J
JimG
Guest
Not to answer for another poster–but while I’m not certain that marriage is in the U.S. Constitution, the Catholic Church would certainly consider marriage to be a universal natural right. But the union of same sex couples is not and cannot be marriage. That would, in the view of the Church as well as in the view of most societies in recorded history, be an ontological impossibility.You seem to be misinterpreting what I have said. According to another CAF member, marriage is a right under the US Constitution. If marriage is a right, then the 14th amendment would extend marriage rights to gays, as well as heterosexauls. It is a question of equal protection under the law.
I am not saying this is true. But it does seem to be the reasoning of the judge who ruled in the case we are discussing.