ericc;13106467:
EricC, I haven’t seen the wording yet from General Convention - it was only approved last week. But once we get the wording of both Canon Law and the Liturgical changes to the texts of the Marriage Office, I can certainly post them here.
Or spare us.
The Marriage Office IS sacramental. And the changes to include same gender is what our own ‘Magesterium’ - our Bishops and governing body - has decided.
The TEC does not have a Magisterium; or anything equivalent. Their actions in recent years will demonstrate to some why a Magisterium is needed.
Just as they decided that Ordination as a sacrament was opened to include women. Just as they decided to do many things as part of the Tradition and Reason of the Faith.
It is also possible they simply adopt changes to follow the secular society, and then justify all their decisions after the fact as emerging from prayer, Tradition, and Reason.
That sounds better.
I do understand that the Roman Catholic teaching about marriage is different.
It involves very specific dictates. But that is no longer the case for other branches of the Church.
The RCC never created the teaching about marriage being only between a man and a woman. The Natural Law was already there, before us. It applies to all individuals and couples, Christian or not. It’s not a “Catholic” thing, it’s a human thing, like sacredness of unborn life.
It will take some time for both the legal and the religious elements of same gender marriage to settle in, but I believe it will. Families are different now (and have been for some time) and this will be normalized in time.
The gospel is never normalized. It calls us to conversion. Acceptance of sin is the typical response, by individuals and institutions. Any dead thing can float downstream; only a living one can swim against the current. Persons with homosexual tendencies have lost an ally - the TEC - in their own struggle towards conversion and sainthood.