these proposed amendments, including Jewish organisations, Muslim leaders, other Christian churches and various advocacy groups.

We are concerned that simply removing these defence exemptions from the Code will introduce new uncertainty about the legal boundaries of faith education and practice. We are also concerned that this may inadvertently deter the kind of open and healthy discourse that is central to spiritual and religious communities—including some of the communities the Bill intends to protect.

On behalf of the Anglican Church of Canada, I would respectfully encourage the Government of Canada to maintain these defences in the Code without additional amendment as they play a beneficial role in safeguarding religious expression without compromising the critical work of acting against violence, discrimination and hate.

Be certain that the Anglican Church of Canada will always be available to work collaboratively with the Government and other stakeholders towards legislation and programs that seek to uphold our shared concern to combat hate and to protect the freedom of religion.

Yours faithfully,
[signed] +Shane
The Most Reverend Shane Parker
Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada

Posted: Jan. 12, 2026 • Permanent link: ecumenism.net/?p=14780
Categories: Anglican JournalIn this article: Anglican Church of Canada, hate crimes, Parliament of Canada, Shane Parker
Transmis : 12 janv. 2026 • Lien permanente : ecumenism.net/?p=14780
Catégorie : Anglican JournalDans cet article : Anglican Church of Canada, hate crimes, Parliament of Canada, Shane Parker


Resisting antisemitism: Living out our adoption as people grafted into Israel’s story

 — Jan. 2, 20262 janv. 2026

This past fall, I attended an event honouring the late Rabbi Reuven Bulka, a loved and respected rabbi from Ottawa. I was struck by the high level of security and how such measures are now common in Jewish circles. I thought, How sad we’ve come to this point in Canada where Jews are constantly forced to prepare for potential physical violence!

Antisemitism isn’t new. For millennia, Jews have faced slander, hatred and violence – and far too often from the Church. In the latter half of the 20th century, many hoped for the end of antisemitism after Auschwitz. Alarmingly, antisemitism is rising yet again.
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The Most Revd Dr Laurent Mbanda, Chairman of GAFCON Primates Council, called the forthcoming G26 Bishops Assembly in Abuja, Nigeria a 'vital moment of counsel, unity, and shared conviction' for the Global Anglican Communion

GAFCON leaders say ‘eyes are on Abuja’ as movement moves to reorder Anglican Communion

 — Dec. 18, 202518 déc. 2025

GAFCON, a conservative Anglican movement that claims to represent the majority of Anglicans worldwide, particularly in the Global South, is moving toward a formal reordering of global Anglican leadership following its October renunciation of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s authority.
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<a href='https://meorome.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wbiog-text-en.pdf' target='_blank'>We Believe in One God: 60 years of Methodists and Catholics walking together</a>, the 2025 report of the Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission (MERCIC)

Methodist-Catholic Dialogue Commission publishes new document ‘We Believe in One God’

 — Dec. 10, 202510 déc. 2025

‘We believe in One God’ is the title of a new publication by the Catholic Church and the World Methodist Council, detailing progress made over the past six decades towards full visible unity between the two Christian world communions.

Printed by the Vatican Publishing House as part of an ecumenical series, the volume draws together the results of 11 reports produced by the Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission (MERCIC) since their formal dialogue began back in 1967. These reports, named after the cities in which they were presented to the World Methodist Conference, explore topics such as baptism, holiness, Scripture and tradition, Eucharist, nature and mission of the church and the call to visible communion.
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Parliament at Christmastime

Faith leaders warn of ‘chill’ if Ottawa reworks hate laws

 — Dec. 9, 20259 déc. 2025

Religious organisations urge Ottawa to consult them before redefining the limits of protected expression for religious groups.

Christian, Muslim and Jewish organisations are responding to a proposal to eliminate a religious exemption to Canada’s federal hate crimes legislation.

In September, the government introduced Bill C-9, the Combating Hate Act, which would introduce offences for publicly displaying symbols such as the swastika, impeding access to places of worship or other social centres, or committing offences motivated by hate.
… Read more » … lire la suite »

Petrocchi Commission says no to female diaconate, though judgment not definitive

 — Dec. 4, 20254 déc. 2025

A report presenting the results of the Commission’s work has been released. It rules out admitting women to the diaconate understood as a degree of the sacrament of Holy Orders, but says that it is not currently possible “to formulate a definitive judgment, as in the case of priestly ordination.”

“The status quaestionis of historical research and theological investigation, as well as their mutual implications, rules out the possibility of moving in the direction of admitting women to the diaconate understood as a degree of the sacrament of Holy Orders. In light of Sacred Scripture, Tradition, and the Church’s Magisterium, this assessment is strongly maintained, although it does not at present allow for a definitive judgment to be formulated, as is the case with priestly ordination.”
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Deacons lie prostrate during ordination Mass in St. Peter's Basilica during the Jubilee of Deacons at the Vatican

Vatican commission votes against ordaining female deacons

 — Dec. 4, 20254 déc. 2025

A Vatican commission studying the possibility of female deacons reported that the current state of historical and theological research “excludes the possibility of proceeding” toward admitting women to the diaconate, a conclusion that slows momentum on one of the church’s most debated questions while stopping short of a definitive no.

In a letter sharing the results of its work with Pope Leo XIV and released by the Vatican Dec. 4, the commission reported a 7-1 vote in favour of a statement concluding that the church cannot currently move toward admitting women to the third degree of holy orders, the diaconate.
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Lighting the Way: CCCB-Canadian Rabbinic Caucus Dialogue

 — Dec. 4, 20254 déc. 2025

In December, even as the days grow shorter and the nights longer, Jews and Catholics celebrate the holidays of Hanukkah and Christmas. Advent candles and Hanukkah lamps are to be found throughout Canada, their respective symbolisms mirrored in other winter solstice festivals, both ancient and modern, that find spiritual meaning in the calendar’s gradual turn towards light.
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Ottawa turns to faith leaders as measles cases surge

 — Dec. 2, 20252 déc. 2025

The Public Health Agency of Canada has reached out to Canadian faith groups, asking them to share information about measles with their members.

The agency made its request to the Canadian Council of Churches, the Canadian Interfaith Conversation, and the Canadian Multifaith Federation, three organisations that represent a wide range of faith groups.

The agency’s request followed a roundtable with faith leaders hosted by the Public Health Agency of Canada on Sept. 16.
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Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople hand each other copies of a joint declaration they signed at the end of a prayer service in the Patriarchal Cathedral of St. George in Istanbul

Pope, Patriarch Urge Common Date for Easter

 — Dec. 1, 20251 déc. 2025

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople called on Christians of the East and West to finally agree on a common date for Easter.

During a meeting at the patriarchal palace on 29 November, the two leaders — who met to celebrate the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea — said the anniversary should inspire “new and courageous steps on the path toward unity,” including finding that common date.
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Canadian participants in the Jubilee of Synodal Teams in Rome

Support for synodality continues to rise

 — Nov. 29, 202529 nov. 2025

A month after attending the Vatican’s Jubilee of Synodal Teams and Participatory Bodies (Oct. 24–26), Canadian lay leaders involved in the Church’s synodality movement hosted a webinar to reflect on the event and discuss next steps in the synodal journey.

The Nov. 25 virtual event, called “Pilgrims of Hope: From Waterloo to Rome” by Concerned Lay Catholics, highlighted that much of the Vatican summit’s discussions echoed those from the “Journey of Encounter: Pilgrims of Hope Embracing Synodality” event held in June at St. Jerome’s University in Waterloo, Ontario.
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