I understand that there are ways of getting around the whole immediate family clause, but if my husband or I end up in the hospital then we don’t have to go through any hoops, I automatically have access and vice versa, not to mention that when either he or I pass on, inheritance rights. That was all that I was saying.
I know what I must say, and do not shrink from expressing the Catholic view that homosexuality is against the moral law if asked directly. However, knowing what you need to say, saying it, and feeling great about it are very different things.
Also, as a resident of Boston (part of the year) and with family in California, same sex “marriages” are already legally occurring. My husband has a gay friend from high school who has just gotten “married”. A very good college friend who is gay is engaged. I know several gay professors who are “married.”
After painfully having to tell one of my best friends that struggles with homosexuality- a Christian- who asked me directly whether or not I thought that she was sinning, and literally watching a bit of her die inside with rejection as I said that I did believe it was a sin but I loved her, I have tried to not seek out the homosexuality issue. However, times are changing and a wedding invitation might be in my mailbox and then what?
In academia, expressing the Church’s view on homosexuality is tantamount to donning a white KKK robe or taking a high power hose to black children. In my mind the Church ultimately always stands with the oppressed, the outcast the downtrodden. I think that it is unfair, but it is a fact that Catholics and Protestants who express views like gays should not be legally married, find themselves agreeing with some extremist groups whose other views are repugnant. I don’t know what to do with this. I don’t want to stand in solidarity with supremicist groups who only hold these views because they hate. I do want to follow God and love my neighbor.
Yet, I understand that if someone I loved was doing something harmful, like drinking a little poison with their coffee I would tell them to stop - even if this coffee was their special secret recipe handed down throughout the centuries and defined their family identity.
Perhaps rejection is inevitable with this issue, and Jesus is certainly worth it because I know that he was rejected by his friends too. I know that some people who were close to him (and some Christians today) walked away when he said that you must eat His flesh and drink His blood or you don’t have life in you.
I just struggle with how to materially “hate the sin” and “love the sinner” when many gay people do not feel like they are doing anything wrong. I don’t want someone to stand up on the last day and say that they rejected Christ because I was unloving and pushed them away.
