S
SMGS127
Guest
So I was trying to find a relevant thread on the forum, and I didn’t see one, so I figured I would pose a question I’ve been wondering for awhile now. I apologize if this has already been asked, but I was wondering if my position on civil marriage was against Church teaching in any way.
As a Catholic, I can’t support same-sex “marriage” in any way; the marriages are clearly bastardizations of a Sacrament. However, with that said, I do realize that from the secular court’s perspective, Relationship A is losing out on $X in tax benefits to Relationship B entirely because of the gender status of the members, and that the likely effect is going to be a downhill cascade of courts legalizing gay ‘marriage’ in many states based on financial or legal differentiation for a so-called protected class. As a result, I believe that we should do away with civil marriages entirely, calling them “bondships” or something else significantly better-sounding to the ear, and allowing the Church to define their Sacrament of Marriage appropriately and with light to the Truth of the Lord far away from the political world.
Simply put, I wanted to know if this position violated the apostolic defense of marriage. I have tried to compare it to situations in the past where the Church has had to deal with political situations in the U.S. and made pragmatic decisions as a result (e.g. Griswald v. Connecticut or the legalization of no-fault divorce), but there really is no comparable situation. I am concerned that my position is not entirely faithful, though I believe it to be. If we don’t eliminate legal marriages in general, my fear is that we will end up being forced to identify societal unions as ‘marriages’ that clearly aren’t.
Clearly the optimist’s answer is that a secular argument could be made that would convince judges that society needs to value one group of people over another for a valid marriage, but I believe that this, while clearly maintaining merit as a moral argument, will ultimately fail as a legal argument. And therefore, I think we as Catholics need to make a choice between: a) defending our legal encoding of our Sacrament and being trampled by courts, or b) my option. The eighth mode of responsibility guides us to never commit a sin in search of a greater good, so I guess my real question is whether supporting the banning of the word marriage from being used in a legal context would be a sin.
Any thoughts on this issue are greatly appreciated, as we live in a very tough moral age for Catholics in the U.S. God bless everyone as well
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As a Catholic, I can’t support same-sex “marriage” in any way; the marriages are clearly bastardizations of a Sacrament. However, with that said, I do realize that from the secular court’s perspective, Relationship A is losing out on $X in tax benefits to Relationship B entirely because of the gender status of the members, and that the likely effect is going to be a downhill cascade of courts legalizing gay ‘marriage’ in many states based on financial or legal differentiation for a so-called protected class. As a result, I believe that we should do away with civil marriages entirely, calling them “bondships” or something else significantly better-sounding to the ear, and allowing the Church to define their Sacrament of Marriage appropriately and with light to the Truth of the Lord far away from the political world.
Simply put, I wanted to know if this position violated the apostolic defense of marriage. I have tried to compare it to situations in the past where the Church has had to deal with political situations in the U.S. and made pragmatic decisions as a result (e.g. Griswald v. Connecticut or the legalization of no-fault divorce), but there really is no comparable situation. I am concerned that my position is not entirely faithful, though I believe it to be. If we don’t eliminate legal marriages in general, my fear is that we will end up being forced to identify societal unions as ‘marriages’ that clearly aren’t.
Clearly the optimist’s answer is that a secular argument could be made that would convince judges that society needs to value one group of people over another for a valid marriage, but I believe that this, while clearly maintaining merit as a moral argument, will ultimately fail as a legal argument. And therefore, I think we as Catholics need to make a choice between: a) defending our legal encoding of our Sacrament and being trampled by courts, or b) my option. The eighth mode of responsibility guides us to never commit a sin in search of a greater good, so I guess my real question is whether supporting the banning of the word marriage from being used in a legal context would be a sin.
Any thoughts on this issue are greatly appreciated, as we live in a very tough moral age for Catholics in the U.S. God bless everyone as well