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What arguments can I use in this situation…
One of my co-workers asked me tonight what I thought about homosexual “marriage.” When I told him I opposed it, he was perplexed. He’s very intelligent, well-educated, heterosexual, happily married, with two teenage sons. Although his current job is not in the legal field, he’s a licensed attorney in another state, and has a keen analytical mind. I don’t believe he professes any Christian faith, but I know him to be at least sympathic to the ethical teachings of Christianity, especially regarding the poor. In his view, if one cannot show how an action of a private individual harms the life, limb, or property of others, then the state has no business intervening or regulating that action. Hence, with homosexual “marriage,” why should he (or the state) care whether two men or two women, or for that matter, a man and a horse, want to get “married.” It has no effect on him. He may think it very odd, may even be personally repulsed by it, but it does not harm his life, limb, or property, or that of others, therefore, the state has no grounds to prohibit it.
I did not have time to get into a long discussion, but I said the short answer is, marriage is not a purely private act or contract. It has societal implications, and therefore the state does have a legitimate interest.
His brief rebuttal was to make a parallel between the position, once widely legislated in the USA (and held by some Christians), that inter-racial marriage was illegal and immoral, on the one hand, and opposition to homosexual marriage, on the other. For him, it was the scales of bigotry blinding the eyes in both cases.
In time, state legislatures overcame that earlier bigotry, and it ought to be obvious that it is mere bigotry in the latter.
I’d like to talk with him further on this. This was a good article in Crisis magazine a while back on the topic, and I’m going to do some research. In the meantime, what are the arguments I can use? It’s no good raising moral objections based in Catholic teaching. That would have no standing as far as he is concerned when it comes to state or federal law. In order for any argument in opposition to have any weight with him it would have to proceed from the logic of “harm to life, limb, or property,” or else in some logic that does not depend on appeals to religious faith or morals.
In previous conversations, I’ve mentioned natural law, but to my surprise, he seems to be unfamiliar or at least suspicious of the the concept.
I’m not posing a hypothetical situation here. This fellow is for real and the discussion is for real. I respect him greatly and we get along wonderfully at work, but simply asserting that homosexual marriage is immoral or “contrary to historical experience,” etc. won’t cut the mustard.
Any ideas?
One of my co-workers asked me tonight what I thought about homosexual “marriage.” When I told him I opposed it, he was perplexed. He’s very intelligent, well-educated, heterosexual, happily married, with two teenage sons. Although his current job is not in the legal field, he’s a licensed attorney in another state, and has a keen analytical mind. I don’t believe he professes any Christian faith, but I know him to be at least sympathic to the ethical teachings of Christianity, especially regarding the poor. In his view, if one cannot show how an action of a private individual harms the life, limb, or property of others, then the state has no business intervening or regulating that action. Hence, with homosexual “marriage,” why should he (or the state) care whether two men or two women, or for that matter, a man and a horse, want to get “married.” It has no effect on him. He may think it very odd, may even be personally repulsed by it, but it does not harm his life, limb, or property, or that of others, therefore, the state has no grounds to prohibit it.
I did not have time to get into a long discussion, but I said the short answer is, marriage is not a purely private act or contract. It has societal implications, and therefore the state does have a legitimate interest.
His brief rebuttal was to make a parallel between the position, once widely legislated in the USA (and held by some Christians), that inter-racial marriage was illegal and immoral, on the one hand, and opposition to homosexual marriage, on the other. For him, it was the scales of bigotry blinding the eyes in both cases.
In time, state legislatures overcame that earlier bigotry, and it ought to be obvious that it is mere bigotry in the latter.
I’d like to talk with him further on this. This was a good article in Crisis magazine a while back on the topic, and I’m going to do some research. In the meantime, what are the arguments I can use? It’s no good raising moral objections based in Catholic teaching. That would have no standing as far as he is concerned when it comes to state or federal law. In order for any argument in opposition to have any weight with him it would have to proceed from the logic of “harm to life, limb, or property,” or else in some logic that does not depend on appeals to religious faith or morals.
In previous conversations, I’ve mentioned natural law, but to my surprise, he seems to be unfamiliar or at least suspicious of the the concept.
I’m not posing a hypothetical situation here. This fellow is for real and the discussion is for real. I respect him greatly and we get along wonderfully at work, but simply asserting that homosexual marriage is immoral or “contrary to historical experience,” etc. won’t cut the mustard.
Any ideas?