An explanation for the focus on homosexuality and abortion

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Then why does France have plans to do so soon?
Eternal,

France is France. The United States is the United States not Washington D.C. Here is the best I can come up with…

La structure française de gouvernement est très centralisée. Le gouvernement peut fixer les normes universelles qui s’appliquent dans l’ensemble de la France. Il a été mon expérience que les départements ne sont pas comme des états aux USA. Ils ont peu de puissance de changer ce qui est placé par le gouvernement national. Cela dit, le Français ne se reposent pas autour si le gouvernement national fait quelque chose qu’ils n’aiment pas. En 1995, la France était juste au sujet de l’arrêt par des grèves et des protestations contre les politiques du gouvernement nouveau-élu de Chirac.

Habituellement, la plus grande ville dans un département est le capital, et a le Préfecture le bureau de gouvernement, où les choses aiment des passeports, des enregistrements de voiture, les permis des conducteurs et des papiers résidents sont traités. Note: Certaines de ce qui obtiennent traités où a été changé dans 2003. Quand vous devez obtenir n’importe lequel de ce ci-dessus fait, il y aura probablement beaucoup d’écritures. " une forme pour tout " semble être la devise de la bureaucratie française. Rien n’est venu soit traité à moins que toutes les questions soient répondues par une forme. Il y a un processus, cela que je n’ai pas figuré dehors, qui en doit être suivi afin des écritures gouvernement-connexes pour obtenir fait en France.

OK…:flowers:
 
Hi, CopticChristian,

As a mono-lingual…who sometimes has trouble with English … I would appreciate a translation. Thanks.

God bless
Eternal,

France is France. The United States is the United States not Washington D.C. Here is the best I can come up with…

La structure française de gouvernement est très centralisée. Le gouvernement peut fixer les normes universelles qui s’appliquent dans l’ensemble de la France. Il a été mon expérience que les départements ne sont pas comme des états aux USA. Ils ont peu de puissance de changer ce qui est placé par le gouvernement national. Cela dit, le Français ne se reposent pas autour si le gouvernement national fait quelque chose qu’ils n’aiment pas. En 1995, la France était juste au sujet de l’arrêt par des grèves et des protestations contre les politiques du gouvernement nouveau-élu de Chirac.

Habituellement, la plus grande ville dans un département est le capital, et a le Préfecture le bureau de gouvernement, où les choses aiment des passeports, des enregistrements de voiture, les permis des conducteurs et des papiers résidents sont traités. Note: Certaines de ce qui obtiennent traités où a été changé dans 2003. Quand vous devez obtenir n’importe lequel de ce ci-dessus fait, il y aura probablement beaucoup d’écritures. " une forme pour tout " semble être la devise de la bureaucratie française. Rien n’est venu soit traité à moins que toutes les questions soient répondues par une forme. Il y a un processus, cela que je n’ai pas figuré dehors, qui en doit être suivi afin des écritures gouvernement-connexes pour obtenir fait en France.

OK…:flowers:
 
Hi, CopticChristian,

As a mono-lingual…who sometimes has trouble with English … I would appreciate a translation. Thanks.

God bless
The point is that France and the United States speak different languages and have different governments. What France does is what France does…
The French government structure is very centralized. The government is able to set universal standards that apply throughout France. It has been my experience that the departments are not like states in the US. They have little power to change what is set by the national government. That said, the French don’t sit around if the national government does something they don’t like. In 1995, France was just about shutdown by strikes and protests against the policies of the newly-elected Chirac government.
Usually, the largest city in a department is the capital, and has the Préfecture, the government office, where things like passports, car registrations, drivers’ licenses and resident papers are processed. Note: Some of what get processed where was changed in 2003. When you need to get any of the above done, there will likely be a lot of paperwork. “A form for everything” seems to be the motto of the French bureaucracy. Nothing came be processed unless all of the questions are answered by a form. There is a process, that I have not figured out, that must be followed in order for any government-related paperwork to get done in France.
Why France does what France does has little to do with the USA…:tiphat:
 
Hi, CopticChristian,

Thank you very much. 🙂

Actually, from my experience (Mexico, Panama, EuroZone) each country is really quite different from the US … and when the US Customs Agent is checking your passport and says, “Welcome home!” it really feels very good!

Hey, does the Mod know that we have Irish emotocoms … but, no US ones?! :eek:
God bless
The point is that France and the United States speak different languages and have different governments. What France does is what France does…

Why France does what France does has little to do with the USA…:tiphat:
 
Perhaps a Catholic theologian could comment.

Do We Have a Pro-Life ‘Good War’ and an Anti-SSM ‘Bad War’?nationalreview.com/corner/284483/do-we-have-pro-life-good-war-and-anti-ssm-bad-war-david-french
I think French nails it. It’s not that conservative Christians should stop opposing same-sex marriage–it isn’t marriage and can never be, and we shouldn’t give in to cultural pressure to pretend it is–but we need on the one hand to give it a lower priority than issues having more directly to do with human life and dignity (abortion, war, torture, human trafficking, etc.), and on the other to broaden the focus by upholding (and most importantly living out) an orthodox Christian concept of marriage and sexuality across the board.

One of the things that first drew me to Catholicism was that Catholics did both of these things–they cared about social justice issues that weren’t politically “right wing,” and they had a sexual morality that made difficult demands of everyone in a coherent and spiritually challenging way.

Edwin
 
The difference between human trafficking and homosexuality is that nobody is trying to tell us that human trafficking is okay.
That is certainly true.
Yes, dealing in child prostitutes is terrible, but the pimps and the customers both go to hell, while the traumatized children have a chance to go to Heaven, and so it all works out in the end.
That’s callous. Going to hell is not “OK.” Nor is having your life scarred and degraded OK, even if you “have a chance to go to heaven.” Ivan Karamazov, where are you when we need you?😦
No action on our part is required, we only need a vague sense of disapproval to be morally correct and achieve our own salvation.
It’s hard to believe that you actually mean this. This sounds like a caricature.

If you can look at human beings suffering and being abused and not feel as if action on your part is required, then you are far from Jesus.

You make it sound as if “being morally correct and achieving our salvation” are somehow abstract matters of jumping through arbitrary hoops, when in fact they are about allowing the Spirit of God to mold us into the likeness of Jesus.

And Jesus didn’t just indulge in “vague moral disapproval.” The Spirit of God was upon him and anointed him to preach good news for the poor, to proclaim release to the captives and sight to the blind, to free the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor. . . .

And to be saved is to allow God to make us the kind of people who do these things as well.

I don’t claim to be a good example of this–I’m much better at talking than doing, and when I have the chance to do anything decisive I usually manage to argue myself out of it.

Edwin
 
I think French nails it. It’s not that conservative Christians should stop opposing same-sex marriage–it isn’t marriage and can never be, and we shouldn’t give in to cultural pressure to pretend it is–but we need on the one hand to give it a lower priority than issues having more directly to do with human life and dignity (abortion, war, torture, human trafficking, etc.), and on the other to broaden the focus by upholding (and most importantly living out) an orthodox Christian concept of marriage and sexuality across the board.

One of the things that first drew me to Catholicism was that Catholics did both of these things–they cared about social justice issues that weren’t politically “right wing,” and they had a sexual morality that made difficult demands of everyone in a coherent and spiritually challenging way.

Edwin
On the other hand, there is a relationship between same-sex marriage and other social evils. For example, people usually analyze prisoners based on racial demographics, but between 80-90% of all prisoners have been previously abused. Same-sex marriage weakens marriage and goes jointly with a culture of cohabitation and nontraditional families; this dramatically raises the likelihood of abuse of children, which increases the number of people who will commit crimes. Perhaps these links should also be a focus.
 
The picture referenced says far more about the writer than it ever could about Christians.

The writer claims to have “seen more in the news and online about this silly rainbow cookie over the past two days than I have ever seen in my entire life concerning [hungry children & human trafficking]”.

That’s not a description of the objective reality, but a description of the writer’s narrow and uninformed information-gathering process. Before I became Christian, I held these same ill-informed views. When the mainstream media is your only source of information about Christianity (as it was mine), you will end up with this kind of ignorant belief. Once I came into the Church and started learning about all of the facets of Christian life, I finally understood that all of these things were happening all around me simultaneously, I was just unaware because I willfully chose not to see it (by choosing the information sources that I did).

In opposition to the writer’s “data”, I’ve heard about lots of Catholic social service efforts in just the last week on Relevant Radio, and I had never even heard of the “cookie” story until I read this thread.
 
Eternal,

Slavery, Abortion, Human trafficking have nothing to do with traditional marriage and less to do with same sex marriage. The support you say that has been lost for traditional marriage is mirrored by the 42 states that ban same sex marriage…

Slavery is a human phenomenon based on living not on using our sex organs

Abortion is a problem with those that are able to use their sex organs to procreate

Human trafficking is slavery and not based on sex organs although I understand prostitution is part of this…

Same sex marriage is based on using sex organs, for those that cannot procreate and I am not sure, but is there, homosexual human trafficking?

You are wrong that the support for traditional marriage has lost ground, when you see that 42 states ban this. Same Sex marriage is not a fight, it is a plea for something that homosexuals have no right to…that is my opinion and the opinion of 42 states…

We war on the side of humanity to fight slavery, abortion, human traficking…

Who wages the war for same sex marriage…? and why is it bad?
Why have same sex marriage? What makes two men to couple in our society is as often as not what led Jerry Sandusky to do his thing. Of course, presently, convenion limits this, but as the 20th century showed us, moral converted can be laid aside in a moment.

In ancient Greek society of course, what Sandusky did was an established institution. Pederasty as an established custom. You seem to want to bring back that society and say. no this Christian thing, which does restrain this stuff, was all a mistake. IAC, yes, there is a link to slavery. Women and boys were “imported” into the Middle East to satisfy the sexual needs of their customers. In America, it was done, but more circumscribed by Christian morality. Fact is that in Islam, asceticism is not a virtue, at least not in the same way we under stand the term.
 
Why have same sex marriage? What makes two men to couple in our society is as often as not what led Jerry Sandusky to do his thing. Of course, presently, convenion limits this, but as the 20th century showed us, moral converted can be laid aside in a moment.

In ancient Greek society of course, what Sandusky did was an established institution. Pederasty as an established custom. You seem to want to bring back that society and say. no this Christian thing, which does restrain this stuff, was all a mistake. IAC, yes, there is a link to slavery. Women and boys were “imported” into the Middle East to satisfy the sexual needs of their customers. In America, it was done, but more circumscribed by Christian morality. Fact is that in Islam, asceticism is not a virtue, at least not in the same way we under stand the term.
Robby,:irish3:

I’m on the side of the OHCAC…or have you not noticed…:compcoff:

Are you posting to me?:ehh:

Maybe it is the quote function…🤷

Who is the you, that you are addressing…:onpatrol:
 
On the other hand, there is a relationship between same-sex marriage and other social evils. For example, people usually analyze prisoners based on racial demographics, but between 80-90% of all prisoners have been previously abused. Same-sex marriage weakens marriage and goes jointly with a culture of cohabitation and nontraditional families; this dramatically raises the likelihood of abuse of children, which increases the number of people who will commit crimes. Perhaps these links should also be a focus.
I think the part in bold makes several unsubstantiated assumptions. That’s not to say that you are wrong, necessarily, just that these things are far from proven.
  1. Does same-sex “marriage” actually weaken marriage? How?
  2. Correlation is not causation. A culture where cohabitation is accepted is the kind of culture that will accept same-sex marriages, but is SSM to blame?
  3. Can one really equate same-sex marriage with the kind of casual cohabitation that tends to go along with child abuse? Some would argue that on the contrary, legalizing same-sex “marriage” will make gay relationships more stable. I think that as a social observation, the parts of the population where SSM is likely to be practiced are just not the same as those that are turning away from marriage–and this is precisely why there’s pressure for SSM, arguably, since marriage has come to be seen as a marker of social status.
I tend to agree with Charles Murray that the privileged left needs to “preach what it practices.”

Edwin
 
Why have same sex marriage? What makes two men to couple in our society is as often as not what led Jerry Sandusky to do his thing. Of course, presently, convenion limits this, but as the 20th century showed us, moral converted can be laid aside in a moment.

In ancient Greek society of course, what Sandusky did was an established institution. Pederasty as an established custom. You seem to want to bring back that society and say. no this Christian thing, which does restrain this stuff, was all a mistake.
Apart from the fact that you have bizarrely decided that CC is an advocate of same-sex “marriage,” here’s my problem with what you are saying:

It’s not true that advocates of SSM want to bring back ancient pagan norms on these things (barring some clueless folks who speak vaguely of ancient “tolerance”). On the contrary, the fact that ancient homosexuality often meant pederasty is often cited as an argument against the conservative interpretation of Romans 1, for instance (in other words, liberal Christians claim that Paul was talking about pederasty).

What I think conservatives miss (partly because liberal rhetoric about “freedom” and “not repressing your sexual identity” or whatever often conceals the fact) is that liberal sexual mores have their own taboos and restraints. The emphasis in liberal sexual morality is on equality, consent, and respect. Hence the relatively recent stigmatization of romantic relationships in which there’s a “power differential,” or even a serious age difference. Hence the concern with things like “date rape.” Liberals have a different set of restraints on sexual impulse–they don’t simply want to liberate it.

Why then does their rhetoric often indicate otherwise? I think the key is that most liberals are Pelagians–they think that “normal” people have basically healthy instincts. But it’s a bit like the classical Protestant view of justification–it’s not that they think it’s OK to do just anything sexually, but that they assume that a “normal” person will only want to do the “right” things.

And lest you accuse me of being an advocate of SSM, here’s what I think about the above:

I think that the liberal emphasis on equality and consent is a needed and appropriate development of Christian sexual morality, in keeping with longstanding themes in Christian tradition (such as the medieval Church’s definition of marriage in terms of consent and not just consummation, which was arguably itself fueled by the doctrine of Mary’s perpetual virginity). But it needs to be added to existing Christian tradition on sexual morality, not substituted for it. So no, I don’t think SSM is real “marriage,” but I do think that we need to recognize the value of a loving, respectful relationship and not equate it with promiscuity or abuse.

Edwin
 
Hi, Contarini,

Let me respond to your first question.

I think there are many ways of undermining the family - and I think that co-habitation and same sex ‘marriage’ are just two of them.

Here is a link that provides some information to back of this statement. wnd.com/2004/04/24335/

God bless
I think the part in bold makes several unsubstantiated assumptions. That’s not to say that you are wrong, necessarily, just that these things are far from proven.
  1. Does same-sex “marriage” actually weaken marriage? How?
  2. Correlation is not causation. A culture where cohabitation is accepted is the kind of culture that will accept same-sex marriages, but is SSM to blame?
  3. Can one really equate same-sex marriage with the kind of casual cohabitation that tends to go along with child abuse? Some would argue that on the contrary, legalizing same-sex “marriage” will make gay relationships more stable. I think that as a social observation, the parts of the population where SSM is likely to be practiced are just not the same as those that are turning away from marriage–and this is precisely why there’s pressure for SSM, arguably, since marriage has come to be seen as a marker of social status.
I tend to agree with Charles Murray that the privileged left needs to “preach what it practices.”

Edwin
 
The emphasis in liberal sexual morality is on equality, consent, and respect.
According to who? Let’s look at the sexual revolution in the 60s (and some would argue still ongoing). The essence of that movement was to breakdown traditional gender roles – and to break taboos related to sexual promiscuity, contraception, homosexual behavior, pornography, and even abortion.
So no, I don’t think SSM is real “marriage,” but I do think that we need to recognize the value of a loving, respectful relationship and not equate it with promiscuity or abuse.
I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but you seem to be asserting that Christian morality ignores the value of loving, respectful relationships (even be/w two homosexual men), and promotes inequality in relationships. Perhaps you can clarify?
 
According to who? Let’s look at the sexual revolution in the 60s (and some would argue still ongoing). The essence of that movement was to breakdown traditional gender roles – and to break taboos related to sexual promiscuity, contraception, homosexual behavior, pornography, and even abortion.
There’s a pretty big difference, it seems, between the 60s and 70s and more recent decades. The 60s and 70s did see a lot of glorification of sexual liberation for its own sake. That’s still around but doesn’t seem to be the major trend today. I think that conservatives who lump everything that isn’t traditional Christian morality in the past 50 years under the “sexual revolution” rubric are missing a lot–not least the opportunity to dialogue with folks who have serious moral concerns about sexual morality and to help them see that the rhetoric of “sexual liberation” is pernicious nonsense.

Even in the 60s and 70s, of course, there was a good deal of talk about love and equality and so on. But I think some (not anywhere near enough) of the Pelagian naivete of that era has worn off–the AIDS epidemic had something to do with it, but so did the increasing influence of feminism, not just as a radical “bra-burning” shock tactic but as a serious critique of male power. Feminists who say that all heterosexual sex is rape are closer to orthodox Christianity than either they or most conservative Christians recognize, I think. They aren’t that different from Augustine when he said that even marital sex is a venial sin.
I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but you seem to be asserting that Christian morality ignores the value of loving, respectful relationships (even be/w two homosexual men), and promotes inequality in relationships. Perhaps you can clarify?
Since I said that this emphasis was in keeping with longstanding themes in Christian tradition, I don’t see how I “seem” to be saying anything of the kind!

What I said is that the sharpened emphasis on this aspect of sexual morality is on the whole a helpful development of Christian tradition. Doctrinal development, in the orthodox Catholic sense in which I’m attempting to use the term, is not a new addition but a development of principles already there.

But the main point I was making was simply that contemporary attitudes toward such issues are actually stricter than traditional ones, whether that’s a good thing or not.

Edwin
 
There’s a pretty big difference, it seems, between the 60s and 70s and more recent decades. The 60s and 70s did see a lot of glorification of sexual liberation for its own sake. That’s still around but doesn’t seem to be the major trend today. I think that conservatives who lump everything that isn’t traditional Christian morality in the past 50 years under the “sexual revolution” rubric are missing a lot–not least the opportunity to dialogue with folks who have serious moral concerns about sexual morality and to help them see that the rhetoric of “sexual liberation” is pernicious nonsense.
I think you’ve stretched my point too far in order to fit your narrative, or at least to paint my arguments as being from someone who doesn’t want to engage in “dialogue with folks” who have serious concerns about sexual immorality.

By the way - I wasn’t necessarily disagreeing with you, Contrarini, but I understand that my comment was very short (due to time constraints) so it wasn’t fully formed. Yes, broadly-speaking, liberal sexual morality is about “equality,” but the genesis of that idea was the sexual revolution, and the first order of business for liberals was and is to break down traditional notions of sex and marriage. Please understand that I’m not “lumping all non-traditional morality” as part of the sexual revolution. I don’t lump pederasty advocacy, for example, as part of the sexual revolution. But even if I did, I don’t agree with your suggestion that it would preclude dialogue with others who have concerns about sexual immorality.

I do link same sex marriage to the sexual revolution, and would even go as far back as the Kinsey Report in the late 1940s. The sexual revolution capitalized on the idea of sexual emancipation, and it soon progressed to homosexual emancipation. Heterosexuals weakened the links among sex, procreation, and marriage during the sexual revolution, and the gay movement has taken full advantage of this. Post-1970s (heterosexual) marriage became centered on the idea of emotional satisfaction; if you’re unhappy, just divorce and move on (as seen in the movie, No-Fault Divorce and the Perpetual Search for the Phantom Soul Mate). Thus, “traditionalists” have been left with little ground on which to stand when fighting against same sex marriage.

You cannot argue for equality until you demonstrate that both forms/ideas are equal; thus, breaking down traditional notions of sex and marriage is paramount for the gay agenda, and was helped by the sexual revolution.
Even in the 60s and 70s, of course, there was a good deal of talk about love and equality and so on. But I think some (not anywhere near enough) of the Pelagian naivete of that era has worn off–the AIDS epidemic had something to do with it, but so did the increasing influence of feminism, not just as a radical “bra-burning” shock tactic but as a serious critique of male power.
Sure.
Feminists who say that all heterosexual sex is rape are closer to orthodox Christianity than either they or most conservative Christians recognize, I think. They aren’t that different from Augustine when he said that even marital sex is a venial sin.
I disagree with you here. St Augustine would say that carnal concupiscence is a sin – not marital sex. In fact, he says marital sex is a good thing because it is from God.
But the main point I was making was simply that contemporary attitudes toward such issues are actually stricter than traditional ones, whether that’s a good thing or not.
You’ll have to do more to convince me of that idea. What are the contemporary attitudes versus the traditional attitudes on the following issues: divorce/marriage, contraception, non-marital sex, and homosexuality?

Maybe it’s just as you said - traditionalists (conservatives) miss the narrative on liberal sexual boundaries because of all the rhetoric about “freedom” and “sexual liberation.” But why do you hold that against traditionalists? Perhaps liberals should tone down the sexual emancipation rhetoric if they are serious about engaging in dialogue sexual morality (or same sex marriage).
 
Hi, Edwin,

The Episopal Church was quite clear about abortion, contraceptive use and homosexual behavior being sinful - prrior to 1900. No doubt about it. The about 1930 the Lambeth Conference opened the door to contraceptives - and effectively opened it for all Protestant groups that had previously condemned it.

Today, we have people of all religious persuasions, romancing what was once immoral. It is noteworth that this change was not accompanied by any reported heavenly visitation saying, “Do whatever you want - the rules that used to apply have been abolished!”

Now, this creates several problems - but, the one I would present to you is credibility. The big differences you identify are truly all superficial. The issue is that God created man and woman and gave them to each other in marriage. Ignoring this is to ignore quite a lot and lead to a path of total destruction. And, if you doubt that - compare where we were in human married relationships of the 1900’s to what we have in the reports of marriage today. Can you tell me that the changes we so easily see are in keeping with God’s Word?

God bless
There’s a pretty big difference, it seems, between the 60s and 70s and more recent decades. The 60s and 70s did see a lot of glorification of sexual liberation for its own sake. That’s still around but doesn’t seem to be the major trend today. I think that conservatives who lump everything that isn’t traditional Christian morality in the past 50 years under the “sexual revolution” rubric are missing a lot–not least the opportunity to dialogue with folks who have serious moral concerns about sexual morality and to help them see that the rhetoric of “sexual liberation” is pernicious nonsense.

Even in the 60s and 70s, of course, there was a good deal of talk about love and equality and so on. But I think some (not anywhere near enough) of the Pelagian naivete of that era has worn off–the AIDS epidemic had something to do with it, but so did the increasing influence of feminism, not just as a radical “bra-burning” shock tactic but as a serious critique of male power. Feminists who say that all heterosexual sex is rape are closer to orthodox Christianity than either they or most conservative Christians recognize, I think. They aren’t that different from Augustine when he said that even marital sex is a venial sin.

Since I said that this emphasis was in keeping with longstanding themes in Christian tradition, I don’t see how I “seem” to be saying anything of the kind!

What I said is that the sharpened emphasis on this aspect of sexual morality is on the whole a helpful development of Christian tradition. Doctrinal development, in the orthodox Catholic sense in which I’m attempting to use the term, is not a new addition but a development of principles already there.

But the main point I was making was simply that contemporary attitudes toward such issues are actually stricter than traditional ones, whether that’s a good thing or not.

Edwin
 
I think we’re getting off-track.

Has the OP received a sufficient answer to the question of why there seems to be so much emphasis in the Catholic Church on gay marriage?

Has anyone found where they’re selling these wonderful 7-layered cookies?
Does anyone know if they’re gluten-free?
 
I think you’ve stretched my point too far in order to fit your narrative, or at least to paint my arguments as being from someone who doesn’t want to engage in “dialogue with folks” who have serious concerns about sexual immorality.
That may have been poor wording–my point was simply that if you approach folks who have a “liberal” view on these issues assuming that they’re just interested in libertinism and “unrestrained” lust, you’re not going to communicate with them and you’re going in turn to confirm their stereotypes of the conservative Christian view, missing an opportunity to build some common ground.
Yes, broadly-speaking, liberal sexual morality is about “equality,” but the genesis of that idea was the sexual revolution
No, I think it’s the other way round. The genesis of the sexual revolution was the belief that the society of the 50s was oppressive and repressive in its “conventionality,” and this stemmed in part from a genuine moral outrage against such things as racial discrimination, immoral/amoral national policies connected with the Cold War, etc.
and the first order of business for liberals was and is to break down traditional notions of sex and marriage.
I know a lot of liberals. That’s simply a caricature. That’s not their “first order of business.” It’s a result of their desire to reform sexual morality around norms of consent, equality, and mutuality rather than what they see as authoritarian and harmful traditions that maintain male-female hierarchy and unduly constrain natural, life-affirming impulses.
Please understand that I’m not “lumping all non-traditional morality” as part of the sexual revolution. I don’t lump pederasty advocacy, for example, as part of the sexual revolution.
But I believe it was, at least to some degree–in the original “sexual revolution.” It isn’t now, because there has been a relatively conservative “backlash” against the sexual revolution, insofar as the original sexual revolution was an anarchic celebration of human desire without qualification.
Post-1970s (heterosexual) marriage became centered on the idea of emotional satisfaction; if you’re unhappy, just divorce and move on (as seen in the movie, No-Fault Divorce and the Perpetual Search for the Phantom Soul Mate). Thus, “traditionalists” have been left with little ground on which to stand when fighting against same sex marriage.
No disagreement with that last part, and my only caveat about the first part is that, again, there were genuine moral concerns behind these changes, centered on the way “traditional” marriage seemed to privilege stability and respectability over genuine affection (not just sexual desire) and mutual regard.

No dispute that the way liberal sexual morality has dealt with these issues has been vastly destructive. My overall point is that if we don’t recognize the genuine moral concerns behind liberal sexual morality, and simply lump it all together under the rubric of “the sexual revolution,” supposedly glorifying sexual indulgence without qualification–then we’re not speaking truthfully in the first place, and in the second place we are cutting off communication with a lot of our contemporaries and failing to convey the beauty and richness of orthodox Christian morality.
You cannot argue for equality until you demonstrate that both forms/ideas are equal
I think you misunderstand me. By “equality” I simply mean equality of the sexual partners.
I disagree with you here. St Augustine would say that carnal concupiscence is a sin – not marital sex. In fact, he says marital sex is a good thing because it is from God.
Yes, the physical act itself is good. But in a fallen state all sexual behavior involves carnal concupiscence and thus is venially sinful, according to Augustine.
You’ll have to do more to convince me of that idea. What are the contemporary attitudes versus the traditional attitudes on the following issues: divorce/marriage, contraception, non-marital sex, and homosexuality?
I was specific: attitudes are stricter with regard to questions of equality and consent and mutual respect.

The obvious example would be the stigmatization of sexual relationships (including marriage) in which one partner is significantly older or more powerful than the other.

But even something like divorce has, in an odd way, a “strictness” attached to it. In modern liberal sexual morality it is regarded as something pretty close to sinful to remain in a marriage with someone you do not “love.” Divorce is treated as a moral duty in some cases.
Maybe it’s just as you said - traditionalists (conservatives) miss the narrative on liberal sexual boundaries because of all the rhetoric about “freedom” and “sexual liberation.” But why do you hold that against traditionalists? Perhaps liberals should tone down the sexual emancipation rhetoric if they are serious about engaging in dialogue sexual morality (or same sex marriage).
But they’re unlikely to do this because of their Pelagian assumptions, as I said above. Or perhaps, ironically, the better analogy is the apparently opposite one, with classical Protestant doctrines of faith/works. (Indeed, maybe there’s a connection, in spite of the resolute anti-Pelagianism of classical Protestantism.) Liberals can talk about freeing one’s sexuality because of the assumption that genuinely perverted forms of sexuality–those, in liberal eyes, that degrade or abuse or dominate another person–are just the result of some people being mentally ill and thus not really morally significant.
 
Yes, dealing in child prostitutes is terrible, but the pimps and the customers both go to hell, while the traumatized children have a chance to go to Heaven, and so it all works out in the end. No action on our part is required,
we only need a vague sense of disapproval to be morally correct and achieve our own salvation.
Wha… what? Are you saying that if someone rapes a child next to you, then the fact that you don’t do anything does not jeopardize your salvation, as long as you express a vague sense of disaproval?.

I bet that the priest in the story about the Good Samaritan has also expressed a vague sense of disapproval over what happened to the guy he found on the road, and reasoned that the evil perpetrators will go to hell, while the beaten up guy has a chance to go to heaven, so it works out in the end. So he went happily on his business while the dude laid there bleeding.

And besides, are you saying that being a child prostitute is better than being a happy homosexual? Now, you may say that, but I bet a lot of child prostitutes would disagree.
Likewise with abortion, the evil provider and the customer go to hell (barring later repentance) and the baby goes to Heaven… the situation works out fine, just like child prostitutes.
Okay, so we should abort any fetus which has a genetic makeup predisposing it to homosexuality. I mean, we will keep it from commiting the mortal sin of homosexuality, so and send it directly to heaven, so it will work out fine!
But if my children grow up thinking it’s okay, instead of believing Biblical morality, then it’s not just the involved parties whose salvation is threatened.
Well, if I was controlling admission to heaven, I would not let in someone who has such a self-serving worldview. Just sayin’.
 
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