Lord Tebbit: It’s perfectly sensible to think gay acts are sinful
Former Conservative Party chair Norman Tebbit is upset about gay people again.
Lord Tebbit, a former Thatcher minister and Chairman of the Conservative Party, is a long-running opponent of LGBT rights.
In an interview with The Conversation, the Tory peer insisted it was “perfectly sensible” to think gay acts are sinful.
He said: “[I think that] to be a homosexual cannot be a sin because that is what God has created, but it is perfectly sensible to argue that a homosexual act is a sin because that is what the Bible has said from the time of the Old Testament through the New Testament.
“So therefore, as a Christian, should you dump all that and still call yourself a Christian? It’s a bit doubtful.”
He added: “I opposed gay marriage because it is fundamentally not what marriage was set out to be.
“I don’t like this way of proceeding by simply changing the meaning of a word. We’re doing too much of that.”
Lord Tebbit recently claimed materials created for LGBT-inclusive sex and relationship education will “damage” and confuse children.
The peer claimed: “I think it is damaging to children to introduce uncertainty into their minds.”
The peer claimed: “We’ve got to make these same-sex marriages available to all. It would lift my worries about inheritance tax because maybe I’d be allowed to marry my son. Why not?
“Why shouldn’t a mother marry her daughter? Why shouldn’t two elderly sisters living together marry each other? I quite fancy my brother!”
The peer has also argued against LGBT equality because he was worried about a gay royal becoming Queen or King.
During the equal marriage debate he warned: “There is, I believe, no bar to a lesbian succeeding to the throne. It may happen. It probably will, at some stage. What, then, if she marries and her partner bears a child by an anonymous sperm donor? Is that child the heir to the throne?
“If the Queen herself subsequently bore a child by an anonymous donor, which child then, if either, would inherit the throne?
“The possibilities must have been discussed.”