Hi, NonServiam,
There you go again…pontifficating your own personal opinion as fact - and avoiding any reference other then you say it is so. Actually, this approach has become both tedious and unproductive - either back up what you say or spare us from non-responsive utterings.
Natural Law has a long and distinguished history - and Scorates predates the Catholic Church by centuries. Check this out:
freenation.org/a/f42l1.html#4.2
Here is something to whet your appetite:
“But first let me make a point about the burden of proof. Most critics of Natural Law assume that the burden of proof lies with the proponent of Natural Law — presumably because they see Natural Law as something bizarre and implausible, something one couldn’t sensibly believe unless there were a knock-down argument for it. But in fact, to believe in Natural Law is simply to believe that there are moral standards that transcend the practices and customs of any given community — that there are rational grounds for condemning the Nazi regime as immoral, that it is possible to be justified in so condemning it, even if we assume that what the Nazis did was perfectly in accordance with the values of Nazi culture. When we condemn Nazism, we don’t ordinarily take ourselves to be expressing a purely personal, subjective preference, like the preference for chocolate over vanilla; rather, our ordinary practices of praising and condemning seem to implicitly assume that there are objective moral standards, i.e., that there is a Natural Law to which manmade laws are answerable.”
I fully admit, it is far more convenient to live the life of license and moral indifference if there were no Natural Law - but, that is not the issue. Homosexual ‘marriage’ is totally agianst the Natural Law, common sense, and God’s Law. Surely, we all need to acknowledge that there are laws outside of ourselves - and outside of selfish sexual events.
Your desire for a safe society on one hand while allowing for unemcumbered homosexual behaviors are mutually exclusive. If you go with the former, you can have a society where children are conceived in love, reared with protection, guidance and a living example that men and women are fundamentally different - and not just with genitals. If you chose the latter, you ultimately have confusion as to which behavior can be expressed as a complete person, and ultimately you have the preditory practice of older men preying on young boys which traces its public display of a society run amuck with the ancient Greeks. Pederasty is the natural consequence of a society that does not protect its children
stfrancis.edu/content/en/marzec/loq01/MikeBuss.htm
If the outlawing of private citizens murdering one another is your criteria for a safe and orderly society - is there no other form of protection the citizens can expect. If maybe their property is included, then maybe their bodies, too. Ultimately, no matter what you personally believe, we are all here - and we all came from a long, long line that can be generally studied as the discipline of History. Those societies that value the family as the seeds of their future and the source of their strength tend to outlast those who want to see how fast their candel can burn if both ends are lite.
God bless
There’s no such thing as Natural Law. It’s part of your religion, which is super for you, but keep it to yourself when it comes to creating laws that people who aren’t part of your religion have to live by.
Let’s leave “right” and “wrong” out of it. We’re talking about why actions should be made illegal.
And it should be obvious that if our chief societal goal is to have a safe and orderly society, we need to outlaw individual citizens privately murdering one another. I’m almost surprised I have to explain this: the opposite of safety is being killed indiscriminately, and the opposite of order is a society where one’s life – or the lives of family and friends – can be taken away by another human being without warning. Thus, in the interest of promoting the kind of society we want, we outlaw murder.
I trust that makes a great deal of sense.
That most people don’t think very hard about these questions is irrelevant to what we’re talking about here.