My marriage was performed by a priest. It is a religious ceremony. It has absolutely nothing in common with the legal process performed by a justice of the peace which is also called marriage.
You are wrong. Because a marriage is secular dos not mean it has nothing in common with your religious marriage; they share common characteristics and principles.
Luckily, this is NOT the case. All marriages are not equal. There are religious marriages and secular marriages.They are not equal to each other except in the eyes of the state.
No-one has said all marriages are equal. All heterosxual marriages have shared characteristics.
You and John Finnis have the OPINION that Catholic Marriage and secular marriage have something in common.
John Finnis is one of the world’s pre-eminent Legal philosophers. He is also a staunch Catholic and mixes philosophy with theology. He is a modern champion of Natural Law moral philosophy. I gave a link to a pice written by him that is both learned and academically sound, yet you brush it off as mere “opinion”. If you had botherd to read it, you would have noticed that his arguments rfrrd to the theology of St. Thomas Aquinas and natural Law. Both underpin catholicism to a grat extent. If you brush of his learned piece as mere opinion, then you are labelling all teaching of theology, philsophy and moral theology as mere opinion. That reeks of hubris, ignorance and anti-Catholicism.
I have the OPINION that they have nothing in common.
Some opinions are well formed. That is, a lot of scholarship and thought lis bhind an opinion. Som opinions are worthless, because they lack insight, wisdom and have a selfish hubris as thir beginning. Finnis actually demonstrated what religious and secular marriages have in common. Th proof is there if you wish to see it. Your opinion is worthless until you do the homework.
One is a religious ceremony tied to love and procreation, the other is legal paperwork.
So here you are inferring that people who are not Catholics and who marry in a secular ceremony do not do so out of love and a desire to have children. That’s an opinion based on grand assumptions which do not accord with the reality of marriage as an institution.
You seem to have confused Mr. Finiss’ opinion on the matter as fact rather than opinion.
The one who is confused is you. Read Finnis and then come back with an informed opinion.
I personally am deeply offended that you and John Finnis are cheapening the Sacrament of Catholic Marriage by comparing it to ANY civil marriage, be it heterosexual or homosexual.
What an idiotic statement. Finnis is arguing that homosexual ‘marriage’ would devalue the institution of marriage. To make that argument, both philosophically and intellectually, he has to make a comparison. Yet you seem to think that making that comparison cheapens marriage, even though the conclusion drawn from the comparison is the opposite. That’s just too funny for words!
My marriage is a religious union in the eyes of god, not a legal paper in the eyes of some worthless government.
Are you saying your Catholic marriage is not recognised by the state? Too funny.
I simply reject your opinion, and the opinion of John Finnis, that my marriage compares to a secular marriage in any way.
Your statement is false. Many secular marriages come about for the very same reasons as Catholic marriages. If that were not the case, then marriage would have no social value and not be recognised for the social good it gives.
and therefore all value has already been taken out of secular marriage,
Here you are denying the validity of, the social good of and the strengths of all secular marriages. That is just plain wrong, because the state and all religious faiths place great importance on the institution of marriage.
and therefore allowing same-sex marriage changes nothing.
Same sex ‘marriages’ would indeed change everything. Same sex marriage has nothing whatsover to do with procreation, which, despite what you argue, the vast majority of marriages share in common. Same sex marriage offfers no social good whatsoever. Read Finnis if you doubt this. Earlier you wrote of people who marry lawn mowers and other weird things that marriage can be turned into. Well, giving legal rcognition to a marriage in which sodomy is the raison d’etre is one of those strange things people make of marriage.
I see a recurring theme among Catholics. Some Catholic puts his opinion in a book, and Catholics assume this opinion is a fact. It is not. Both of the works you cited are opinions, not facts, and therefore no one has even the slightest obligation to agree with them.
It is a recurring theme across all your posts that you know better than all the Popes and Doctors of the Church down through history who have formulated Catholic philosophy, teaching and doctrine. It is a recurring theme that you thumb your nose at the Catholic Church’s moral philosophy because you regard it as mere opinion. It means you thumb your nose at the accepted doctrine of Apostolic succession and it means you thumb your nose at the power and support Jesus gave to Peter when he gave him the power to loose and bind on Earth.
Catholic teaching is predicated on Natural Law, which is an objective moral philosophy. There is no other, except a moral relativism which says one man’s morality is no better than anyone else’s. That is what you are espousing. If you feel you are not obliged to follow the Catholic Church’s moral and philosophical teachings, then I suggest you remove the Catholic label from your ID.