World Pride will talk religion

Religion, Christianity in particular, will feature at Sydney’s world Pride LGBTQIA festival that started with the Mardi Gras march on the weekend.

Sydney will host “the largest LGBTQIA+ Human Rights Conference ever to be held in the southern hemisphere”. Several of the speakers are high-profile campaigners for change in Christianity.

Jayne Ozanne, a leader of the LGBTQIA movement in the Church of England will be a guest at World pride Human Rights Conference. She was an evangelical member of the Archbishop’s Council in the early 2000s, living a celibate life “and said at that time she “did not believe it was compatible to be gay and a Christian.” She came out publically as a lesbian in 2018, declaring “God is a God of surprises.” She had subjected herself to “deliverance” ministries exorcisms,

Ozone moved an amendment at the recent Church of England General Synod (church parliament) to bring same-sex marriage on their agenda for mid-year. Her amendment lost, but the Bishop’s plan to have prayers blessing same-sex couples has been accepted.

She is a full-time campaigner, and director of the Ozanne Foundation which she set up to work with religious organisations to “end discrimination based on sexuality or gender.”

Ozanne is a “go to” commentator in the UK media. She told the press this week that the Church of England’s bishops’ decision not to back same-sex marriage was “utterly despicable”

She will be joined on the presenters’ panel at the Human Rights Conference by Josephine Inkpin, a transgender Anglican Priest who is currently the minister at Pitt street Uniting Church in Sydney.She was the first openly trangender person to be licensed as an Anglican priest in Australia – The Other Cheek understands there are three.


Jo Inkpin is also the Co-chair of Equal Voices, a peak Australian network that advocates for LGBTIQA+ people in churches. Through the University of Divinity in Melbourne, she recently created the first Australian-accredited Queer Theology university unit. 

It is likely that these speakers will be platformed in the major media quite widely.

Update: the “y” went missing from Jayne’s name, now fixed.

Image: Pride flag Credit: zeevveez/flickr