I essentially just think that long as cooperation isn’t explicit or formal then providing services to these events, even a death event, isn’t sinful.
I haven’t seen anyone here argue that the reason conscience rights should exist is because a given activity necessarily meets the Catholic Church’s standard of objectively sinful. (I think the question of sinfulness re: degrees of cooperation with sin in cases A B C might be more a matter for a different thread.)
Is it possible the point you’re coming in with seems to keep bouncing off people, because they feel it doesn’t address what they’re saying?
By the way I largely think you’re approaching things in a reasonable way here, and I get that you don’t want Christians to make waves that you consider unnecessary.
At the same time, can I ask you one more question from one more angle?
Are you basically onside with the general advice given to family and friends invited to these same-sex rituals, to abstain from attending the ritual as a celebratory witness? (I’m not saying pastoral advice may leave attendance open to exceptions in drastic circumstances, though even then one cannot seem to celebrate or affirm the ritual underway; but in general the advice I’ve always heard is not to go.) If not onside, do you at least respect your fellow Catholics who, often at great personal cost and pain, make this choice not to attend?
So assuming you can at least answer that yes you can respect the choice of a Catholic to abstain from attending his friend’s ‘gay wedding’… how is that friend going to feel if the following week that same Catholic attends and takes 300 celebratory photos, framed and posed for maximum beauty and romantic glow, at a stranger’s ‘gay wedding’? Just because he did it for money, do you think that will make it ‘better’ for the friend? I reckon no. I reckon if anything it’ll make it worse, that the Catholic will seem willing to do for money (or fear of Caesar) what he wouldn’t do ‘for friendship’.
What do you think?