F
frankieschatz1
Guest
The word Natural is used every so often in the catechism as in Natural law and Natural relations, etc.
For example, ‘man has a natural sexual desire for a woman’. Natural here is used to describe a males sexual attraction and desire for a female. The catechism also says there are certain ‘natural laws’. Here the laws of thermodynamics and physics would be natural laws that God has created, and as far as we know they are absolute and unbreakable.
But can said first example of ‘man having a natural sexual desire for a woman’ also be a ‘natural law’ such that it is absolute and unbreakable? It doesn’t seem so. Some gay men have told me that they absolutely have no natural desire for a woman, but only for a man? They have said to me that it is very natural for them to have this desire for men and not women. The desire for women is very unnatural to them. It is not absolute, therefore, that all men have a natural sexual desire for woman.
The catechism also states that no one knows where the homosexual inclination comes from and that we as Catholics shouldn’t discriminate against them, but the catechism still says all gay sexual relations are immoral. This is confusing. If we don’t know where it comes from we cannot call it natural or unnatural because as stated we just don’t know. Yet the catechism still jumps to the conclusion that gay sexual relations is unnatural and more definitively always unnatural. This doesn’t make logical sense.
It is a standard truth in logic and philosophy that if an argument’s basic premise or position is wrong then any arguments and conclusions leading from it, no matter how logical, are also wrong. So if someone states the basic premise that ‘man has a natural sexual desire for a woman’, but a man, 100% gay, has no such natural desire towards any woman, and we have no knowledge of where sexual desires come from (be they natural or unnatural) then any logical arguments based on this premise, such that gay sex is always unnatural and also immoral, is also wrong.
We just can’t put the natural laws of thermodynamics and physics in the same category as sexual attractions anymore. How can we defend our position that gay sex is immoral if our basic premise about natural sexual relations is wrong? We need new words to describe a premise that would conclude that gay sexual relations is absolutely wrong. What would they be? And if we can not find such words for such a premise that is absolute then maybe we are also wrong about SOME gay sexual relations.
Yes I know we have different Bible passages against gay sexual relations, but each of these passages speaks to a specific gay sexual act, like rape, adultry or pederastry, etc. which are also stated many times in the Bible as immoral in heterosexual sexual relations as well. So what about mutual, loving, monogamous gay relationships? Nowhere in scripture does it speak against such relationships.
It is clearer and clearer to me why most gay men don’t accept the Catholic apologist defense of our position against all gay sexual relationship. They seem very illogical and untenable.
What can I say that can convince someone of our Catholic position on homosexual sexual relations that works?
For example, ‘man has a natural sexual desire for a woman’. Natural here is used to describe a males sexual attraction and desire for a female. The catechism also says there are certain ‘natural laws’. Here the laws of thermodynamics and physics would be natural laws that God has created, and as far as we know they are absolute and unbreakable.
But can said first example of ‘man having a natural sexual desire for a woman’ also be a ‘natural law’ such that it is absolute and unbreakable? It doesn’t seem so. Some gay men have told me that they absolutely have no natural desire for a woman, but only for a man? They have said to me that it is very natural for them to have this desire for men and not women. The desire for women is very unnatural to them. It is not absolute, therefore, that all men have a natural sexual desire for woman.
The catechism also states that no one knows where the homosexual inclination comes from and that we as Catholics shouldn’t discriminate against them, but the catechism still says all gay sexual relations are immoral. This is confusing. If we don’t know where it comes from we cannot call it natural or unnatural because as stated we just don’t know. Yet the catechism still jumps to the conclusion that gay sexual relations is unnatural and more definitively always unnatural. This doesn’t make logical sense.
It is a standard truth in logic and philosophy that if an argument’s basic premise or position is wrong then any arguments and conclusions leading from it, no matter how logical, are also wrong. So if someone states the basic premise that ‘man has a natural sexual desire for a woman’, but a man, 100% gay, has no such natural desire towards any woman, and we have no knowledge of where sexual desires come from (be they natural or unnatural) then any logical arguments based on this premise, such that gay sex is always unnatural and also immoral, is also wrong.
We just can’t put the natural laws of thermodynamics and physics in the same category as sexual attractions anymore. How can we defend our position that gay sex is immoral if our basic premise about natural sexual relations is wrong? We need new words to describe a premise that would conclude that gay sexual relations is absolutely wrong. What would they be? And if we can not find such words for such a premise that is absolute then maybe we are also wrong about SOME gay sexual relations.
Yes I know we have different Bible passages against gay sexual relations, but each of these passages speaks to a specific gay sexual act, like rape, adultry or pederastry, etc. which are also stated many times in the Bible as immoral in heterosexual sexual relations as well. So what about mutual, loving, monogamous gay relationships? Nowhere in scripture does it speak against such relationships.
It is clearer and clearer to me why most gay men don’t accept the Catholic apologist defense of our position against all gay sexual relationship. They seem very illogical and untenable.
What can I say that can convince someone of our Catholic position on homosexual sexual relations that works?