M
MamaJewel
Guest
As a pagan convert to Catholicism, I could never understand how the Catholic church in America accepts the wide spread use of contraceptives among its parishioners who chose to block pregnancy because they are “done having children”.Here’s how I see it: If the Church will now take divorcees on a case by case basis, why not homosexuals in cohabiting relationships? It’s all the same in the eyes of the Church anyway, neither of the two groups are in a legitimate relationship.
That said, I am curious why you link the Church accepting remarriage without an annulment to homosexual relationships. In my catechism class, I learned that God forbids homosexual relations because they have no procreative ability and thus “mock” heterosexual relations, which only rightfully take place between two people who are married to one another. (the man and woman issue wasn’t even being addressed back when I converted and couples were assumed to be a man and woman.)
I would think that gay couples would have had an issue with the church’s welcoming of contracepting couples for a long time now. Personally, I don’t really see any difference between contraceptive heterosexual relations and homosexual relations, except that those in the heterosexual group choose not to have reproductive ability while those in the homosexual group are naturally impeded due to anatomical/physiological reasons.Just sayin…
However, my crew of teenage and young adult children share your perspective. They can’t understand why, if the church believes marriage is truly a sacrament, it will allow divorced-remarried (sans annulment) to receive Eucaharist. Honestly, the remarriage/gay marriage has caused a crisis of faith amongst many young people who feel that the church is just out to discriminate against certain dermographics by picking and choosing which groups to apply the rules to. Their perspective is if it’s the truth, it should applied evenly to all humans, without excluding others.