I suggest the Church has the same right to a voice as does anyone else on any secular matter.
I think the re-defining of the term Marriage - which Church and State have historically held a common view on its essential nature - is such an matter.
They are not redefining the word marriage.
The are redefining SOME marriages. Notably, only marriages performed by justices of the peace. Which have 0 concern for the Catholic religion. No Catholic or any other religions definition of marriage will change.
The two events have almost nothing in common, yet you claim they are very similar.
In the Church, one member must be Catholic, they must agree to live by Catholic Teachings, to remained married forever, etc.
In the Justice of the Peace’s office, they sign a document stating they have certain legal rights. Period, the end. No love is required. No length of time is required. Having children is not requested nor required.
They are two events that have almost nothing in common, except that both involve two people and they happen to have the same name, and you’re saying that gives the Church authority in this matter? So if buying a car was called “marriage”, would they have authority over it as well?
Of course the Church can say “we don;t think same-sex marriage should be legal”, but they need to make it clear that this is just their opinion, not Church Doctrine, and they have not done so
No - you misunderstand, the “parts” are only listed to aid reference to the components of your definition. I argue that the institution of Marriage - “Man + Woman” - is simply unique
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Two men, two women cannot “mate” (unless that word is also redefined). They cannot produce offspring - despite the will and perfect health of the couple.
Two homosexual men can mate just as well as a sterile heterosexual couple. I don’t understand why you keep giving exceptions for some people who can’t mate but not others.
The idea that a sterile couple is like SSM is often raised. Presonally, I find it bizarre to imagine that the meaning of Marriage (as heterosexual) ought (as some kind of logical consequence) to oblige the State to check on the intent and sterility of the partners prior to issuing a marriage licence. One wonders how such a ‘check’ would serve the State’s interest at all? The State may as well require that couple’s divorce upon the woman reaching menopause! The State has no desire or interest to intrude so dramatically into people’s life - but the State does have an interest in differentially recognising** the class of relationships in society which are central to the continuance of the society.**
What? The State has no interest in determining if people can mate, but they have an interest in determining if they can mate? That doesn’t make any sense.
All you have shown is that it is harder to prove that a sterile heterosexual couple cannot mate than it is to prove a homosexual couple cannot mate. You still have not shown how there is any difference between the two. Either:
A) marriage is about mating, and neither is eligible, or
B) marriage is not about mating, and both are
The difficulty in determining who is or is not eligible is irrelevant to the discussion.
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Cutting back on abortions is a nice thought - but the facts suggest that the availability of adoptive parents is not a factor - The number of abortions in the USA is vast, yet parents desiring to adopt can rarely secure a baby in the US!
Actually, that’s not exactly true. It takes a long time if you want to adopt a baby immediately after birth. But if you don’t care what age the baby is you want to adopt, you could have a foster child after only 12 hours training, and adopt them. There are over 104,000 children in foster care right now waiting to be adopted. The problem isn’t a lack of babies, the problem is a lack of babies the adopters want. Most people adopting don’t want special needs or nonwhite babies, and most don’t want to adopt a child older than a newborn. Maybe if we increase the amount of married couples we can cut back on the number of orphaned children who need homes. It’s completely possible that God want’s same-sex marriage to be legal, and the Church is unknowingly fighting Him!
(I believe the show South Park enacted that same scenario with Terri Schiavo, where for whatever reason God wanted her in heaven and tried to get people to let her go while the Devil wanted her alive and kept trying to get people to keep her that way)
If it was that simple, that would be one thing. But what is desired is for the rest of society to accept, if not fully endorse it. Anybody who won’t do so is labeled a “hater”.
If it was a matter of them not wanting to push themselves on us and, in exchange, us not leaving them alone, we would be looking at a completely different situation than we are.
Are you honestly telling me that if homosexuals wanted the right to get married and didn’t make a big deal out of it, the Church would readily agree? Don’t make me laugh.
Also, how comer the Church can express its opinion that homosexuality is immoral, but homosexuals can’t express their opinion that it isn’t?