CATHOLIC PRIEST SUES AFTER BEING FIRED FROM HOSPITAL FOR ANSWERING PATIENT QUESTIONS ABOUT MARRIAGE
Catholic priest who sued hospital for religious discrimination gets $12,000 settlement
(Well done! Any victory over the Gay Lobby should be celebrated. Gene)
"So I said to him, ‘Well, what do you think God would say about that?’ This is a Catholic asking a Catholic chaplain – obviously within a secular hospital, but he obviously wanted Catholic doctrine, but that's all I would give anyway," Pullicino recounted.
"I didn't try to push it on him, I just sort of laid it out to try to open his mind slowly about it, and it wasn't a confrontational talk." After the patient disclosed that his father disapproved of his lifestyle, Pullicino said he would agree and encouraged him "to try and make up with his father."
CATHOLIC PRIEST SUES AFTER BEING FIRED FROM HOSPITAL FOR ANSWERING PATIENT QUESTIONS ABOUT MARRIAGE
"Particularly people with psychiatric illness, they definitely need the family support. So I didn't share too much more," he said.
Pullicino had a successful career in the NHS as a consultant neurologist before he became a priest in 2019, and achieved widespread recognition for helping to expose the abuses of the Liverpool Care Pathway, an end-of-life protocol in the U.K. that was later abolished after scrutiny.
Following his exchange, Pullicino was told the patient filed a formal complaint against him. Vanessa Ford, the acting chief executive of South West London and St. George’s Mental Health NHS Trust, reportedly said in a written response to the complaint that the Trust’s policy on equality and diversity "takes precedence over religious belief."
Part of the complaint against Pullicino alleged he had told the patient "you should not be with your husband" and "that you would go to hell," both of which accusations he vehemently denied. The priest ultimately had his contract with the hospital terminated while he was on annual leave in January 2020, according to his lawyers.
Pullicino then lodged a grievance against Ford and the way she handled the situation. Ford later acknowledged "on reflection" that her letter should have been phrased differently and that religious beliefs are "afforded exactly the same rights as the other eight protected characteristics."
For also noted "there was no suggestion that the Trust felt you had told the patient that he would go to hell."
"We are pleased that we have agreed an outcome with Mr. Pullicino which avoids the need for further proceedings," a spokesperson for South West London and St George’s Mental Health NHS Trust told Fox News Digital.
"We remain absolutely committed to promoting equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) for our patients, staff and communities. We respect and celebrate all protected characteristics equally, including religion, race, sexual orientation, disability, age, sex, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, and pregnancy and maternity," the spokesperson continued.
What absolute nonsense - the “gay lobby” had no part in this incident. The impertinence of the priest has been checked, and he will no doubt weigh his words in future. Ministering to the sick has nothing to do with lecturing them about their relationships.
ReplyDelete"The impertinence of the priest has been checked,"
ReplyDeleteHas it indeed. His employers have paid out £10,000 for the privilege of achieving this.
GENE
But the “gay lobby” (sic) had nothing to do with this. It is about a priest taking advantage of a sick man to lecture him about his sexuality and then trousering £10k from his employers - who should have told him to hold his tongue and piss off.
ReplyDelete