C
CMatt25
Guest
Whitacre, I am not Brittish. I would prefer in such cases where Catholic agencies will never adopt to a loving gay couple, that they still be allowed to remain open as completely private entities. And if they can not afford to do so, as someone posted it is not a right to stay in business if you can not afford to operate. I would also oppose locking up Catholic pastors for preaching their faith beliefs.See previous posts - the rights have already been stripped in some countries. Pastors have been locked up for preaching to their own congregation that homosexual relations are a sin. Catholic adoption agencies across Britain were shut down when they refused to adopt to homosexual couples because it violated their belief. (how many times do I have to type this out?)
Again - and I will put it plainly - if this were simply about gay marriage, the debate would go differently. I personally don’t give a flip about what two men want to call themselves, it doesn’t make it true. Where I have an issue is when they start telling me that I have to accept their personal life choices, and that I or anyone else can be imprisoned for not doing so.
That said, even if Brittish Catholic agencies are being forced not to be in the adoption business, all that means is they can not operate an adoption business.
Catholics in Brittain to my knowledge can still believe gay marriage is wrong. Can still attending Mass. Can receive in faith the Body of Christ through the most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist. Can go to confession. A Catholic heterosexual couple can still be united in the Sacrament of Marriage.
Whereas here in the US, for instance a homosexual United Church of Christ couple can not practice their faith by being married by their pastor at their local United Church of Christ when their Christian denomination endorses such.
And we talk about whose rights to practice their faith are being stripped more.
Peace to you Whitacre Girl. And God bless in your faith journey.