"Although we don't create obstacles for these people in their relations with God, our church speaks in traditional language on issues like this," said Father Ihor Yatsiv, spokesman for the Ukrainian Catholic Church.
"We haven't received requests so far for special treatment from homosexuals, and we've no plans to introduce any pastoral facilities for them," he told Catholic News Service in late September.
In excerpts from an interview published Sept. 20 on the Eastern Catholic Church's website, Ukrainian Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk of Kiev-Halych rejected EU calls for greater homosexual rights under a planned Ukraine-EU association agreement.
"We are mistaken if we believe we have to opt for these diseases to attain European prosperity," the archbishop said.
"Today, the EU looks like a teenager experiencing the restraints of morality, who needs a Christian education. Europe was not founded on same-sex couples, but on respect for human dignity."
EU officials have warned that new laws banning "propaganda of homosexuality" in Ukraine and Russia are incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights and have called on Ukraine to tighten its anti-discrimination rules.
A mid-September letter to members of Parliament from Ukraine's National Council of Churches and Religious Organizations said greater homosexual rights would "promote the advertising of homosexuality" and restrict "free speech for supporters of traditional families."
Eastern and Latin Catholics make up a tenth of the Ukrainian population of 50 million, compared to around a third who belong to three rival Orthodox denominations.
During a March visit to Brussels, Catholic and Protestant leaders backed accession to the EU, although closer links are opposed by Ukraine's opposition Communist Party and the largest Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which is linked to the Russian Orthodox Church.
In his interview, Archbishop Shevchuk said tolerant attitudes to homosexuality were "spreading in Ukrainian society," adding that EU requirements were based on "pseudo-values" and "different conceptions of morality."
Father Yatsiv said the Ukrainian Catholic Church held the same views as Pope Francis, who said in an interview published Sept. 19 in Jesuit publications he did not want homosexuals to feel the Catholic Church had "always condemned them."
"There's no tension between the standpoints of the pope and our archbishop -- they're saying the same things, just in different words," the spokesman told CNS.
In August, the spokesman for Russia's Catholic Church also ruled out pastoral facilities for gays and lesbians after international calls for a boycott of the Winter Olympics to protest Russia's alleged mistreatment in the country.
"Homosexuality is a totally marginal issue in Russian society -- there's not great interest in it here," said Msgr. Igor Kovalevsky, secretary-general of Russia's bishops' conference.
"There are very few homosexuals in our Catholic communities, and we direct our pastoral work at individuals, not groups. But we don't exclude homosexual people either," he said.