Christians oppose gay rights regulations
London ? Christian activists submitted a petition to Queen Elizabeth II on Tuesday protesting a gay rights law that they contend will force them to promote and condone gay sex.
The activists, who said such laws violate Biblical teaching, held a candlelit vigil outside Parliament as the House of Lords debated the new law Tuesday night. The body voted 199-68 against a motion calling for the regulation to be scrapped.
The section of the Equality Act 2006 banning businesses from discriminating against gay people in the provision of goods and services took effect in Northern Ireland on Jan. 1 and is scheduled to be introduced in England, Wales and Scotland in April.
In March, Britain’s High Court will hear an attempt by a Christian group, the Christian Institute, to overturn the legislation.
Andrea Minichello Williams, a protest organizer, said the petition submitted to Buckingham Palace was signed by 10,000 Christians and urged the monarch to use her “power and position” to demand that the government protect the freedom of Christians to live according to the Bible’s teaching.
The queen is the titular head of state in Britain and supreme governor of the Church of England, but she has no binding powers on either front.

