S
stewstew03
Guest
That’s not true at all - look up the tragic case of Muth v. Frank out of Wisconsin.Those laws are already not enforced anyway, much like laws against fornication which are still on the books.
That’s not true at all - look up the tragic case of Muth v. Frank out of Wisconsin.Those laws are already not enforced anyway, much like laws against fornication which are still on the books.
Besides - sodomy laws were essentially unenforceable but what happened in Lawrence v Texas?Those laws are already not enforced anyway, much like laws against fornication which are still on the books.
What children come from a father and son marrying?Sorry I was busy with work but here is my reply:
I won’t fall into your trap. Technically, what two consenting adults do is fine. However, the public cultural backlash would be so great as to deter that kind of behavior. If the possibility of deformed children isn’t already.
Your standard is your private opinion which is not truth.How is it based on relativism? How is it not based in Christ?
There is no discrimination against any human right here. None.Once again, I’m not getting any Bible verses from you guys. Show me the Bible verse that says we must discriminate against gays when it comes to human rights.
Why do you want to see that in the bible? Is that your standard?Show me the Bible verse that says we can’t let gays adopt. Show me the Bible verse that says that the **government **must stop women from exercising the civil right to abortion.
Oh yes, relevance. That is the key to salvation.If Catholics shut down their hospitals and adoption agencies for this reason, it will only shrink the ministry and help further the decline of the Catholic Church into nonexistence. There are already enough reasons to reject the Catholic Church, its lack of relevance in modern society being one of them.
So where do these Catholic positions come from? They don’t come from the Bible; instead they come from the historic promulgation of oppressive policies of the Catholic Church in the name of “helping others to holiness”.
Stop promulgating oppression. Stop trying to legislate morality. You really want to force people by law to be Catholic? That’s not a relationship with God; that is slavery.
Separation of church and state is beneficial for Catholics and the rest of society.
This is the advice from someone who uses moral relativism as the standard. Why on earth would anyone accept such advice?Stick to preaching the Gospel and cultivating individual relationships with Jesus Christ. Protestants have realized this and that is why they are growing while Catholics are shrinking. I’m not saying this to proselytize; I’m saying this because isn’t this something they’re doing right and that Catholics are doing wrong?
Not only what you said, but you can show him in the Bible where it speaks out against gay adoption and abortion.What children come from a father and son marrying?
Your standard is your private opinion which is not truth.
It is not based in Christ because everything you wrote in contrary to the bible, Tradition, and the magisterium.
There is no discrimination against any human right here. None.
Why do you want to see that in the bible? Is that your standard?
Oh yes, relevance. That is the key to salvation.
This is the advice from someone who uses moral relativism as the standard. Why on earth would anyone accept such advice?
Yes, the entire proposition is absurd on many levels.Not only what you said, but you can show him in the Bible where it speaks out against gay adoption and abortion.
Gay adoption:
“Whoever causes these little ones to stumble, it would be better if a milstone were tied around his neck and thrown into the sea”
Abortion:
“Thou shall not kill”
![]()
Its precisely because I lovethem as myself that I oppose their behavior. I do not wish to enter Hell, and so I do not wish for them to enter it either.me the verse, baby, show me the verse.
The only verses that apply with respect to gays is to love your neighbor as you love yourself (Mark 12:31), and the Golden Rule of Matthew 7:12.
What? This doesn’t even makes sense, unless you are asking whether marriage of two persons would unite them to their biological children that pre-dated the marriage ceremony. And the answer to that is… Yes, it would be an institution that unites the two of them to their progeny.The only institution? Did marriage unite children born out of wedlock to their natural parents?
My point was that the weak argument for gay marriage that stems from the right of privacy misses the mark primarily because marriage is a public act. I would acknowledge that what two (or more) consenting adults do in the privacy of the bedroom is protected under the Constitutional righ to privacy (even if it is immoral). But it does not follow that because two men, or two women, engage in private sexual acts that they therefore should be allowed to get married.Privacy and marriage are both fundamental rights in constitutional law. Your point is?
This comment assumes so many (false) facts that it’s hard to know where to begin. But I’ll try. First, the position of the Church is not “archaic.” The position of the church is based in truths from nature which do not change. It takes a man and a woman to have a baby. It is important to have a social structure that recognizes and unites that man and that woman to each other, and to the children they bring into the world. That social structure is marriage. Marriage - in this sense - has no real application to a same sex couple. Not because the same sex couple is “gay” or “icky” or “damned to hell” or “sinning” but because the nature of what marriage is simply does not apply to their relationship. This relationship comes from God, and it is supported by Christ’s teaching on marriage, but the bible alone is not the sole basis for challenging the move to re-define marriage so that it is completely devoid of its original role - i.e. uniting parents to their children.So if Catholic people are so loving, then why does the Catholic Church continue to hold onto its archaic position against gay marriage rights? Where does this position come from?
**
It doesn’t come from the Bible. No, it can only come from the tradition of oppression and hate that it has shown throughout its history in Europe and Latin America.
It is hate and bigotry, just like discrimination against racial minorities is.**
Morality CAN be legislated, but your argument is really beside the point. I’m not saying that people who self-identify as gay should be persecuted. All I’m saying, and all the Church is saying, is leave marriage the way it is (an institution that unites man and woman to any children they may produce.) Don’t completely re-define marriage out of some misguided attempt to overcome past injustices, or show compassion for a group of people that - admittedly - have suffered unfair treatment at the hands of all types of societies and cultures. Doing so, so that it amounts to just a recognition of two people who want to live together and share bank accounts, completely guts the original purpose behind the institution.I’m not saying that gay sex is not a sin. But what the rest of the world is saying, correctly, is that morality cannot be legislated, and it is hatemongering to restrict the right to marry for gays. Recognize that science has shown that it is normal for about 2-5% of humans to be gay, and that gay behavior is found in hundreds of species.
First, it does not necessarily follow that if one is against the redefinition of marriage, that one is anti-gay. That’s your prejudice showing, and not mine. The only marriages that the bible recognizes is a marriage that includes male and female. If you think the bible supports gay marriage, please cite the chapter and verse that says “thumbs up” to gay marriage. (It does not exist) The fact that some protestant denominations are caving in to political and social pressure does not support a finding that their weakness amounts to an acceptance of “truth.”Protestants recognize this, and that is why they have gradually backed off from their former anti-gay stance. They have recognized that the Bible does not say anything about the issue politically, and that it is open to interpretation. At the same time, they have gone back to the basics and emphasized preaching the Gospel over legislating morality. That is why Protestantism is still growing in the West, while Catholicism fades, because Protestantism adapts itself to modern culture.
Again, it’s not about morality. It’s about protecting the institution of marriage. It’s not really an anti-gay issue at all. It’s about fighting to make sure that marriage remains all about family.The Catholic Church’s response to recognition of gay marriage rights should be to preach the Gospel and quit trying to legislate morality futilely.
“The fight against homophobia is a core part of the broader battle for human rights for all,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in his remarks to the International Forum on the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO), held in The Hague, the Netherlands.There is no discrimination against any human right here. None.
It’s irrelevant what I want to see in the Bible. The fact remains that there’s nothing in the Bible that forbids recognition of gay marriage rights. Tradition alone doesn’t save anyone. The only thing that fuels the Vatican position is its own Magisterium. But what is that Magisterium based on??Your standard is your private opinion which is not truth.
It is not based in Christ because everything you wrote in contrary to the bible, Tradition, and the magisterium.
Why do you want to see that in the bible? Is that your standard?
Relevance is not the key, but one of the keys to reaching the hearts of modern people with the Gospel. But Catholic-style oppression is NOT the key to salvation. That is why people fall away.Oh yes, relevance. That is the key to salvation.
The fact remains that there’s nothing in the Bible that forbids recognition of gay marriage rights. Tradition alone doesn’t save anyone. The only thing that fuels the Vatican position is its own Magisterium. But what is that Magisterium based on??This is the advice from someone who uses moral relativism as the standard. Why on earth would anyone accept such advice?
Gay adoption:Not only what you said, but you can show him in the Bible where it speaks out against gay adoption and abortion.
Gay adoption:
“Whoever causes these little ones to stumble, it would be better if a milstone were tied around his neck and thrown into the sea”
Abortion:
“Thou shall not kill”
![]()
There are irresponsible married parents, and responsible unmarried parents. And there are adopted parents. Marriage has nothing to do with uniting children with their parents.What? This doesn’t even makes sense, unless you are asking whether marriage of two persons would unite them to their biological children that pre-dated the marriage ceremony. And the answer to that is… Yes, it would be an institution that unites the two of them to their progeny.
Why doesn’t it follow?My point was that the weak argument for gay marriage that stems from the right of privacy misses the mark primarily because marriage is a public act. I would acknowledge that what two (or more) consenting adults do in the privacy of the bedroom is protected under the Constitutional righ to privacy (even if it is immoral). But it does not follow that because two men, or two women, engage in private sexual acts that they therefore should be allowed to get married.
So where is your position on the civil right to marry based on? Once again, marriage has no correlation with uniting parents to their children (see above).This comment assumes so many (false) facts that it’s hard to know where to begin. But I’ll try. First, the position of the Church is not “archaic.” The position of the church is based in truths from nature which do not change. It takes a man and a woman to have a baby. It is important to have a social structure that recognizes and unites that man and that woman to each other, and to the children they bring into the world. That social structure is marriage. Marriage - in this sense - has no real application to a same sex couple. Not because the same sex couple is “gay” or “icky” or “damned to hell” or “sinning” but because the nature of what marriage is simply does not apply to their relationship. This relationship comes from God, and it is supported by Christ’s teaching on marriage, but the bible alone is not the sole basis for challenging the move to re-define marriage so that it is completely devoid of its original role - i.e. uniting parents to their children.
Morality can be legislated, but it shouldn’t be, because that is tantamount to slavery and religious oppression. For gay people, it is about more that sharing bank accounts, it is about uniting gay parents with their children (to quote your logic).Morality CAN be legislated, but your argument is really beside the point. I’m not saying that people who self-identify as gay should be persecuted. All I’m saying, and all the Church is saying, is leave marriage the way it is (an institution that unites man and woman to any children they may produce.) Don’t completely re-define marriage out of some misguided attempt to overcome past injustices, or show compassion for a group of people that - admittedly - have suffered unfair treatment at the hands of all types of societies and cultures. Doing so, so that it amounts to just a recognition of two people who want to live together and share bank accounts, completely guts the original purpose behind the institution.
My point exactly. Since there is no Bible verse in support of or opposition to the issue, we are free to interpret. However, the rebellion and hatred against the CC because of this issue is because the Vatican has wrong interpretation. No amount of papal infallibility will serve to make a wrong interpretation correct. Hatred of gays is not justified by papal infallibility.First, it does not necessarily follow that if one is against the redefinition of marriage, that one is anti-gay. That’s your prejudice showing, and not mine. The only marriages that the bible recognizes is a marriage that includes male and female. If you think the bible supports gay marriage, please cite the chapter and verse that says “thumbs up” to gay marriage. (It does not exist) The fact that some protestant denominations are caving in to political and social pressure does not support a finding that their weakness amounts to an acceptance of “truth.”
You wake up the next day and worry about your own life and marriage.What do Catholics do on the marriage front if gay “marriage” becomes a legal reality in the United States?
What was expected of us when no-fault divorce was legalized? What was expected of us when slavery was still legal?
Do we protest and march?
Just curious what everyone else thinks.
I hope–when you want to focus on adultery–you mean by right teaching and good example and not the criminal punishment of adulterers. That solution calls to mind that bloody-minded mob who were so focused on an adulteress they wanted to stone her. Jesus could have hammered that issued by acquiescing to her punishment, **but he saved her instead. **Jesus does not mention homosexuality. Not once. He does, however, admonish against adultery more than 20 times. Maybe we should be focusing on that threat…
You discuss children. In your opinion is it ok for a woman to marry if she is physically unable to conceive? I often read people advocating for traditional marriage over gay marriage based on the fact that only man and woman can conceive a child.As several have pointed out to you elsewhere, your position on civil gay ‘marriage’ is not Catholic, and not aligned with the teaching and values taught by the faith.
It is evident you disregard the counsel of the current Pope, inconsistent with the esteem you seem to hold for him basing on your signature, and the bishops and leaders of the faith.
You serve as a good mouthpiece for and defender of civil gay ‘marriage’, failing to acknowledge the interest of children and the future generation, not to mention the consequent erosion of religious liberty of Catholics and other faiths that support traditional marriage and oppose legalization of gay ‘marriage’.
Begetting and raising children is not just the desired end of sacramental marriages; a good many are brought about in non-sacramental and civil natural partnerships of a man and a woman, notwithstanding failed relationships and those that are intentionally, accidentally, or by virtue of natural old age rendered infertile.
Civil gay ‘marriage’ enshrined in law is not benign as you and advocates for it portray.
It is shortsighted to believe that Catholics are imposing their morals to non-Catholics in maintaining that traditional marriage is best protected and expanding or including same sex unions as marriage promotes special interests against the common good. The Catholic Church regards a non-sacramental marriage between a man and a woman as a natural marriage.
If any group will be imposed upon, it will be Catholics and those defending the natural family. As law is instructive, indoctrination of children in schools, expressed disagreement with homosexual behavior, ‘marriage’ and adoption of kids by same sex couples will be disallowed, suppressed. Erosion of individual and parental rights of a great part of society would be inevitable. Against Catholic teaching and deeply held values, children in greater numbers will be placed for adoption in same sex homes. This is freedom? Think hard, Dex.
Efforts in opposition to uniform legalized gay ‘marriage’ may very well fail as did efforts against laws that were passed without thought to unintended negative social consequences, like effective abortion on demand and no-fault divorce.
It is truly sad when Catholics serve as enablers.
,
The teaching is not that each act be procreative. The teaching is that each act be ordered toward procreation. Any man-woman fully consumated act of sexual intercourse is ordered toward procreation regardless of the ferltility of either spouse.Women who have had hysterectomies should not be allowed to marry since they are physically not “open to life”. Sterile men – same thing. If this Catholic rule applies to one, then it applies to all.
I stated that Jesus does not mention homosexuality but does mention adultery. My point is the church (in my opinion) should be focusing more on divorce, an actual threat to traditional marriage. The ridiculous amount of money wasted fighting SSM when that money could be used to help the poor and needy.