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90Domer
Guest
Amen. Beautifully written. And that is why we named our daughter Elizabeth!Untrue, it is both procreative AND unitive, as the above posters have explained. The marital embrace brings together a husband and wife. They truly become “one flesh” in a unitive, procreative act.
The word “sin” means “to miss the mark”. In archery, if you don’t hit a bullseye, you have missed the mark. Under Divine Law, all things that are outside the order which God has set up for humankind are considered sin. For example, we owe worship to God alone who is worthy of our adoration. When we worship other gods, or objects, or something that is not God, we have sinned, because we have failed to give worship where it is due, and we have become idolatrous in putting our faith into something or someone else.
Only sex that is open to procreation within the context of a valid marriage is permitted by God because of His vision for the family as the building block of society. This rules out things like sodomy and masturbation. Two men cannot validly marry because they lack sexual complementarity. They cannot complete each other and become “one flesh”, because bottom line, they do not have the right equipment. Only one man and one woman are physically equipped by our Creator for the marital embrace and only they can complete it in the way God has ordained it.
The Church has done much research and development on these points, but the kernel of truth was in the Garden of Eden, when God created one man and one woman, and gave the woman to the man, and commanded them (and us) to “be fruitful and multiply.” That was not just an idle comment or suggestion. It is a divine command. We are obliged to explore the vocation of marriage, and if that be our calling, we are obliged to enter the covenant with the intent to be open to life and ready to bear children for the good of the Kingdom. Moses understood this when he gave the Law to the Hebrews. Prohibitions against homosexual acts are written in the Old Testament. The apostles wrote about it in their epistles, and the Church, through a sophisticated understanding of Divine Law, has validated and reaffirmed these eternal teachings.
Untrue. Abram’s wife Sarai was thought to be barren and too old, and yet she bore a son, Isaac, and Abraham became the father of nations through him. St. Elizabeth, Mary’s cousin, was also thought to be too old to bear children, and yet God blessed her and Zechariah with John the Baptist. Nothing is impossible with God. But a couple must put their faith in Him and only perform sex in a way that is open to life and ordered to procreation, whether or not it means that they will have a child as a result.