G
Godfollower
Guest
You’re making my point: the question is one of behavior only. It’s objectively immoral for a businessman to refuse to hire a secretary who is engaged in homosexual activity at home, because that has nothing to do with the carrying on of the business. As the letter you cite pointed out,What principle? One is a matter of race, the other an issue of behavior.
Unjust discrimination - what is just discrimination?
here:
In fact, it comes from Pope Benedict himself, when, as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he headed the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
“‘Sexual orientation’ does not constitute a quality comparable to race, ethnic background, etc. in respect to non-discrimination. Unlike these, homosexual orientation is an objective disorder and evokes moral concern,” wrote Cardinal Ratzinger in a crucial document in 1992.
Legally enshrining “sexual orientation” in this way, he continued, “can easily lead to regarding homosexuality as a positive source of human rights,” and “can easily lead, if not automatically, to the legislative protection and promotion of homosexuality.”
Some Considerations Concerning the Response to Legislative Proposals on the Non-Discrimination of Homosexual Persons ¶ 12.Homosexual persons, as human persons, have the same rights as all persons including the right of not being treated in a manner which offends their personal dignity (cf. no. 10). Among other rights, all persons have the right to work, to housing, etc. Nevertheless, these rights are not absolute. They can be legitimately limited for objectively disordered external conduct.
You’ve repeatedly cited “businessmen” in your posts, not school principals dealing with “out” gays or what have you. So it appears that you’re arguing generally that everyone gets to discriminate against gays, just for being gay. And that’s just not consistent with the Church’s teaching.
If a Sunday School teacher is in an open relationship (gay or straight), disciplinary action is called for. If the receptionist can’t answer the phone because he’s too busy photocopying Gay Pride materials, fire away. The question is whether the job is getting done. If it is, then the employee is doing fine. If it isn’t, then that needs to be fixed. But it has nothing to do with who the employee sleeps with.