F
Future_Prodigy
Guest
Before diving into the question let me give a bit of a background:
The teaching of suicide has changed over the last 500 years (since Trent) and how the new cathechism acknowledges this. Something to the effct of once free will is diminished, and now that sucide is seen as a mental disorder this has been acknowledged, an action does not bear the bull weight of other sinful actions. **So basically when anyone takes their life they are acting on dimenished free will and choice and this renders there action unsinful. **
Now this relates to homosexuality does it not? If modern science is right then there might be homosexuals who are born that way (not implying them all) and there ability to make a free choice is diminished and can not this exact case be made for this type of situation? This i believe is ‘sort of’ where the Anglican church is sitting but the synod is this month so we will know more soon.
The teaching of suicide has changed over the last 500 years (since Trent) and how the new cathechism acknowledges this. Something to the effct of once free will is diminished, and now that sucide is seen as a mental disorder this has been acknowledged, an action does not bear the bull weight of other sinful actions. **So basically when anyone takes their life they are acting on dimenished free will and choice and this renders there action unsinful. **
Now this relates to homosexuality does it not? If modern science is right then there might be homosexuals who are born that way (not implying them all) and there ability to make a free choice is diminished and can not this exact case be made for this type of situation? This i believe is ‘sort of’ where the Anglican church is sitting but the synod is this month so we will know more soon.