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InSearchofGrace
Guest
I find your equivocating or fence sitting to be confusing, specifically the part I bolded above. According to authentic Catholic view, a man-woman pairing is not discriminatory in the sense that marriage has always been understood, as a covenant, open to any free man and free woman to enter. For Catholics, gay “marriage” does not have validity in front of God, the same with divorce, notwithstanding that both now have legal status in society.…
But as for whether there are two potential Catholic views on gay marriage, I don’t know if I agree with you. **I think it is possible to believe, for example, that current marriage laws are discriminatory against gays while still being Catholic. ** It’s going against the grain, and it’s puzzling, but it’s possible. As to whether it’s possible to think that Holy Matrimony can be extended to gay couples and still be a Catholic in good standing – that’s a tougher issue.
Other churches that bless or “marry” gay couples do not dispense holy matrimony as Catholics understand it.
I thought I read your position elsewhere but maybe I am wrong, that you do not support gay “marriage.” Do you or don’t you?
On a purely social level.Here’s the test I run in my head to test these things: I imagine a priest who held the view, and I ask whether he should be defrocked. It seems to me that a Catholic priest who believed in legalizing gay marriage, on a purely social level, would not necessarily be anathema.
Marriage is necessarily public and has social implications. A priest who believes in legalizing gay “marriage” will find it hard, as he should, to maintain his position as Catholic clergy. He might as well move to New Ways Ministry.
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