B
Brendan
Guest
A few do, most do not.I. Do all states permit same sex civil marriage?
A few do, most do not.I. Do all states permit same sex civil marriage?
As I mentioned, we were speaking of civil contract law.What difference does that make? Everyone still gets the same rights, which was the point you based your previous argument on.
Deo,Grace & Peace!
I find that the biggest problem in all of this is the Roman Church’s understanding of homosexuality as intrinsically or objectively disordered. Here’s why I think this is problematic–because desire is not a separate organ of the will, but a form of it. To say that one’s sexual orientation is intrinsically disordered is to say that they simply cannot will correctly. Someone on these boards has made the point before that a heterosexual’s desire for a new lawn-mower may be quite alright, but a homosexual’s desire for a new lawn-mower is intrinsically corrupt because their wills are intrinsically broken. There is no circumstance under which a homosexual can will correctly because the mechanism of their desire is intrinsically wrong. This is the logical conclusion of Rome’s teaching on homosexuality–the homosexual is necessarily criminal or sinful because intrinsically disordered. Our general understanding of original sin is that it is a corruption of our will and nature and foreign to both. Rome’s teaching suggests that the homosexual is naturally corrupt.
Moreover, the Judeo-Christian tradition for the most part locates personhood in the will. Unlike the Greeks, we do not believe that we are what we know or what we remember–we are what we will and what we desire. If we cannot help but desire a moral disease because of an objective disorder, we cannot help but be that disease. As such, homosexuality admits no moral cure. Insofar as homosexuality is an expression of a desire for an intimacy which is intrinsically disordered, the homosexual’s will cannot be reformed by grace until they cease being a homosexual. It is inconsistent of Rome to say that an individual can be a homosexual (that is, remain conscious of a desire for same-sex intimacy) and yet not be in a state of sin. It is also inconsistent of Rome not to demand conversion therapy of her homosexual sons and daughters.
In this way, love the sinner, hate the sin is problematic. Homosexuals don’t have to do anything in order to be in a state of sin–they are, in Rome’s understanding, naturally sinful in a way that the heterosexual is not. Rome’s rules regarding homosexual seminarians illustrates this point perfectly: the consciousness of homosexual desire renders one incapable of exercising the offices of a priest. Heterosexual desire, however, does not so cripple a person. A vow of celibacy is worth more, and/or is actually meaningful coming from a heterosexual as opposed to from a homosexual. Why? Presumably because Rome’s teaching leads one naturally to the conclusion that homosexuality is a disease of the will which renders one incapable of properly making the vow.
There is no way to express the Roman understanding of homosexuality as either consistent or particularly charitable without running very quickly into a ditch. The problem is in the very nature of Rome’s understanding, not with how that understanding is phrased or expressed.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
All is grace and mercy! Deo gratias!
Gearhead, you bring me to Second Question of this thread: Is homosexuality intrinsically or objectively disordered?Why go through the charade of painting this as tolerant? It’s not. Why not simply say, “yes, we’re intolerant of homosexuality, but we’re right to be so”?
It is true that the Catechism of the Catholic Church says that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered (CCC 2357) and that homosexual inlination or tendency (i.e. same-sex attraction) is objectively disordered (CCC 2358). Let me paraphrase the answer I give in my book, Born to Love:I find that the biggest problem in all of this is the Roman Church’s understanding of homosexuality as intrinsically or objectively disordered. Here’s why I think this is problematic–because desire is not a separate organ of the will, but a form of it. To say that one’s sexual orientation is intrinsically disordered is to say that they simply cannot will correctly… The logical conclusion of Rome’s teaching on homosexuality–the homosexual is necessarily criminal or sinful because intrinsically disordered. Our general understanding of original sin is that it is a corruption of our will and nature and foreign to both. Rome’s teaching suggests that the homosexual is naturally corrupt…
If we cannot help but desire a moral disease because of an objective disorder, we cannot help but be that disease. As such, homosexuality admits no moral cure. Insofar as homosexuality is an expression of a desire for an intimacy which is intrinsically disordered, the homosexual’s will cannot be reformed by grace until they cease being a homosexual. It is inconsistent of Rome to say that an individual can be a homosexual (that is, remain conscious of a desire for same-sex intimacy) and yet not be in a state of sin. It is also inconsistent of Rome not to demand conversion therapy of her homosexual sons and daughters.
In this way, love the sinner, hate the sin is problematic.
survive correctly points out:If one considers instead that the inclination is a temptation which should be fought against, then of course, those who fight against the temptations are not sinning.
We all suffer from temptations. Temptations alone are not what make us sinners, giving in, either in fact or in fantasy, is what makes us sinners.
As does St Francis:Everyone has disordered desires. We struggle with them. Loving the sinner is actually the same thing as hating the sin, because sin does damage to the sinner, inevitably. To love someone is to hate what damages someone, from within or without.
Mark (Deo Volente) doesn’t see that all sin and all tendency to sin as disorder:No, because homosexuals are not considered sinners *unless *they sin. Just *being *a homosexual is not sinful.
AndTo my knowledge, though, Rome has not chosen to define all of those disordered desires as intrinsically disordered. Which suggests that Rome sees most desire as good, but suffering from the perversion of sin–that is, sin is extrinsic to the desire and parasitical. Something that is intrinsically disordered, though, is *by it’s very nature *disease.
But, as we showed above, it is the inclination to sin are disordered, just as desires to gratify oneself by masturbation or by doing pornography are disordered. As Mark77 pointed out:But my larger point is that Rome sees homosexuality as a moral disease. Homosexual desire is objectively disordered, according to the catechism, the logical conclusion of which is that the will of a homosexual is objectively compromised. Unlike other disordered desires, which represent perversions, by sin, of a desire that is understood to be good, homosexual desire is by nature, corrupt. It is by nature understood to be perversion itself.
Here, DOShea rightly points out that it is the sense-desires or deep-seated emotional tendencies that are disordered, not the will of the homosexual which is intrinsically good.Heterosexual sexual relations outside of the Sacrament of Matrimony are just as much a grave evil! We are not intolerant, we want everyone to spend eternity in Heaven with God!!!
Deo Volente comes back by saying:You are using the term “the will” as a singular, forcing you to conclude that any decision come to by a person with gay tendencies is disordered. That is not what the Church teaches. It is specifically referring to that part of the will - those decisions - that forward will into actions and result in sin of homosexual acts.
Desires for any immoral sexual activity is objectively disordered, whether homosexual or heterosexual. Desires for heterosexual sex with children or with oneself or with a person who is not one’s spouse are all objectively disordered.Rome does not believe that homosexuality is, in fact, a sexuality. It defines it as an inclination. The inclination to a heterosexual act is not objectively disordered, but the inclination to a homosexual act is… The idea that the homosexual inclination is objectively disordered must be abandoned as contrary to Rome’s fundamental understanding of the relationship between seuxality and all aspects of the human person (as is mentioned in the catechism). Whether or not homosexual acts are disordered would arise from this more accurate understanding of human sexuality.
IOW, you agree that the Catholic Church is intolerant of homosexuality, but you think this intolerance is justified. Right?Gearhead, you bring me to Second Question of this thread: Is homosexuality intrinsically or objectively disordered?
Earlier Mark (Deo Volente) wrote:
It is true that the Catechism of the Catholic Church says that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered (CCC 2357) and that homosexual inlination or tendency (i.e. same-sex attraction) is objectively disordered (CCC 2358). Let me paraphrase the answer I give in my book, Born to Love:
[snip]
The Catechism of the Catholic Church condemns intolerance, as it does:IOW, you agree that the Catholic Church is intolerant of homosexuality, but you think this intolerance is justified. Right?
1st Question: It’s another chink in the cultural unity that once defined this country, ugly and contradictory as it often was (i.e. slavery, poll taxes, etc.). The worst case scenario is that it will contribute to the destruction of the family unit as the basic unit of society. To be certain, divorce and living together have done far more damage to this building block of society. In fact, they are a main reason we are at this point. However, the recognition of anyone marrying provides public and official support for the notion that marriage doesn’t matter at all. In short, it continues our slide into moral relativism, the inability or unwillingness make necessarily subjective judgments.I understand what you are saying. Let me ask this question - what is your ‘worst case’ scenario should things play out as you think they will? And my second question - if that happens, why wouldn’t society rise up as squash it?
Unjust discrimination. IOW, it accepts a certain level of discrimination, calling it “just”. It also rejects discrimination over and above this level.The Catechism of the Catholic Church condemns intolerance, as it does:
Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard… (CCC 2357).
You like to twist other people’s words, I see… OK, I’ll play your game.Unjust discrimination. IOW, it accepts a certain level of discrimination, calling it “just”. It also rejects discrimination over and above this level.
Just because it isn’t comfortable with a greater level of intolerance than it exhibits itself doesn’t make the Church’s position tolerant.
How am I twisting your words? The Church views homosexuality as disordered and homosexual acts as sin. Is the Church tolerant of what it views as disorder and sin?You like to twist other people’s words, I see… OK, I’ll play your game.
Why am I getting the feeling that some come in here not to argue a point but to apply the intolerance of homosexuality to the person whereas the church finds the ACT in itself intolerant.IOW, you agree that the Catholic Church is intolerant of homosexuality, but you think this intolerance is justified. Right?
No the Church is VERY tolerant of homosexuality. What it is intolerant of is homosexual ACTS.IOW, you agree that the Catholic Church is intolerant of homosexuality, but you think this intolerance is justified. Right?
There are legal restrictions against marriage between people closely related by blood and some related by marriage. The Church does prohibit such marriages.Whether or not it’s discriminatory, I don’t know of any legal protection that guarantees a group of people the same rights as an individual or vice versa.
Does it? Apparently, DOMA doesn’t mention anything about brothers or sisters in its definition of marriage:
Since it’s illegal for a brother and sister to marry now, I guess that restriction is given in some other law. Or is this a state-level thing?
Extremely well put Diane! I’m not sure what part of the word “act” most are not getting. I also like the way Drawmack explained the incorrect use of “tolerate”. In today’s society, we tolerate a whole lot of things, but we “accept” or “reject” based on our moral conscience. We as Catholics cannot accept the homosexual act any more than anyone can “accept” me stealing money from friends. I can’t imagine trying to make people feel badly if they reject my disorders and sins, which we all have.Why am I getting the feeling that some come in here not to argue a point but to apply the intolerance of homosexuality to the person whereas the church finds the ACT in itself intolerant.
Most Catholics do not think of homosexuals as being evil but we do find the ACTS they commit repulsive. I personally think that the demand for homosexual couples to be granted license for their sinful ACT a blasphemy. It is nothing less.
Now the comparison of other human foibles are being compared to homosexuality and also the issue of class or race is somehow considered in the same measure. The BIBLE makes clear that a man lying with another man is an abomination. If you don’t accept that then I strongly suspect you are here to argue with us in an attempt to convert us to your favorable consideration of the ACT of homosexuality. Sorry, I am Catholic and I abide by the tenants of my faith. I will not be swayed by your passion for the physical in opposition to the spiritual.
Homosexual acts are labelled “sin”; homosexuality itself is labelled “disorder”. Neither of these are tolerant.No the Church is VERY tolerant of homosexuality. What it is intolerant of is homosexual ACTS.
There is quite a big difference.
Now there’s a stretch. As A=B, therefore soup is an orange. :nope: Homosexuality has nothing whatsoever to do with virginity on the wedding night etc. Your putting them together in this context as a comparison is false. Think this through Cluny.<< Just politely tell them that we don’t hate them for being gay, we just think they’re wrong for being gay.>>
Your sentence assumes that being gay (or heterosexual) is a choice.
It’s not.
It’s just a given.
Being gay does not bring with it that one is promiscuous or even sexually active, any more than being heterosexually married assumes that one was a virgin on the wedding night and monogamous thereafter.
You are correct, it is a moral disorder . The acts that it is ordered towards are inherently sinful (hence the term “wrongly ordered”). That is not being ‘intolerant’, just stating a fact.Homosexual acts are labelled “sin”; homosexuality itself is labelled “disorder”. Neither of these are tolerant.
I’m tolerant of the disorder of homosexuality and intolerant of the act. There, I said it.Homosexual acts are labelled “sin”; homosexuality itself is labelled “disorder”. Neither of these are tolerant.
But if you think you’re right in your intolerance, why not proclaim it proudly?
Speaking for myself, I’m intolerant of evil (actual evil); I’m intolerant of disease (actual disease)… and I have no problem saying so. If you think that homosexual acts are akin to evil and homosexuality itself is akin to disease, why would you have a problem saying that you’re intolerant of them?