The Presbyterian Church is active in social issues, and is conservative in regards to LGBT rights and abortion. The church ordains women as ruling elders and ministers of word and sacrament. On life issues, the denomination opposes abortion except for when the woman's life is in danger, and holds "total opposition" to the liberalisation of Northern Ireland's abortion laws. The denomination quoted itself as being "deeply disappointed" at the passing of the
Northern Ireland (Executive Formation) Act 2019. In 2021 the General Assembly agreed to ‘…direct the Trustees to employ a 'divest and engage' strategy in relation to companies producing or using
fossil fuels, thereby divesting from those that derive more that 10% of their turnover from oil and gas extraction (the coal, oil and gas majors), and engaging with companies that derive more than 10% of their turnover from the use of fossil fuels encouraging them to make clear commitments to the targets for global heating and carbon emission reduction as set out in the COP 21 Paris Agreement; reporting back to the 2022 General Assembly.' On the issue of dealing with the legacy of the Troubles, the Church's Council for Public Affairs has commented on "the right of victims and survivors to seek due process and justice in the courts. The Council’s report expressed its 'deep disquiet at the current proposals' stating that, 'whilst the Stormont House Agreement (SHA) was not perfect, it did set out a broader, four-strand framework to address legacy issues. We are on public record stating our support for all four key principles outlined in the SHA, especially the right of victims and survivors to seek due process and justice in the courts." The Church is active in social work and provides services to those with addictions and offending behaviours, and who require supported housing through specialist facilities. Along with the other major Protestant denominations (Church of Ireland and Methodist Church in Ireland), the Church is heavily involved in education. The three denominations nominate over 1,800 governors to serve on the boards of controlled schools in Northern Ireland. Controlled schools are 'church-related schools' because in the 1930s, 40s and 50s, the Protestant Churches transferred their school buildings, pupils and staff into state control (hence the terms 'transferor' and 'controlled') on the understanding that the Christian ethos of these schools would be maintained in perpetuity.
Views on LGBT rights In May 2006, the church's press officer stated that current regulations did not prohibit blessing same-sex relationships. However, in June 2006, the General Assembly (GA) voted to ban its ministers from blessing same-sex relationships, clarifying the previous ambiguity. In 2015, the church voiced its opposition to the legalisation of same-sex marriage. In June 2018, the General Assembly held a debate "the specific theological question of what constitutes a credible profession of faith and how it is to be understood and applied in [the] particular pastoral circumstances" of same-sex couples. The report from the Doctrine Committee stated,"In light of our understanding of Scripture and the Church’s understanding of a credible profession of faith, it is clear that same sex couples are not eligible for communicant membership, nor are they qualified to receive baptism for their children. We believe that their outward conduct and lifestyle is at variance with a life of obedience to Christ."The Assembly subsequently agreed with this report, and voted 'That appropriate training be offered to Kirk Sessions on the theology and practice of the Church's understanding of 'a credible profession of faith' and the pastoral guidelines on homosexuality.' The outcome of this debate was controversial among the church's members, and several ministers spoke out against the adoption of any formal rules. It also led to several resignations; notable Presbyterian elder,
Lord Alderdice, announced his resignation in protest, and later wrote a book on the subject of tolerance. When a minister of Whitehead Presbyterian, Ian Carton, resigned three years later, he partially attributed his decision to the 2018 decision of the General Assembly. An
open letter was published by newspapers from 232 members of the church, including many ministers, elders, and one former Moderator of the Church Assembly, entitled "A Cry from the Heart", addressing the "profound sense of hurt" the church had inflicted on its LGBT members. In the same year, the church voted to loosen its ties with the Church of Scotland with a vote of 255 to 171, after that church took steps towards letting its ministers preside at same-sex marriages. This followed several years of the Assembly's decision to not have the Moderator attend the Church of Scotland's meetings, in protest of that church's steps towards liberalisation. In September 2019 the church dismissed a Dublin-based elder, Steven Smyrl, after he had contracted a same-sex civil marriage in November 2018, citing that this was "not compatible" with the church's ordained leadership. This led to a bitter and divisive investigation, which in December 2021 found that the minister of Christ Church, Sandymount, Rev Katherine Meyer, had breached the Church’s laws and teachings on sexuality, had refused to recant her decision to support the elder, and that her church council had coopted the dismissed elder back onto its membership and then refused the Presbytery's demand to reverse that action. The response from the media and several congregations was highly critical, with an editorial in
The Irish Times describing the church as being on "the road to irrelevance". In 2024 Katherine Meyer was ruled by a church court, the Presbyterian Church in Ireland Judicial Commission, to have failed to "yield submission in the Lord to the courts of the Church"; she decided to resign from her ministry. ==Publications==