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mcliffor
Guest
I understand the Church’s teachings concerning Civil Unions and the role they play in degrading the institution of marriage, but what is the Church’s stance on the following issues. They all have to do with Catholic’s discriminating against non-Catholics practicing sinful lifestyles.
- Catholic adoption agency’s discriminating against homosexual couples. Can the adoption agency also discriminate against other religions, since a child being brought up in a Hindu household for example would be deprived of a Christian environment? What exactly is the difference?
- This one is the most hazy to me. In Canada, it’s illegal to not employ someone due to his sexual orientation. I supposed if you wanted to make your company a model of efficiency, you would hire people who shared the same values and behaved alike. This would certainly be a right, since the right to private property would mean you wouldn’t be forced to share it with another individual against your will. But in the United States, it’s illegal to hire people based on creed of ethnicity, or rather, to refuse to hire people based on those terms. Isn’t being forced to hire homosexuals the logical extension of this law, right or wrong? I can understand how the two scenarios mentioned above can be described as scandalous, but isn’t not hiring someone because he’s a sexually active homosexual the same kind of discrimination as not hiring a person because of his religion? I suppose this law would also make it impossible to not hire someone on the grounds that he’s a pedophile, or flaunts any kind of disordered behavior that doesn’t necessarily endanger the company and its workers. Can it be compared to not hiring someone on the grounds that he’s a practicing Muslim? Actually, are either of these scenarios wrong for a Christian?
- Could a Catholic employer refuse to pay for an employees health plan if it meant having to pay for contraception, even if that employee weren’t Catholic himself?