C
Contarini
Guest
Well, perhaps you should work on it, because it’s a serious issue. Why do you assume that the temptations posed by the presence of a loved person in the same house are greater than those posed by loneliness and emotional pain?So, kind of a “I may sin with this person but if you keep me away I’ll sin even more acutely” type of thing? You got me. I have no idea how to respond to this.![]()
I think it’s reasonable to say that generally speaking sexual temptation, no matter one’s sexual orientation, is more intense and difficult to resist when one is lonely and suffering.
Parallel case: a divorced and remarried couple (especially but not only one that has children). In the absence of an annulment, do you tell them to split up to avoid the occasion of sin, or do you tell them to live as brother and sister, recognizing that depriving them of companionship and affection is going to provide even more occasions of sin?
Yes, we are, because the subjects are inextricably connected. “Gay” is a cultural label, and a very recent one at that. You can’t talk about it without discussing changing concepts of love and friendship and identity.What you say is very true, Edwin, but the subject matter of this thread is “Gay Bishops”. We are not talking about the differences in cultural mores concerning same sex friendships and American hang-ups concerning the same.
Edwin