The question is not whether gay marriage is good or not. It is also not what the purpose of sex is. We could debate these another time.
The question is why for this particular issue do some Catholics find it difficult to separate their largely private religious views from their views as citizens in the public sphere. There is great inconsistency in the application deemed to be required by the faith.
Do you stand out side bars and night clubs late at night with a sign saying “Repent Sinners. Fornicate no more”. Of course not. But we both know that many people in those places are looking for sex. And I don’t think any of those are seeking procreation.
We should remember that not to long ago in many places in America a marriage between blacks and whites was viewed in much the same way. It was illegal.
I do not think gay marriage should be shoved down anyone’s throat. That is why any church should be allowed to not perform it if it conflicts with their beliefs. But again the question is why opposition to it a civil liberty should be a requirement of being Catholic.
The principles behind " I disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it" Should be given the broadest possible sway
You don’t understand. Gay marriage is an outgrowth of the “Sexual Revolution” which was never about love. Catholics protested all of this but after a 40 year campaign to shut us up and to convince us to view sexuality in precisely the same way as the “SEX FOR FUN” advocates - same sex marriage advocates now say, “Look. You’re bad too. You’ve apparently stopped caring about other sexual ‘sins’ so why the big deal about this?”
First, gay marriage is not a civil liberty. It never was. It’s a recent invention.
In the 1960s, divorce was rare. And when it did happen, it was a scandal.
Abortion was rare and when it did happen, it was a scandal.
Catholics were taught to be modest. Teenage girls were required to wear skirts that covered the knees. When the mini-skirt appeared, it was a scandal.
Being a virgin before marriage was important.
Graphic pornography was hard to get.
There were Vice Squads.
You could be arrested for a lewd or obscene performance in public.
The clear goal was to bring the kind of sex secularists wanted into our neighborhood. We had to turn into them.
They had mistresses. They had to send them to Mexico for the occasional abortion. The Pill. What a great idea. I’ll make sure my girlfriend gets on it. Divorces are so messy and frowned upon, I’ll suggest it go to No-Fault.
And Catholics. All you do is listen to the Pope! And you’re sexually repressed. And you have no business telling other people how to live! Mind your own business!!
Oh, we had the
right to say it all right, But We Were Wrong! (they said) The pornographers had the First Amendment right to produce porn. They had the First Amendment right to open strip clubs and sex clubs. And they had highly paid lawyers to fight religious nuts and people who tried to impose Censorship.
What you fail to understand is 40 years of social engineering. We’ll turn cohabitation with sex, divorce and even abortion into, Hey. What’s the big deal?
We’ll create TV shows where actors playing doctors have ‘just sex.’ Love? What’s that? Worried about AIDS? Don’t. Getting lots of sex is job one.
We’ll turn movies away from love and romance into just sex. Attractive actress? I know. She’ll play a hooker in her next movie. Or a new idea, she’ll be in a sex tape or get arrested for possession of illegal drugs. Which we would love to decriminalize.
And all I heard on the radio for years was “tame by today’s standards.” What standards? Who creates these standards? Are they written down anywhere?
I open up the local newspaper and see ads for “Wild Hearts.” The heart has zero to do with these ads. Just like the Swinger magazines from the 1970s - casual sex with no questions asked. On another forum where I am a moderator, the secularist and pagan posters have decided that porn is mainstream, just like a Supreme Court justice who decided we (we who?) are never going back to a time when abortion was illegal.
LGBT people can do whatever they want - right now. They don’t need permission from Catholics or anybody else. But when I saw gay marriage on the ballot, I had the exact same feeling that I had when I saw an Adult Bookstore in the 1970s for the first time. Who approved this? Who said this was OK? Who made this legal?
On a forum where I am a moderator, it is very clear what some people want. They do not want to Feel Bad - Ever, for anything called a sin. Ever. They don’t want to feel guilty or ashamed or sinful ever again. A few want a spirituality, as they call it, that is 100% nonjudgmental. Nobody can judge anybody and it is forbidden to forbid.
I am puzzled about certain questions here.
First, I ask anyone reading this to explain something - why was homosexuality removed from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual in 1973? Just be honest.
God bless,
Ed