That’s ideal as far as I’m concerned. Myself and my partner specifically don’t want to get married in a church, and aren’t too worried if you call it a “sin” since we know that there is no such thing as God/Hell.
I suppose, then, that you support the Church’s right to lobby society, as it were, to conform to her religious teachings on homosexuality?
Maybe not the only reason, but it seems to bring up issues such as hate-speech in the whole gay marriage argument - when it really doesn’t belong here.

If homosexual activists and others didn’t try to suppress Church teachings behind the gay marriage argument, it wouldn’t be brought up in that context. The Church is reacting to accusations of hate speech in this context; she didn’t bring them up.
The problems of people lashing out at the church, both homosexual groups and others.
Yes. Homosexual marriage promotes equality, teaches that homosexuals are the same as everybody else and should be treated as such.
Ah, but marriage is a religious as well as a social concept. “Equality” can be achieved through other legal means; “civil partnerships” and the like. The Church would still speak out against them, as such practices would foster what she considers behavior bad for society, not to mention sinful (which, granted, has no bearing on non-believers).
It is shutting homosexuals out from society by lobbying against letting homosexuals get married in a purely legal perspective.
This is very confused thinking. “Shutting out” from what? The Catholic Church has “rules of behavior” for membership. She should abolish certain things to make membership all-inclusive? Is that what you’re saying?
If so, you’ve got a mistaken perspective on the RCC. EVERYONE is welcome, sinners and saints. In fact, sinners MORE than saints.
Now if you’re saying that there are Catholics who shun homosexuals and that’s wrong to do so, I agree. We should shun the behavior, not the person.
Or what do you mean by “shutting out from society”?
Have a look:
geocities.com/gaymarriage@ymail.com
In their “special report on gay marriage”, they quote statistics way out of context, misrepresent scientific articles and quote discretited authors - all in an attempt to try to mislead the public into believing there are valid non-religious reasons that homosexuals should not get married.
This report is worthless. I could say the same thing about it, that it quotes statistics out of context, misrepresents scientific articles and quotes discredited authors- all in an attempt to try to mislead the public into believing that there are ***no ***non-religious reasons that homosexuals should not get married.