Manhattan Declaration

The Manhattan Declaration is a manifesto issued in November 2009 by Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox leaders calling for Christians to re-affirm their support for the anti-abortion movement, and opposition to same-sex marriage. Notably, the manifesto calls for civil disobedience to laws affirming the right to abortion and same-sex marriage.

The drafting committee who wrote the manifesto includes Chuck Colson.

The signatories represent leaders from almost every branch of American Christianity, except for Mormons who are conspicuously missing from the list.

"Vital issues"
The full text is nine pages; but their website lists these three "vital issues".

By all means, be against abortion, but calling it a "culture of death" or that lives are considered "discardable" is nonsense and a profound misrepresentation of the pro-abortion movement. The disagreement on abortion is what exactly constitutes "life"; not whether or not life is "discardable".

Interestingly, they've added a quote from Mother Teresa; more than a few people (most famously Christopher Hitchens) have criticized Mother Teresa for nurturing a death cult on account of her beliefs that suffering is a good thing, and the abysmal medical standards in her clinics, where many people needlessly died.

That the authors are unable to imagine a society without marriage is a failure of imagination on their part. The Mosuo people of China are doing just fine without marriage.

The LBJ quote is correct insofar as divorce can be terrible for children, but this is because it upsets their familiar environment, and may forcibly cut off contact to one of the parents. Not because the parents are two men or two women. The issue of divorce is completely unrelated to same-sex marriage.

Almost everyone in the industrialized world agrees on this. Indeed, toleration for other religious views is considered a virtue by most people, both religious and otherwise. Persecution complex much?

Pseudohistory and other choice quotes from the manifesto
Dubious framing here, given that almost all of the Roman Europe was under church influence at the time. It ignores the contributions of Arab scholars and the hostility of many Christians to pagan Greek ideas.

This is not the case. For most of its history, Christianity has upheld the divine right of kings, in Europe and elsewhere. Some did eventually challenge this, but only significantly with the Reformation and Enlightenment. Conspicuously, France is the first European power to become a republic with the French Revolution—though it did not do so until after the United States-a movement led by non-Christian (even strongly anti-Christian) revolutionaries. To make matters worse, when the republic was declared, it was soon taken over by, then , then by for a bit, then  again, then , , and finally  before settling for a republic in 1870. In fact, most European states did not become free from rule by a royal elite until after World War I. Greece is a prime example of a European state gaining its independence prior to World War I, from the Ottoman empire, only to be ruled by a local monarch rather than a democratic republic.

Yes, of course, people like Malcolm X. Meanwhile, good fundamentalist Christians were denouncing the Rev. Martin Luther King as a Communist and New Left students in SNCC as outside agitators.

iPhone app
People can sign the declaration on the website; and for a time also offered an iPhone app to sign the declaration, which was removed from the app store by Apple for being "too offensive". Note that there is no other way to install an app other than using the app store, apparently morality now needs to be policed by a multinational (and you get to pay hundreds of dollars for the service).