It is more than the Catholic Churches view. Many cultures share that view. Many since the dawn of mankind. Do you have an alternate defintion that will cover a larger scope of people and time than Peter’s?
I gave my personal definition of marriage earlier.
If you want a description of the position of women ‘since the dawn of mankind’ as it relates to what we know call marriage, I can sum it up in one word: Property. And I gave a quote from a book that I had lying in front of me when I made the post to Peter as an example. Although I didn’t really think that anyone would need an example.
Tell me if you think this is a fair analogy. I think you’ve been a poster of integrity in the past, so I anticipate your honest response (that is, you’ll say: "Ok. It does make sense, PR. The analogy limns that the CC’s position is consistent).
Yeah, right. The kind word and a smile just before she slides the knife between my ribs.
Does this limn for you better how the Church does not forbid marriage between 2 senior citizens while she does for homosexual unions?
But I’ve never had a problem understanding it before. I can see how the example works perfectly (I’ve seen it a few times before). It’s a good analogy, and a fair one, of how the Catholic Church thinks on this matter. But as you’d know, I simply don’t agree with it.
I don’t see life, or marriage for that matter, as something that has a fixed set of rules. The Catholic Church says that this is the only game in town and these are rules by which we are all to play it. And the idea is to win. That is part of the reason why you actually playing. It must form part of your game plan.
But in my game a lot of people play it for fun. They enjoy the game as much as anyone else, they play it just as hard, but they’re not interested in winning. The score doesn’t matter. And the Catholic Church says – well, if you call it baseball, then no-one will turn up to watch our games. And we don’t get that argument.