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CaliLobo
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pastormacsponderings.wordpress.com/2013/06/27/pondering-my-reactions-to-scotus-rulings-on-gay-marriage/
Now that gay marriage is almost fully decided in the USA, can the Catholic Church now stop attempting to meddle politically in this issue?
Can Catholics now realize that:
Can we go back to preaching the Gospel now? Isn’t Gospel preaching more important than politics?
Here is an excerpt from the above article that may give us clues on what to do from now on:
Now that gay marriage is almost fully decided in the USA, can the Catholic Church now stop attempting to meddle politically in this issue?
Can Catholics now realize that:
- The way Catholics have dealt with the gay community has been incorrect, hateful, and bigoted, and God is telling us to rethink how we engage with gays,
- Though Christians should not be gay, it is still biologically normal to be gay and impossible to convert one out of being gay (Exodus Int’l shutdown).
- Extending marriage rights to gays does not affect straight people,
- It ensures that the children of gays are legally and equally protected,
- It ensures that surviving gay spouses are equally protected,
- Gays are indeed capable of lasting, committed relationships, and straights are capable of swinging and depravity
- It is futile to legislate morality,
- If we legislate morality it leads to bad precedent and Muslims demanding sharia in the USA.
- A secular government is not obligated to follow the Bible,
- Ironically, although Protestant churches allow for one to vote his conscience, Protestants are more likely to oppose gay rights than Catholics. Could it be because Protestant churches actually preach the Gospel and teach the Bible to members of all ages? Could it be because Protestant churches don’t push political views down one’s throats?
- The Church needs to change to survive another generation, and convert modern people?
Can we go back to preaching the Gospel now? Isn’t Gospel preaching more important than politics?
Here is an excerpt from the above article that may give us clues on what to do from now on:
- We are going to love our wives and our children and instead of defending marriage with our anger we are going to advance it by taking it seriously enough to model and live. We are going to stop worrying about the word, “marriage” and worry about the reality of it in our own families and lives. We are going to stop insisting other people build the culture we are called to build with pillars we are called as a church to build with. We will stand firm on the sanctity of marriage by keeping it sacred, not by expecting citizens of this world to agree with citizens of another.
- We are going to love those who disagree with us. We are going to remember that none of us reaches the glory of God apart from the Grace of Christ. We are going to stop declaring that a sin which focuses on worldly love is more egregious than the million sins we sometimes let slide which don’t even pretend to an aspect of love; sins like slander and gossip and lying or, in extreme cases even violence. We are also going to love them by clear communication of the Gospel in word and deed, clarifying that all sin is big and God’s Grace is bigger.
I hope we realize that the Rainbow Rulings are God’s call for Christians to rethink how we engage with gays.
- We are going to love our Lord and trust Him when He says that the church is not called to rule through power of law or politics, but to serve through love and grace. We are going to remember (again) that Christ and the church has never before required the agreement of a culture (politically, legislatively or artistically) before we love those in it. We are going to remember that as we incarnate Christ’s life in us to others we can change lives. We are going to remember that laws which allow do not require and laws which forbid, do not overrule passions which control. We are going to remember that Christ alone brings freedom from sin and freedom to love.