I’ve had this concept in my head for quite a while now, and I’m curious as to the thoughts of others. I know there is the concept of “civil union” for same-sex couples, but they claim it isn’t entirely legally the same as marriage, which got me to thinking the following:
- If people keep advocating for the separation of church (religion) and state (government)
- If it is primarily people of religious background that are against said “marriages”
- If same-sex couples want legal equality under a union for dedicated individuals
Then why not give everyone what they want. I believe we already have the systems in play to make this happen smoothly, because it essentially already is this way, with a few exceptions, and mostly a game of semantics and words.
Would a good solution to the issue to separate church and state and make marriage purely a religious matter so that each religion can define what it constitutes marriage, and then give the state the power over civil unions (legal “marriage”, but the term marriage will be kept to be used by religious). Then, anyone could get a civil union by the state to get the legal benefits of a dedicated relationship. This would mean, though, for those that are religious who are married by their church would also have to register for a civil union (which is essentially already done).
The idea is not completely thought out, but would this work? Why or why not? I’d like different perspectives, from Catholics, non-Catholics, non-Christians, and non-religious people.