The law is against conversion therapy programs, not moral agreement.
And you're naive if you think that's the only way to read it. Look at the language used; it's vague enough that not agreeing or affirming could be considered involuntary and coercive conversion therapy.
From the article (not the bill itself, but their interpretation):
According to this law that has made it through the Spanish House, if a pastor tries to help someone repent of sodomy, or counsels a "trans" person in a "non-affirming" manner, then they can be thrown into prison.
And you're naive if you think that's the only way to read it. Look at the language used; it's vague enough that not agreeing or affirming could be considered involuntary and coercive conversion therapy.
From the article (not the bill itself, but their interpretation):
I live in Spain, and I'm telling you that priests aren't going to go to prison for telling gays about sexual morality.
The article is downright deceiving in its interpretation.
Yet. Give it a few years or, at the rate things have been going, maybe months.
Nonsense. Spain is the last European country that would persecute Christians.