With all due respect, and I’m sure you are aware, as part of the decision, bishops and other church officials were granted the right to refuse to officiate homosexual marriages. Priests who do not want to celebrate a marriage between a same-sex couple will still have the right to object. So it’s clear you have the option to remain and not perform legal marriages between 2 of God’s children whose orientation and natural attraction happens to be towards a partner of the same gender.
With all due respect, that doesn’t mean anything substantially. A few days ago, I heard that after the institution of the liturgy (probably in January), I could still, legitimately, proclaim the tradition and biblical view. But that is simply not the case
Of course I can preach that, but when the Church has instituted a new teaching, I cannot preach a different view and claim to represent the Church’s teaching. Even though both priests and bishops have made the claim, two mutually excluding views cannot both be the official teaching of a Church.
As a priest, I preach as a representative of the Church, and of my bishop, and I am in communion - sacramentally AND doctrinally with everyone he is in communion with. If A is in communion with B, and B is in communion with C, then A is in communion with C, if he wants to or not. So unless there is granted alternative episcopal oversight (essentially two communions under one roof), I will have to leave.
My bishop told me that I shouldn’t go, because I’m so young (33). I didn’t answer him, but if I did, I would ask him what my age had to do with it. Practically, I’m at an age where I could easily get a new (and probably better paying) job, if I couldn’t continue (somewhere else) as a priest, and existentially his points were just weird. Did he ask me to compromise my conscience for 30 years ‘because I’m young’?
It reminds me of the scene, in
A Man For All Seasons, between Norfolk and Thomas More where Norfolk asks More to sign the declaration, “for fellowship,” whereupon More answers: “And when we die, and you are sent to heaven for doing your conscience, and I am sent to hell for not doing mine, will you come with me, for fellowship?”