Nowadays, couples get married with no intention of having children. And some get married knowing that they can't have children. The intervention of medical science, and adoption mean that a gay couple could have a child as easily as an infertile straight couple. Now given that infertility is about as prevalent as homosexuality, we have to start thinking again. There have now been ectopic pregnancies that have carried to term, and a healthy child born. This means that theoretically a man could have an embryo implanted. Or a woman with no womb. And it could have genetic material of both parties, implanted into an empty egg.
Now, for me, this is seriously screwing up the boundaries. And I think the church needs a rethink.
I think it is a fair analogy - after all those who are gay, and those who are infertile are born that way. In fact being infertile can be more down to lifestyle choices that homosexuality. (consumption of alcohol, etc)
Love
Angel
quote:Hah! If we had no concept of marriage, we wouldn't have fornication, if you think about it.
Originally posted by Angel:
prevent fornication
quote:Er, are you sure about that? Ectopic pregancies are extremely dangerous, not to say fatal. My understanding is that the embryo has to attach itself to some good supply of blood and nourishment, and the best alternative to the womb is the large intestine.
There have now been ectopic pregnancies that have carried to term, and a healthy child born.
Can you show us a report on this?
I do think we can no longer deny homosexuals relationships because they can't have kids, yet have a society which puts vast amounts of money into helping infertile couples do just that.
Tricky ground...
But not necessarily. Women have survived ectopic pregnancies. They have to remain immobile (lying down), be constantly monitored, and the baby must be delivered as early as possible by caesarian section.
With proper care, complete immobility, drugs to combat rejection, and hormones to make the man's body behave more like a woman's, it is possible in principle for a man to bring a baby to term, and give birth.
But it would be very dangerous for the man and the baby.
Woo! This wasn't what I was looking for, but it should fuel further debate!
'frin
A secondary reason is it puts a gay relationship on the same level as traditional marriage.
I think the childrearing issue has become a non-issue for most, me included.
Why aren't reasons one and two non-issues as well?
Is the Bible all that clear on this issue? If so, why do we see even among orthodox believers and fundamentalists so much interpretational division on so many other scriptural matters? For example, do you think speaking in tongues is a gift of the Holy Spirit? Where do you stand on pre-millenialism? Does "day" mean a 24 hour period, or it is a broad indication of time as in "Day of Judgment"? There are many Bible-believing Christians who disagree with you on the issue of homosexuality.
Do you think the state should become a Christian theocracy, doing only those things that have explicit Biblical endorsement?
How does that square with the Constitution?
If you want to see theocracy in all its glory, check out Iran.
What is the "level" of traditional marriage? My view, reinforced by all current studies of marriage, is that its "level" is low and is sinking ever more rapidly. The thing I find surprising is that gays and lesbians want any part of an institution that has become such a disaster for so many people, including Christians, even those of the orthodox, fundamentalist, and evangelical wings. I'm not sure that recognizing gay and lesbian unions would make matters any worse. In fact, maybe heterosexuals would feel challenged enough to get serious about their own marriages!
Greta
corgi greta said
quote:
Is the Bible all that clear on this issue?
the ideal expressed in the bible is man and woman living together for life although as we all know there are numerous stories in the bible where this does not happen.
There are also the divorce laws of the OT which many of us would find difficult but are re-interpretted by Jesus to give more rights to women ( a femininst interpretaion open to debate on Jesus's sayings on divorce)
There is no affirmation in the bible of same sex sexual relationships but please feel free to correct me here.
The only hints we have are to the negative ie paul and leviticus.
Marriasge is between a man and Woman a Gay marriage in my opinion is a contradiction in terms
Basically Corgicreta the Bible is quite clear but no doubt people will have other opinions
Yes, there are many areas where the Bible is not so clear. And you mention many of them. However, on the issue of homosexual conduct (as opposed to orientation), most Bible-believing Christians find the Bible quite clear.
Those that dispute that clarity engage mainly in one of two tactics: 1. interpretational gymnastics intending to make the Levitical or Pauline passages either extremely cultural or extremely narrow in meaning (e.g. saying Paul was only referring to temple prostitutes) or 2. simply refusing to except the Bible's authority in this area, which is becoming more open and common in the American mainline denominations.
As for a theocracy, I in no way advocate that. Government has to make decisions concerning morality. The question is whose morality?
In case someone finds me backward in this area, I do not think gay orientation is a sin. I think gay sexual conduct is a sin. I would say the same concerning hetero orientation and conduct except that it is blessed in marriage.
What about David and Jonathan?
I am seriously thinking of starting a thread called Other People's Genitals so I can see the message, We're taking you back to....
Or perhaps: A load of old Bollocks?
quote:
What about David and Jonathan?
a great excample of friendship as we would understand it or one of cs Lewises Loves (Philo?). Like me and my best mate .
Could really can only be considered an excample of sexual love with some slightly dubious interpretation of the text (But we all do this I guess )
In some ways it is a little confusing to have various threads covering similar subjects from different angles
At the risk of losing my Fundie credentials, I think homophobia (I used to HATE that word.) keeps many men from having close male friendships. I admit it makes things awkward for me sometimes.
quote:
David and Jonathon had a great close non-sexual relationship.
How do you know? Have I missed a verse in which the writer clearly states that David and Jonathon then went to seperate beds and dreamt nice heterosexual dreams?
I don't especially want or need that to be a gay relationship, I just wonder how you can be so categorical about it.
'frin
quote:
How do you know?
I assume you want an answer from myself or markthepunk the answer in my opinion is we don't know; The bible is silent as it is about the love which Jesus had for the disciple he loved.
It is silent on this issue but using Occams Razor (deep joy I have used it and not in the context of atheism ) the simplest hypothesis is to be preferred then the answer is he did not.
Naturally we can put a more complicated hypothesis on silence but if we did this on other biblical passages where would be... whoops suddenly I don't want to go there
Arguing from silence boils down to yes he did no he didn't which is fruitless.
Maybe Markthepunk has a better answer (it's late for me)
By the way, us Yanks are about to celebrate our independence from you Brits by blowing up lots of stuff. Happy Fourth of July.
mark
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
To take interpretive leaps such as reading sexuality into David and Jonathan's friendship takes some gymnastics that just aren't good exegesis.
I would suggest that to read anything BUT a homosexual relationship between David and Jonathan would require even greater gymnastics; a giant interpretive.
Those verses in Samuel do everything they can to indicate the nature of David and Jonathan's relationship:
1 Samuel 18:1,3
"And it came to pass, when he [David] had made an end of speaking unto Saul, that the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of
David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul . . . And Jonathan and David made a covenant, because he loved him as his own soul."
2 Samuel 1:26
[After Jonathan's death, David said,] "I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan: very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women."
.....And in the verses between, you'll find disrobing, and the kissing!!!
Are you going to get funny ideas about me? Hmmmm?
Off to watch true Americans blow up stuff.
mark
GSF member
But the church is no place for homosexual marriage. The Bible is clear as it can be -- homosexuality is a sin, David and Jonathan be damned -- it wouldn't have been David's first or last sin. Just because David did it doesn't make it right. If that's your model, you had best be a man after God's own heart. Homosexuality is a sin. If it's genetic, well, so is the urge to mate with many partners, kill without remorse, and defecate publicly (of course, the Bible doesn't say anything about that; it's just best to do it privately). Christ is our model, not genetics; the Bible is our path, not "nature."
quote:
Originally posted by Gabe:
Homosexuality is a sin.
An "abomination" to be exact; right up there with eating lobster and getting a tattoo.
quote:
2 Samuel 1:26
[After Jonathan's death, David said,] "I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan: very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women."
So some one in there grief when over the top. but there is no reference to a sexual relationship, maybe there was guilt that he was not present to assist Jonathan. Certainly in the ancient world friendship was more highly thought of than today and indeed more so than any form of sexual relationship (complete opposite to today). In my opinion to find a sexual relationship here is an imposition of our cultural values upon events 3000 years ago.
Using the similar amount of evidence we could say that about Jesus and the disciple he loved.
Anyway kings samual chronicles (well may not chronicles and all the histories record things warts and all that does necessary make them right if it did then we would be in big trouble
Though I don't have negative views on homosexuality per se (though I do have on a number of practices prevalent amongst a number of gay communities), I don't think that the classical construct of a 'Christian Marriage' - i.e. including children etc., is open to gay people - leaving all debate over sexual ethics aside (i.e. gay/straight), a sexually exclusive gay couple can't have children naturally, ever.
Alongside this, there are huge problems arising in society due to the variation in expectations of marriage, which is at least part of the cause of the high divorce rate. (Long discussion - won't go into it now). Does the Church recognise this in some way or not?
I'm not altogether sure that the Church is wary of discussing marriage as a construct as it feels that society has an altogether different one (though I personally suspect that society has more than one).
Given that, having a debate which could reach a useful conclusion practically, pastorally and theologically is difficult.
As for David and Jonathan, of course it was a gay relationship. Whether they had sex or not: homosexuality isn't just about sex. It's about who you fall in love with. I also don't see anywhere in Chronicles that actually condemns the relationship, so the writer of Chronicles obviously didn't think there was anything wrong with it.
Now, can we get back to talking about something else?
quote:
As for David and Jonathan, of course it was a gay relationship
It is unlikely we are going to agree on the hermeneutics and we all come from different perspectives and to some extent we all read into the text what we want to read and bring our 21st century understanding to it. We forget that there is a 3000 year gap in time and a huge culteral gap.
Random thoughts
when does a male relationship become Gay?
I have spainsh relations the men exchange is this gay? In some african societies men hold hands...
The giving of Joanthans (royal?) robe and sword is proberly as the story of Jonathan and David moves on is a symbolic action that the true heir to Saul is David and not Jonathan.
As I reread Brueggemann and the bible on this story I see a potential for another thread which is completely unrelated to sex
Proberly I will be taking a holiday from threads about sex
Just having specific "gay" threads sends us round in circles. Tackling a specific issue, which takes on one of the specific presumptions about marriage informs the other marriage threads floating around.
If you set aside whether or not homosexuality is specifically condemned, and look at what are our perceptions of marriage, you have to look beyond the initial assumptions. If you look at what else makes a marriage, then we can go back and look at our initial assumptions in a new light.
Love
Angel
The Bible gives plenty of examples of marriage in the Bible – some good and some bad – but all of them involve a man and a woman.
All the examples of same sex relationships – such as David and Jonathon – are described as “deep friendships”. The Bible is silent about whether or not there was a sexual aspect to that relationship. I suspect that someone’s opinion on whether the deed was done will depend on what they’ve already decided about the whole homosexual issue. [ie: You can make the text do what you want as you’ll interpret the silence to back up what you’ve already decided].
Given what’s the Bible says about marriage and the models it presents, I don’t think it’s right that the church allows a formal marriage service for gays. But I don’t see why clergy shouldn’t be allowed to bless gay relationships if the couple were committed Christians and wanted to do that as a sign of their love for each other.
The Government could allow a civil marriage ceremony for gays which would work in the same way as marriage and would grant the same legal rights. [I think this is what Ken Livingstone is proposing to do in London]. I think that would be a good thing as it would ensure that people’s legal rights were protected. Eg: In situations where a gay couple has been together for years, one of them dies without a will and then the survivior suddenly finds themselves homeless.
quote:
If you set aside whether or not homosexuality is specifically condemned, and look at what are our perceptions of marriage, you have to look beyond the initial assumptions. If you look at what else makes a marriage, then we can go back and look at our initial assumptions in a new light.
I don’t think you can do one without bringing in the other. Someone’s attitudes to gay marriage will be dramatically influenced by whether or not they believe that it is an “abomination”.
Gay couples adopting children or having a baby with a third party seems, to me, a separate issue. [Think this has been covered in the thread about “should homosexuals be allowed to adopt children].
And what’s the rise of infertility got to do with our perceptions of marriage?! The majority of people who get married hope to start a family. They only know they’ve got a problem when it becomes a problem. [If you see what I mean]. The only people who are likely to have thought it through before marriage are those who are adamant they don’t want kids or who are aware of a specific family problem – such as Huntingtons or Turners. I can’t remember anything in the Bible that states that you can only get married if you’re going to have children. [Unless it’s buried in Leviticus] .
Tubbs
Astro
You say, "Government has to make decisions concerning morality. The question is whose morality?"
I generally subscribe to the view that a government that governs least governs best, and I think this is particurly so in regard to moral issues. Unless there is near universal agreement on some moral issue, e.g., that bank robbery should be punished, the state should be hesitant about legislating morality, and any enactments should be as neutral as possible.
We are fortunate in being Christians in a country with a Christian majority. That may not last forever. I would be very unhappy in a country where I might be stoned for eating ribs (Iran), or steak (India), or going for a drive on Saturday (Israel), or owning a Bible (China, still!).
I simply don't see any governmental interest in denying same-sex couples the secular benefits that flow from marriage.
At the same time (and this may anger lesbians and gays) in deference to tradition and the sensitivities of a great many people, I feel that the state should apply the term marriage only to heterosexual unions. Same-sex covenants should be registered with the state, and should be accorded the same rights and responsibilites as marriage. The covenant option should even be open to heterosexuals, many of whom are maritalphobic.
Greta
P.S. I appreciate the refinement of your original statement with regard to homosexual practice, but the fact that some Bible- believing Christians disagree with you suggests there may be a lack of Scriptural clarity on this issue. As a way-off-topic aside, I think that ambiguity argues FOR, rather than against, inerrancy and divine inspiration, in that a lack of clarity makes us exercise our faith. We can't just sit back and have it all laid out cleanly before us. God did not create us in the image of a puppet.
quote:
I feel that the state should apply the term marriage only to heterosexual unions. Same-sex covenants should be registered with the state, and should be accorded the same rights and responsibilites as marriage.
So - it's down to semantics. And if that's ALL it is, and if gays WANT marriage, why can't they have it?
Yes, the discussions are getting boring (see my gay-free 'interest-bearing account' thread!) BUT it is actually at least relevant to the title of the htread, in this case!
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
Yes, there are many areas where the Bible is not so clear. And you mention many of them. However, on the issue of homosexual conduct (as opposed to orientation), most Bible-believing Christians find the Bible quite clear.
Hi MarkthePunk,
Leviticus 20:13 spells out --"quite clearly"-- the death penalty for homosexual conduct. Doesn't this mean that Bible-believing Christians should go out and start killing homosexuals? I hope not! Profaning the Sabbath and dishonoring one's parents are also death penalty offenses. The Bible is quite clear about this. Aren't we being "unfaithful" to the Bible or "revisionist" by not killing offenders? The Bible is also "quite clear" that slavery, levirate marriage, polygamy, sex with slaves, treatment of women as property, and concubinage are ok. Pork, long hair on men, women with their heads uncovered, divorce and remarriage (except for adultery), and clothing made of mixed fabric are not ok. Have you had ham or bacon lately? When I hear discussions about homosexuality and fidelity to Scripture, I have to wonder about the gymnastics involved on these other Scriptural issues. The Bible is "quite clear" on these other matters, but we only seem to want to focus on homosexuals when we approach Scripture this way. This is a good discussion and these are things to really think about. Peace be with you!
Love
Angel
1. We are no longer under the Law. So no, the Bible doesn't teach we should stone those caught in the act.
2. (And this is a common problem on this board, I've noticed.) We should distinguish between moral laws of the Torah and ceremonial and dietary laws.
Without going into all the theology, the moral aspects of the Law still apply. It is still wrong to kill, steal, lie, etc. Fortunately for rebellious sons, the penalties no longer apply.
Although the ceremonial and dietary laws still have much to teach us (Albeit, the "pots and pans" section is a bit turgid ), we are no longer under those as shown in the NT.
Man, I shouldn't think about such things so early in the morning.
quote:
2. (And this is a common problem on this board, I've noticed.) We
should distinguish between moral laws of the Torah and ceremonial
and dietary laws.
why? and if we should, why should we include hommosexuality with the things to still be abominated and the others not to?
We still are dealing with this issue today in this case over sexuality. On balance Paul in Romans I seems to me to imply that the Laws with regards to sexuality still apply.
(I am well aware of the hermeneutical issues with regards to Romans )
Let's look at the society which received the Torah. It was a bunch of nomadic tribes wandering around the desert. Dietary laws were a matter of life-or-death in such a hot and difficult situation. The males were the ones who protected the tribes and who fought all the battles, which may offer us a clue here.
First of all, this meant that there were far fewer men than women, because it was the men who were getting killed in battle. That was their lot. Hence the prohibition on women having more than one husband, while men could have several wives and concubines.
Secondly, this meant that the survival of the tribes in the future depended on the production of as many children as possible. Hence the ban on homosexuality: virile men, who should be impregnating women... weren't. If it got out of hand, this could endanger the long-term survival of the tribe.
This is conjecture, of course. There is the objection that homosexuals were executed anyway, but of course they were killed as a deterrent to others. It also makes sense of why Onan was condemned for "spilling his seed on the ground".
quote:
It also makes sense of why Onan was condemned for "spilling his seed on the ground".
I always thought the sin there was the refusal to father children who would have taken precedence over his own? (They would have been considered as his brother's, wouldn't they?)
quote:
By-the-by there are those scholars who believe that Paul's thotn in the flesh was his homoseuality.
Ah, Yes, John Spong that most unbiased of Biblical Scholars
Rob also said
quote:
It concerns me that any one would use the bible to tell others that by nature they are sinners and then pretent to be loving. To give the bible that much authority
And how much authority would you give the
bible?
Is 'love your neighbour as yourself' something we must look at it's context of a agrarian society which did not understand the need to accumulate wealth and the need to dump on our neighbour as we climb higher up the greasy pole? (rich with irony but with a serious point :rolleyes
Ok Basically how much authority does the bible have over sexual mores? maybe another thread but that would be boring to have another one about sex .
In an indirect way, you bring up what is often the underlying issue in these matters -- the authority of the Bible. Personally, I'll stick with the authority of God's Word over man's authority or cultural trends.
Sebastian, I too appreciate the tone of this board. Appreciate the tone of your post, too, although I imagine we do indeed disagree on this issue.
quote:Well yes, that was the reasoning behind Onan's actions. But why was it a sin? It was a sin because, basically, he was failing to produce offspring and threatening the long-term survival of the clan.
Originally posted by Gill:
I always thought the sin there was the refusal to father children who would have taken precedence over his own? (They would have been considered as his brother's, wouldn't they?)
But we're nice to them now!
[humorously appropriate typo edited out -- such a shame...]
[ 07 July 2001: Message edited by: Erin ]
You have stated: "In an indirect way, you bring up what is often the underlying issue in these matters -- the authority of the Bible."
This is the issue for most fundamentalists, but I think it misperceives the issue. I have not attacked Scriptural authority, and I can't detect such an attack in any of the other posts. Instead what we are discussing is the authority of PARTICULAR INTERPRETATIONS OF SCRIPTURE. I realize that most fundamentalists have a tough time seeing this, and generally refuse to acknowledge that they engage in any manner of interpretation, but as I read the posts, I see interpretational leaps on both sides and in middle. Moreover, I don't equate interpratetion with apostacy. When someone crosses that line, it's major and obvious.
My view is that while the Bible is divinely inspired and is authorative in all matters of faith, it must be read carefully and prayerfully, always recognizing that other Christians can often wind up with different interpretations of the same passage.
You slso stated: "Personally, I'll stick with the authority of God's Word over man's authority or cultural trends."
How can any Christian disagree with that? That's the conclusion, not the issue.
Greta
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
Personally, I'll stick with the authority of God's Word over man's authority or cultural trends.
Sorry for the following theological pedantry.
God's Word (the Logos) is the Christ. The Bible is not the Logos. Christians worship the Christ. Christians do not worship the Bible. Somehow this issue gets confused quite a lot. A little dip into the famous first lines of John:
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God... And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, and we behold his Glory, the Glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of Grace and Truth."
Note that the Word did not become a book that was printed among us. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.
Bible worship is idolatrous.
Nor do Christians believe (as Muslims, for example, do) that God dictated the text of our book.
I am not denying that some people may in fact believe that the Bible is the Word, or that some people deny that Christ was the Logos. I'm just trying to pin down what's really under discussion here, because there seem to be four overlapping but competing issues:
1. The ethical treatment of homosexuals in society (which treatment may be informed by Christian ethics)
2. How the Christian church should deal with homosexuality (which may be influenced by social ethics)
3. what the Bible says about homosexuality (which is really a veiled way of grappling with questions of Biblical inerrancy)
4. How the Christian church should deal with homosexual people (in relation to marriage and ordination. This debate is obviously influenced by one's reaction to the preceeding 3 issues).
I think the core of interest in this discussion is the last one, but it often gets side-tracked by the first three, some of which lead to debates that are clearly unresolvable.
HT
I agree Hooker. I was once in a church which SEEMED okay but there was something which niggled me. In the end I realized they were preaching faith not in God but in the WORD of God. (The Bible, not Jesus.)
It can be SO subtle!
quote:ect ect
The Bible is not the Logos
An intresting non-arguement at the start since nobody said it was so why say it?
Proberly most christians when they refer to the bible as the word of God are actually implictly shaped by Barth's doctrine of the Bible as the word of God as the Bible 'as god speaking to us now or that it containt the revelation of the Logos for us here and now' (ghastly precis but K Barths stuff is long winded and I have only really ever dipped my toes in it and no I don't have all 14 volumes of dogmatics!
The list that Hooker's trick used is useful (and an improvement upon something I wrote on another thread) but I think should have included
5)Biblical approach to sexuality and relationships in general.
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
-- the authority of the Bible. Personally, I'll stick with the authority of God's Word over man's authority or cultural trends.
Perhaps I'm reading an unclear antecedent here but it seems to me from this that "authority of God's Word" was equated with "authority of the Bible". Which seems dangerously like proclaiming that God's Word and the Bible are the same thing. Perhaps I misread that.
Although I concur with Nightlamp's #5, I continue to be fascinated that the discussion of sexuality and relatiosnhips in general is so often tested by the extreme case of homosexuality.
HT
Considering that Barth developed his theology of the word against what he called liberal protestanism belief. This is what implicitly markthepunk is disagreeing with hence proberly without being to explain it that is what he means.
Intrestingly enough I did meet an evangelical who considered the word of God was how bultmann understood it and that is strange.
maybe I should put a new thread about what we mean by the word of God..
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
God's Word (the Logos) is the Christ. The Bible is not the Logos. Christians worship the Christ. Christians do not worship the Bible
I'm not sure why this is said with such assurance. Everyone has the right to their opinion, but HT is speaking here is though this is an accepted fact, which I don't think it is.
And I am not evangelical or fundamentalist.
It is only relatively recently that ANY Christians have not accepted the Bible as the Word of God.
The Bible universally equates the Law and the Prophets with the Word of God. Jesus repeatedly refers to God's laws as the Word of God. The Gospels, the letters of Paul, and Revelation all refer to the Word as meaning the Gospels.
It is only in John and Revelation that the added mystical quality of Jesus as the Word of God is introduced. It is not a difficult leap to say that God and His Divine Truth are the same entity.
I guess this is off the topic, but I was surprised that HT jumped in on this point with such force.
I think that many, and perhaps even most, Christians regard the Bible as the Word of God referred to in John. After all, Jesus said numerous times that He came to fulfill the Scriptures.
quote:
Originally posted by Freddy:
I'm not sure why this is said with such assurance. Everyone has the right to their opinion, but HT is speaking here is though this is an accepted fact, which I don't think it is.[snip]
I guess this is off the topic, but I was surprised that HT jumped in on this point with such force.
HT is speaking with no more certainty than most who've made their pronouncements on this thread (and in truth, a heckuva lot less).
Carry on...
[typos... *sigh*]
[ 07 July 2001: Message edited by: Erin ]
Markthepunk,
You are right we are all sinners and fall short of the glory of God. The OT also says,"What is man that you are mindful of him. You created him a little lower than angels". I am a sinner. I fall short. And like Paul am grateful for the grace of God.
Over in Galatians warns Christians about returning to the law,that is looking for litmus test to prove some one is really a christian, which the church is doing with homosexuality. And again most seem to ignorantly believe homosexuality is primarily about sex rather than a God given genetic birthright. The only sexual issue for homosexual is the same for all of us which is are we in a faithful, committed, responsible relationship.
quote:ect ect
Nightlite,You disappoint me. If the bible is God's word without
But more likely I failed to explain Karl Barth he said (any Karl Barth fans very sorry!!)that the Bible is the word of God because it contains God's revelation (sorry I don't know the German). The Logos is Jesus and we receive and understand it through the word of God that is the Bible in other words the Bible contains God's revelation.
When people use the phrase the word of God when refering to the Bible this is almost certainly what they mean they do not mean it is the Logos or something to be worshipped.
You yourself said
quote:
Believe it or not I do accept scripture as God's word
How do you understand this if not the same as Karl Barth?, that the Bible contains God's revelation to us (Not the BibleisGods revelation to us -possiblely a subtle difference that remained unnoticed possibly due to a typo )
quote:
Originally posted by Rob:
Nightlite,You disappoint me. If the bible is God's word without cultuaral bias the why do women cut their hair short and wear makeup, and why don't we stone to death rebellous teenagers...
Maybe you mean me. Except that I don't think that it is without cultural bias. I see it as being hugely symbolic and in need of intelligent interpretation to free it from things such as you mention.
But it has to be interpreted in accordance with the repetitive themes of the Bible as a whole, such as loving God and the neighbor, justice, mercy, the beauty of marriage, etc.
quote:
Originally posted by Erin:
HT is speaking with no more certainty than most who've made their pronouncements on this thread (and in truth, a heckuva lot less).
Yes, I guess you are right. Sorry about that. Got carried away...
first off, theres nothing in the old testament that specifically says anything prohibiting two women from having sex. just isn't mentioned at all. so lets leave that aside for the moment.
now as far as i know, the only place that prohibits what we would call male homeosexuality is the line that goes something along the lines of, you shall not lie with a man as with a woman. i take that to mean specifically (sorry going to be graphic here) anal sex. so what we have here is a specific sexual act prohibited. nothing implied about oral sex, or mutual masterbation, or anything else that two men can do together, just one particular act.
now it seems to me that theres a better analogy to be made than with the (yes i'll admit it) overused analogy with pork or shellfish, and thats that it it prohibited for a man to have sex with his wife during the time she is having her period, for a certain number of days afterwards, and until shes had a ritual bath. seems to me that, as far as i can remember, that and bestiality are the only other two specific sex acts forbidden in the old testament.
now, i for one don't really want to know what any of the male gay shipmates here are sprcifically doing, and i'm sure they don't want to go into it. but even assuming that they are engaging in this forbidden activity, welll.....
guys, you staying away from your wives til they've had that ritual bath?
women, found where you can take one?
nope me neither.
(new testament is a whole nother post for another time...)
Here's a list from Google of the Mikveh (ritual baths) located in your area:
Community Mikveh, 583 Kings Hwy, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 375-6660
Mivka 18 Avenue-Congregation, 5010 18th Ave, Brooklyn, NY, (718)633-7724
Mikvah Israel-BoroPark, 1351 46th St, Brooklyn , NY (718)871-6866
Mikvah Israel-BrightonBeach, 245 Neptune Ave, Brooklyn , NY (718)769-8599
Mikvah Mayon Of Papa, 115 Rutledge St, Brooklyn , NY, (718)624-9262
Mikvah Of MidManhattan, 234 W 78th St, New York , NY, (212)799-1520
Mikvah Ritualarium, 708 Mace Ave, Bronx , NY, (718)798-6173
Mikvah Of Crown Heights, 1506 Union St, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 604-8787
Mikvah Divrei Chaim Inc, 1249 52nd St, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 972-9678
Mikvah Yisroel Of Flatbush, 1296 E 10th St, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 253-8302
Mikvah Israel Of Bensonhurst, 48 Bay 28th St, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 372-9563
Mikvah Israel Of Forest Hills, 6304 Yellowstone Blvd, Flushing, NY, (718) 897-9370
Mikvah Young Israel, 835 Forest Hill Rd, Staten Island, NY, (718) 494-6704
Mikveh Israel-KewGardens Hill, 7111 Vleigh Pl, Flushing , NY, (718)268-6500
Mikveh Of WashingtonHeights, 4351 Broadway, New York , NY, (212)923-1100
Queens Synagogue Mikveh, 7548 Grand Central Pkwy, Flushing, NY, (718) 261-6380
Riverdale Mikveh, 3708 Henry Hudson Pkwy, Bronx, NY, (718) 549-8336
Sephardic Mikvah Israel, 810 Avenue S, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 339-4600
Also, if Chabad is active in your community, they usually have a mikvah nearby.
Given the cost of Vitabath (Badedas (?) in Europe}, I should think it would provide ritual cleansing.
Greta
As part of that, I seek to follow Jesus. Jesus clearly followed the authority of scripture. I seek to do likewise.
I probably should leave it at that. You should know better. Especially since you are a moderator, aren't you?
I've heard the term "Bible worship" before. It generally comes from those who do not respect the Bible's authority. That you choose to use that prejorative term and play semantic games with me does not speak well of you.
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
I've heard the term "Bible worship" before. It generally comes from those who do not respect the Bible's authority. That you choose to use that prejorative term and play semantic games with me does not speak well of you.
Host hat on ...
Right at the end here it sounds like you're getting ready to descend into personal comment and dispute. Please prove me wrong in your next post.
Love
Angel
I think if you'll look at past posts I'm not into picking fights. After a night's sleep and a review of Hooker's post, I may have overreacted. But to suggest that a Fundamentalist's respect for the written Word and it's authority is somehow idolatrous and substituting the Bible for Christ -- them's fighting words!
And I was really disappointed to see someone who hosts another board here post that.
For the sake of peace, I've leave it at that.
mark
Shared vision, shared experience, a oneness (that over-used word 'Soulmate' fits here).
Good times, bad times...
Being there for each other. Laughing together.
Sex, I guess... (hard to remember!)
A feeling of togetherness when facing the world and life's triumph's/problems.
Love. Self-giving. Putting the other first. BOTH of you!
Definitely not 'two Halves making a Whole'. Two Wholes (no puns please!) superimposing and fusing (that's partly down to the sex bit, I guess).
And then... well, what Unmakes a marriage is a different thread, I suppose. It's sad to look back on all that and be unable to find any of it any more.
However - it makes me all the happier for couples who are about to get a shot at it! I'm praying for all of you!
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
I probably should leave it at that. You should know better. Especially since you are a moderator, aren't you?
and
quote:
And I was really disappointed to see someone who hosts another board here post that.
Administrator's notes:
If you have a complaint against a moderator, it belongs in the Styx. Keep it out of the discussions, please. Thank you.
Erin
So many questions.
Love
Angel
.
A democratic state should afford its citizens equal protection of the laws. A church is bound by no such requirement and may at will exclude certain people from its rites or sacramets.
In granting special rights to those who are married and in denying marriage to a large class of citizens who differ from the favored group only in the fact that they do not possess the appropriate gender mix, the state now finds itself in the position of either enforcing a religious ("moral"} based discriminatory practice or seemingly repudiating the deeply held religious values of many people, and thus helping to undermine the institution of marriage, which is already in serious trouble.
This difficulty forms the basis of my suggestion that the state should offer a kind of covenant option open to gays and lesbians. My thinking on this is still in flux (as it is in the whole matter of sexuality and Christianity), and I am currently of the opinion that the state should abandon any use of the word 'marriage' and surrender the term to the church. It should be in the business of registering covenants only. This debate would continue, but it would become a purely religions (moral) one, which is perhaps as it should be.
Greta
Pease add "and in their view" to the phrase "helping to undermine the istitution of marriage..."
Greta
quote:
Originally posted by CorgiGreta:
thus helping to undermine the institution of marriage, which is already in serious trouble.
Not to take Corgi's remarks out of context, but I think the serious trouble that marriage is in is the real point here.
How many people wouldn't give their life to have grown up in a happy home with a mother and a father who loved them and who loved each other?
It is heartbreaking that it is not that way for millions of families. It is no wonder that people look for alternatives. I'm just not sure that the alternatives are an improvement. I imagine that statistics will eventually indicate some kind of answer to that, if they don't already.
My point being that commitment is not a cut-and-dried thing, and means different things to people at different stages in their lives. There are spouses who are not as committed as 'partners' and vice versa.
I think it is a good point about the state/church divide. I think we are skating very near an Equal Opportunities breach, in fact - because of the State Church. Then no doubt good Christian folk will grumble about 'Europe'. But if a gay person can have a bank account, buy a house, go to University, then why should marriage be denied them?
I should add that ten years ago this would have been unthinkable for me to write. I have thought long and hard and don't see why the genitalia have suchbearing on our ability to make a commitment. I think straights probably project a lot onto gay relationships that perhaps isn't there. And there is some physical revulsion at the thoughts of 'what goes on'. Perhaps it ain't our business???
That said and hopefully understood, I will now suggest that denying the benefits of marriage to same-sex couples seems to me to be closely analogous poliically to the anti- miscegenation (racially mixed marriage) laws that existed in some parts of the U.S. until well into the 20th century. This is particularly so if we accept as true the testimony of most gays and lesbians that their orientation was not chosen, indeed was often fixed before they even heard the word "homosexual" or had any idea there were any other people who had similar feelings.
I do not dismiss those who claim they did have a choice, nor deny those who claim to have changed their orientation or practices, thruogh religion, or therapy, or any other means.
If we accept the reports of the vast majority of gays and lesbians that their orientation was not chosen, sexual orientation is very similar to race.
As to the argument that gays and lesbians deserve to be victims of discrimination because they choose to act on their orientation, I would suggest if anti-miscegenation laws were re-written to to allow only platonic inter-racial marriages, such laws would be as discriminatory and reheprehensible as the old laws that were on the books. In other words the government says it will not discriminate against you for how you are, it will only discriminate against your actions.
I think analogies to proclivities for temper tantrums or the commission of crimes, et c., are patently off track.
Greta
And anti-miscegenation laws were strongly defended on the basis of their being clearly Biblical, fulfilling God's intent in creating separate races.
Greta
More than one poster has commented on the state getting involved in a "Church" activity in the case of marriage. However, marriage existed before and outside of the church for many years, and many atheists get married etc., etc.
Nonetheless, the problem does seem to me, as I've observed before, the differences even within the Christian community as to what marriage is about. Gill's comments most people wouldn't disagree with, but it's interesting how much variation there is in the comprehension of how those different strands are integrated and lived out.
For instance, I know a number of Christians who believe quite seriously that sex is the price you pay for getting married. Others on the other hand see it as a wonderful gift which plays a central role in marriage and through which tenderness and connectedness can be expressed. Although they all superficially would state the latter, there is a clear separation at work.
For many, being loving is sharing a house, making sure it's clean, having your own freedom to make social and work commitments, but having a secure base to come home to. For others, there is a more unquestionable need to centre their lives around each other and for those other commitments to be mutually agreed.
Then, yes, there is the gap between "Christian marriage" and "secular marriage" - though there may be a question as to what that is about.
Finally, and my big beef if I'm honest, is that the Church goes around defending the absoluteness of marriage rather than the quality of marriage - the Church should be supporting good marriage and making war so to speak against bad marriage, but towards the latter it sticks the head in the sand, and gets out the DM's to give those who suffer them a good kicking - the Lord forbid we actually say that good people should not suffer the indignity of being denied a good marriage for the misfortune of being in a bad one.
quote:
Originally posted by gbuchanan:
the Lord forbid we actually say that good people should not suffer the indignity of being denied a good marriage for the misfortune of being in a bad one.
I agree, but I don't think we can blame the church for going along with Matthew 19. It's not their fault what Jesus said.
Greta mentions the comparison to race discrimination. I would guess that this is one of the strongest arguments, and that it hits Christians where it really hurts, because we know how racist our history is. This argument puts Christians who accept the biblical and historic injunctions against homosexuality in the uncomfortable position of being racists.
It is true that laws against miscegenation were justified on biblical grounds. It doesn't necessarily follow, however, that this mistaken and wrong justification means that the same is true for the arguments against homosexuality. The point is, if you believe in the Bible, it is important to know what it really does teach about marriage and homosexuality. If the interpretation is wrong then we need to reinterpret it correctly.
The question of choice is also a very sticky one. I realize that Greta dismisses out of hand the comparison with bad tempers, etc. as also not being matters of choice. Yet I think it is true that a whole range of problematic behaviors appear to be completely out of the realm of the free choice of many people. This is particularly true of compulsive behavior, and perhaps even more of behavior around sex. Who ever chooses to fall or not fall in love? It just happens. Adulterers often complain that they had no choice, that they were driven by forces beyond their control. The same is obviously tue of pedophiles.
The difference, of course, is that whereas adultery and pedophilia have victims, homosexuality does not.
I accept the testimony of homosexuals that they did not consciously choose their orientation any more than any of us do. I don't think that this necessarily means that there is absolutely no aspect of choice involved, or that there aren't factors that promote or discourage a person from inclining to that orientation.
One thing about sex in general, however, is that in most cultures and for most of history it has been something that is surrounded by prohibitions and laws. The general view has been that happiness results from restricting and controlling it, and that acting on one's desires is the path to unhappiness and degradation.
We don't tend to buy those arguments any more, but I'm not sure that we are any happier because of it.
quote:
Originally posted by Freddy:
I agree, but I don't think we can blame the church for going along with Matthew 19. It's not their fault what Jesus said.
....Mmm... - I'd actually say it is the Church's (our) fault for interpreting it without love or compassion. I'm not persuaded that there isn't more than a little bit of humanity wanting to have comfortably clear absolutes rather than a proper reaction to the Lord's word in our approach to it.
Greta
Greta
The path to happiness is tough to define and even harder to dictate. Luckily, we are all free to pursue our own answers to these questions.
And, Bucky, you are right about the mercy. Sorry to be a little black-and-white there.
Fred
corgigreta, no, its a specific ritual that is called for, simply washing doesn't do it.
In the past we've had serious problems over this issue when people equated homosexuality with paedophilia (or appeared to) and we don't want to see that repeated. Would people please be very careful when discussing this subject so as to avoid any potential unpleasantness due to misunderstandings that may be read into what has been written. It is probably safest not to mention paedophilia in the same post as homosexuality.
Alan
Purgatory host
quote:
Originally posted by Freddy:
The question of choice is also a very sticky one. I realize that Greta dismisses out of hand the comparison with bad tempers, etc. as also not being matters of choice. Yet I think it is true that a whole range of problematic behaviors appear to be completely out of the realm of the free choice of many people. This is particularly true of compulsive behavior, and perhaps even more of behavior around sex. Who ever chooses to fall or not fall in love? It just happens. Adulterers often complain that they had no choice, that they were driven by forces beyond their control. The same is obviously tue of pedophiles.The difference, of course, is that whereas adultery and pedophilia have victims, homosexuality does not.
Now then. I want to go very carefully through these 2 paragraphs.
The opening 2 sentences deal with choice.
'The question of choice is also a very sticky one. I realize that Greta dismisses out of hand the comparison with bad tempers, etc. as also not being matters of choice.'
I have looked carefully back over the thread and can only find this quote by Greta:
quote:Greta: would you clarify the behaviour/quality to which you believe this analogy is inapplicable.
I think analogies to proclivities for temper tantrums or the commission of crimes, et c., are patently off track.
Freddy: going by the paragraph immediately above this, you would seem to be referring to homosexual orientation when you mention the 'question of choice' (ie. does one choose to be homosexual). This is further suggested in that you are responding to Greta's post (1st of pg 4) where she firmly states that she understands sexual orientation to be a given. As I read it, her only statement regarding tantrums and criminal acts are that they are inappropriate analogies. But you state: 'Greta dismisses out of hand the comparison with bad tempers, etc. as also not being matters of choice.' Yes. She does indeed dismiss the comparison (no-one is clear which comparison it is, but let's soldier on) out of hand, but what is the purpose of those words you have tacked on the end? What is this 'also dismissed' matter of choice that you are referring to? Nowhere have I seen Greta dismissing any thing as 'not a matter of choice'. I have however, seen her stating that she believes sexuality not to be a matter of choice, and appealing to anecdotal evidence (there's that word again).
I think what you have written is obscure. Obscurity in writing is very convenient - in the above case, what is suggested to the reader is: Greta dismisses out of hand that there is choice in sexual orientation. But the writer can always squeal: 'I didn't mean it like that!'
Well. That would be the first 2 sentences.
Just a quick one on Sentence 3: We have now moved to 'problematic behaviours'. Let's jump to my second quoted paragraph. 'The difference, of course, is that whereas adultery and pedophilia have victims, homosexuality does not.' Certainly adultery and paedophilia have victims, and homosexuality does not (in the same sense that heterosexuality does not). A very reasonable statement, or is it? There is a difference between homosexuality; and adultery and paedophilia. Is the lack of victims the only difference? If so, what are the similarities? We need to look back to the paragraph above. But notice. Surprise Suprise. Homosexuality or homosexual behaviour is not even mentioned. Same as before... 'if you do not state it, you cannot be taken to task for it'. But homosexuality and homosexual behaviour are right there implied in that paragraph - because otherwise, how can one talk about difference in the very next breath?
So what else is said without being said in that paragraph about homosexuality and homosexual practice? A quick break down:
-Homosexual practice is a problematic behaviour
-Homosexual practice is 'out of the realm of the free choice of many people'
-Compulsive behaviour is another such problematic behaviour. (Why bother to even mention this, unless you want to make an association?)
-A completely spurious sentence about falling in love
-Adulterers report being driven by forces beyond their control, as do paedophiles.
So what forces drive adulterers? What forces drive paedophiles? And you know what? The difference between homosexuality; and adultery and paedophilia is that homosexuality has no victims. So one could logically conclude that the writer believes something like the same forces that drive adulterers and paedophiles, drive homosexuals. Which are they?
Offensive in the extreme.
quote:So why did you spend the time in the first paragraph undermining Greta's view on 'given' sexuality?
I accept the testimony of homosexuals that they did not consciously choose their orientation any more than any of us do.
I am short of time and not fully awake, so I'm not prepared to tackle the analogy with compulsions issues (perhaps it's less patent than I thought). I aepper to have posted something quite ambiguous and Freddy hopefully unintentionally responded in kind.
However, I feel it is imperative for me to immediately respond to THIS statement by Freddy:
"This argument puts Christians who accept the biblical and historic injunctions against homosexuality in the uncomfortable position of being racists."
Here he totally ignores or rejects my first paragraph, which I wrote sincerely, specifically, and (I think there at least) clearly enough so as to avoid any such reading of my argument.
Greta
quote:
Here he totally ignores or rejects my first paragraph, which I wrote sincerely, specifically, and (I think there at least) clearly enough so as to avoid any such reading of my argument.
Unfortunately that is how I read your arguement. To me it reads I am not going to do something and then doing it.
I am sure that is not your intention I think you are simply trying to produce a model from one part of life to another and considering it more accurate than other peoples models.
Unfortunately models can be missunderstood I Hope some one understood this
quote:
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
But to suggest that a Fundamentalist's respect for the written Word and it's authority is somehow idolatrous and substituting the Bible for Christ -- them's fighting words!And I was really disappointed to see someone who hosts another board here post that.
Sorry to be late in returning to this. Even civil servant librarians have to work sometimes!
To Freddy and MarkthePunk. Apologies if I provoked you, and thanks for taking time to re-read some of my Hookerisms.
OK, you all guessed it, I am not a fundamentalist (note great self-control and tact in not writing possibly inflamatory term "fundie"). I am interested in the authorities that are appealed to in the various debates on this board. Quite often the Bible is referred to as the definitive authority. Occasionally one might see someone appeal to the Church. And rarest of all someone will describe having struggled prayerfully (good point, frin) -- perhaps one could say one referred a problem directly to his or her relationship with Our Lord.
Obviously, the only infallible source of any knowledge seems to me to be Our Lord himself. So put me down as curious how printed or institutional intermediaries seem to get equal billing with the Divine.
If I'm wrong about the equal-billing part, please feel free to tell me so (I can take being told I'm wrong).
HT [apologies to Angel for de-reailing her thread. If this turns out to be of interest I can post a thread on "Authorities", but I think it's been done to death]
Oh, and in re: hosting. Please note that I do not post here as the Host of Mystery Worshipper Board. Indeed, I don't even generally post on the MW Board as Host. I'm just a normal punter like anyone else unless I explicitly state that I am acting in a Host capacity (clarification for this may be pursued on Styx).
I've lived through the 1980-2001 period listening to demagogues rant about "homosexual promiscuity"; then those folks are the first people to take arms against any kind of commitment/contract that would keep a gay couple together and prevent/ reduce promiscuous sexual behavior.
Now, when we get to talking about alternative methods of reproduction and so on I think it does get a bit Jesuitical. I myself don't particularly care for the slang term "gay marriage," but certainly there ought to be some sort of civil arrangement for two romantically and financially committed persons sharing a household in the absence of the traditional blessing, marriage.
Why are so many middle-class gay men and lesbians making such a fuss about all this in church?? Probably because it has become a non-issue in most other facets of their lives. There's a difference between maintaining cherished and beloved traditions and stubbornly lagging about thirty years behind the times socially, and I think it's the rank-and-file church membership rather than the church leadership (at least in America) who are most to blame for their ignorance, apathy, stubbornness and (however unintentional) hurtfulness toward homosexuals.
But, for Buddha's sake, can't straight people understand the central irony that church very frequently is the one place we CAN'T be accepted and welcomed??
His other posts on this thread are: 3 on biblical authority, 1 of regret at the current state of hetero marriage, and 1 evasive philosophical snippet when asked to elaborate on the pandora's box of destructive compulsions (opened by him).
I am respectful of people who have argued against gay marriage from a scriptural perspective. But freddy's 4th post I will not let past without comment because it does not tackle gay marriage, neither does it appeal to scripture (mentioning Matt 19 is not good enough - I shouldn't have to construct freddy's argument from first principles). In my analysis the whole 4th post contains only one (implied) point regarding gay marriage, which is that it is unacceptable to those that 'accept biblical and historical injunctions against homosexuality'. The rest is a crusade against homosexuality and homosexual expression.
You stated:
"I am sure that [labeling opponents of gay marriage as racists] is not your intention I think you are simply trying to produce a model from one part of life to another and considering it more accurate than other peoples models."
Yes, yes, and yes.
Since I reject analogies to obsessions, or disfunctions, I began to think lefthandness might be a closer parallel, but I couldn't think of a basic right that is denied to left-handed people. Then I recalled the anti-mixed marriage laws, and the analogy seemed almost perfect.
While it is true that many of the supporters of those laws were racists (and are undoubltely dead or very elderly),
it does not folow that supporters of a very similar (BUT non-race related)law that is applied to a very similar {BUT not racial} group of people, are racists. The two situatitions, in my view have in common the element of discrimination, not racism.
From the critical standpoint of choice, sexual orientation seems to me to be closely parallel to race. Orientation may not be genetic (like race), but for most people it seems to be determined at a very young age. So, if it is wrong to discriminate on the basis of race wouldn't it be wrong to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation?
Wheeew! I hope I haven't confused things more, and I probably have bored you silly, but I want to make it clear that I had no intent to paint any living person or group as racist.
This is already a tough enough issue for us all.
Greta
quote:
But, for Buddha's sake, can't straight people understand the central irony that church very frequently is the one place we CAN'T be accepted and welcomed??
And it's probably the one place where they should be welcomed. The majority of my gay friends are interested in spiritual things and like what what Jesus had to say but are completely dis-interested in Church as most of the Christians they've meet are so unwelcoming and intolerent.
If you look at the way Jesus treated people in the Bible, he never turned anyone away although he did challenge people about the choices they made. It's a shame that we [self included] don't live up to that.
Tubbs
PS I was watching Jerry Springer last night. [I know] The episode was called "Wild Weddings" and one of the couples featured were lesbians. The chaplin blessed them and pronounced them "partners for life". Does this have any legal vaildity in the US or does it just count as a blessing / sensational thing to show on TV?
So. One. Marriage is a sacramental rite.
Two. What are Sacraments. Outward and visible signs of inward and invisible grace. We want to extend signs of God's Grace to all his children, right? We don't deny the Eucharist to homosexuals, so how can we also deny the sacrament of marriage?
Well, because marriage has legal ramifications and the Eucharist doesn't (I don't get special tax status because I am a regular communicant -- more's the pity).
The Church in the US at least can operate with some freedom in terms of the legal definition (in England where the Church is Established this may be harder). But it runs the risk of re-defining marriage altogether.
But I don't think we're all ringing our hands about redefining it in Sacramental terms. I don't think (wait -- I'd LIKE TO HEAR someone defend denying Sacraments to anyone for any reason). So really we're hiding behind the Sacraments, and making the church a stooge for our fears over social change.
Is that it?
HT
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Happy Coot: give Freddy a chance to respond now, okay?
Thanks, Ruth. I am a little surprised that HC took such exception to what I wrote in response to Greta, and I am trying to digest his points. I am very embarassed by the problem that Alan pointed out, and I sincerely apologize.
One problem is that I can't remember what HC said, and the way these boards are constructed I can't refer back to the messages - or at least I don't know how. But I will respond as soon as I figure out how to do that. Maybe they give pointers on that technique in the styx.
Needless to say, HC makes some very good points about what I wrote. It is great to have someone analyze your arguments in such detail! Even looking at my other posts on this thread! A very good deconstruction of the weaknesses of my reasoning.
I really do not want to say anything that is offensive or that sets people off, as I find these discussions very interesting, and feel in harmony with most of my shipmates.
quote:
So. One. Marriage is a sacramental rite.
In the Roman catholic Tradition it is but formally in the CofE(see BCP)it is not a sacrament although I am aware that some in the Anglican (Episcopal tradition) would hold it be so.
The only two sacraments are formally in the Church of England are Baptism and the eucharist.
I find your use of a sacramental arguement odd (but I am instictively low church)
Hooker's Trick said
quote:
(wait -- I'd LIKE TO HEAR someone defend denying Sacraments to anyone for any reason).
I believe in the RC tradition that Ordination is a sacrament and that only those can be trained for Priesthood can receive it single people cannot receive the 'sacrament' of marriage some who are not dying cannot receive extreme unction.
So I guess some of the 'sacraments' are denied to people.
Anyway, Angel asked how we define marriage and what's at stake. One was to define it is as a sacramental rite, and I lay out what's at stake.
Another way to describe it is as a legal contract.
What is the church doing when it performs a wedding ceremony? Saying God's ok with the contract, too? Shedding a little grace on the happy couple? Affirming the analogy between the marriage of Christ and his Church with the marriage of Man and Wife (note who gets to be Jesus in this analogy).
If you don't see marriage as sacramental at all, what could it be? I think this is really one of the essential questions that needs to be answered to meaningfully engage the bigger question of WHO can be married.
Maybe not...
HT
HEAR HEAR!!!!
WHY do we have to behave like this? or isn't our mission to homosexuals as well as anyone else?
At the very least, the church surely SHOULD be known for its love and compassion extended to all (oooer Missus, no, don't laugh, really...).
How DARE we presume we can take on judgement?
In fact, how dare we assume that our (as 'the Church') opinion matters a flying... whatever to The World?
Ooh yes, in an ideal world, it SHOULD. But while we're pontificating, people are getting depressed, dying of AIDS and going without the support Jesus would surely give them were He around in person.
?
quote:
Actually, the Anglican Communion recognises two Sacraments (Baptism and the Eucharist, as ordained my Christ himself) and 5 other sacramental rites.
I don't know where the anglican communion decided this ( it is unusual to for it do any deciding) certainly article 25 (Nightlamp has hurridly rubbed the dust of his BCP) of the church of England makes no such distinction but I accept you may well know more about this (brief search through the net didn't help).
One of my objections to seeing Marriage as a sacrament is that is limiting a sacrament to only a part of the church (ie those who want to be married) along with ordaination.
It seems to imply that an ordained married person is several steps up the ladder than a single lay person.
I expect to be corrected ,oh well
This is true for the Presbyterian Churches as well, as per the Westminster Confessions.
An interesting side note--the Westminter Confessions also make a clear distinction between the moral laws of the Old Covenant and the Ceremonial laws--only the moral laws are binding upon Christians. A plain-test reading of the Confessions seems to say that the moral laws are contained entirely within the 10 Commandments themselves.
Sieg
Being deeply, emotionally, and intimately -- including physically -- involved with someone of the same sex -- is not the same as having sexual intercourse with them.
It is my understanding, and always has been since I became a Christian, that what is actually forbidden between two people of the same sex is not the affection, hugging, kissing, or deep commitments -- it is simply and (in this case) solely sexual intercourse, outside of male-female marriage.
Why not accept the commitment, love and such, even physical expressions of same (many of which are quite traditional, such as kissing and so forth, and go very far back in history, around the world, including in the Bible period), and just make it clear that what is forbidden to us as Christians is the sex.
This is an option which no one ever seems to bring up; it is either "forego all same-sex relationships" or "have sex." I would think this would be an acceptable way to deal with the emotional, even sensual/tactile hunger for same-sex hugs, touch, affection, relationships, etc., without the sin. Yes, temptations would come, and some would stumble at times, but at least it is a way that ... well, works for me anyway, but I'm odd.
I think I see the error of my ways.
In responding to Greta in what I thought was a logical and innocuous way I realize that I was seemingly crusading against homosexuality on a thread where this was not the topic. This was not the topic of this thread, and I was speaking off topic.
I am not crusading against homosexuality – I was only meaning to discuss Greta’s interesting points. Her further explanations make me see how badly I misinterpreted her remarks. She was simply looking for parallels, not calling anyone a racist.
As some others did, I thought that she started out to say she wasn’t playing the race card - and then proceeded to play the race card. But now I see that she was simply drawing a parallel where the legal issues were similar.
In the area of free choice, your comments are well-founded. I was meaning to question the assertion that sexual orientation is not a matter of choice. I am not claiming to actually know anything about this. I just think that “choice” is a complex concept, and that it is not a black-and-white issue. There must be many factors that exert an influence on sexual behavior - heredity, environment, etc. I said that I accept people’s claims that they do not consciously choose their orientation, because I think that many factors are involved, and that there are many ways of choosing – conscious and unconscious. I don’t recall ever choosing my own orientation, but I am sure that I have assented to it in various ways that were within the realm of my free choices, both consciously and unconsciously.
Your comments about my associating homosexuality with “problematic sexual behaviors” are also well founded. I was wrong in doing that. I was simply thinking in terms of sexual behaviors and grabbed at convenient ones that came to mind. Big mistake.
But these comments are out of the realm of this thread, as they are not about gay marriage per se. I was only reacting to what I popped into my head as I read along.
In any case, I appreciate the attention and the comments. I would be interested in any further observations, and apologize if I have offended.
Bawer is a high-church Episcopalian in New York City and he discusses his faith journey and how he gets along in church. He has a long-term partner. His thesis angers many gay people: that American gays are fighting their fight for acceptance with a self-defeating "Woodstock" confrontational mentality. When we have Pride Day, do the TV clips show people in suits, or khakis, or polo shirts? Well, they could, but if there's one little old drag queen or lesbian on a Harley or some drunk guy with his left butt cheek showing through his Levi's, that's what gets broadcast. He wants gay men and lesbians to be extra careful in putting forth a mainstream, patriotic image. (More militant gays have called him a "house Negro.")
A PLACE AT THE TABLE was published in 1994, but it articulates many issues that are germane today, including acceptance in church, and the desirability of some sort of civil-partnership accord with the government.
I'm rather new to BB's and don't know if this type of mention is kosher, but I assure you that I am not Bawer's press agent!! The book is still in print, at least in the USA.
You state: "I'm rather new to BB's and don't know if this type of mention is kosher..."
We have discussed the dietary laws at length on this board, and we are unanimous in our belief that breaking kosher may or may not be a sin.
Greta
ChastMastr - I'm with you on the sex/no sex thing - but you again have the problems of boundaries blurring. Is it wrong if you have the intention of creating the same sort of intimacy as with the heterosexual act - e.g. oral sex? mutual masturbation?
Freddy - I take your point about race, and the way mixed race marriages were banned at one time.
But, again, what is the bottom line about a marriage - you enter it with your own free will, a lifelong mutual commitment, with the intention of bringing about children. On the radio they suggested there might come a time when for the purposes of superior genetics 1 in 5 children would be born from a test tube. Part of the controversy was that it would allow lesbians to have babies, with no reference to a man.
Love doesn't get a mention in the BCP - you could have a lifelong commitment to someone, without necessarily loving them at the time.
quote:
Originally posted by Bishop Joe:
I'm rather new to BB's and don't know if this type of mention is kosher, but I assure you that I am not Bawer's press agent!! The book is still in print, at least in the USA.
[/QB]
Recommending a book is totally kosher (unless of course the book has previously been used in idol worship).
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Recommending a book is totally kosher (unless of course the book has previously been used in idol worship).
Which rules out the bible......
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Recommending a book is totally kosher (unless of course the book has previously been used in idol worship).
My understanding was that it was okay to use a book that *had* been used in idol worship, as long as it didn't cause other brothers and sisters to sin.
bb
Greta
quote:
Originally posted by Angel:
But, again, what is the bottom line about a marriage - you enter it with your own free will, a lifelong mutual commitment, with the intention of bringing about children.
Is an intention to have children an necessary part of marrage - I can think of plenty of people who have got married with no intention to have children at all.
[slight hyperbole]
but if you look at my OP, you'll see the 3-fold reason for marriage. The other two can be managed without getting married, and not be sinful.
Love
Angel
Surely there is more to marriage than avoiding sin. Few here would subscribe to the view that sex is solely for the purpose of procreation anyway, any I can't think of any NT references that would in anyway imply it is (Gospel or St Paul). The BCP or any other liturgy is hardly authoritive in that sense - it just reflects the thinking of the people and age that produced it.
Your post kind of implies that if, for example, Bronwyn's op had gone less well so that there was no possibility of her having children then there would be no point in us getting married, and that strikes me as absurd and mildly offensive. The support we can give each other in our lives and our following of Christ is just as legimate a reason as the children we will have and their upbringing.
I didn't marry the Gremlin because I wanted to have "legitimate" sex, but because I fell in love with him, and wanted to spend my life with him. I wanted to have children, but because of an arthritis like problem I didn't know if I would be able to carry a baby. (Thankfully things have worked out really well.)
Even if I had not been able to have children I would still have wanted to marry the Gremlin. We may well have adopted children. But the reason why marriage is a good place to having children is because the loving, nurturing, caring environment already exists.
bb
quote:
Originally posted by babybear:
But the reason why marriage is a good place to having children is because the loving, nurturing, caring environment already exists.bb
well that rather depends on the marriage, i'm afraid.
In seminary we tried to imagine a scenario breaking as many Levitican imprecations as harmlessly as possible. We thought of a Jewish woman attending an art show as a fund-raiser for AIDS at her Reform temple. Funds raised will benefit Africans, not her co-religionists. The woman drove herself to the event because her husband is home watching the Friday-night "Sex and the City" on cable TV. (Him I might worry about.) She wouldn't miss this showing because she just ADORES modern art. The woman is hatless and wears a purple sweater made of a blend of silk and linen. At the buffet reception for the fund-raiser, she eats a deep-fried shrimp from a stick. Nobody else knows it, but she's having her period. By the way, she has CD's in the bank, but of course the usury restriction came along much later. Now, are these alleged deviances enough to send the lady straight to Hell? Or had she better be judged by other means?
Has anyone else come across this?
quote:
Originally posted by Angel:
ChastMastr - I'm with you on the sex/no sex thing - but you again have the problems of boundaries blurring. Is it wrong if you have the intention of creating the same sort of intimacy as with the heterosexual act - e.g. oral sex? mutual masturbation?
quote:
Originally posted by Bishop Joe:
But some of those same clerics would rather be slathered with honey and tied up on a red-ant colony
you can't honestly be advocating that homeosexuals carry on with there lives, live together, have physical intimacies... but never have orgasims?????
that is so cruel that words fail me.
Did I sin when that happened? Or did she? Or did we both?
Please can I write the filmscript?
A Methodist Preacher who brings women to orgasm as he brushes past them in the street?
It'd be a cross between 'What Women Want' and 'Sister Act' - unexplained powers mysteriously filling a church with worshippers.
Brilliant!
quote:
Originally posted by nicolemrw:
chastmaster, i must be misunderstanding you, i really MUST.you can't honestly be advocating that homeosexuals carry on with there lives, live together, have physical intimacies... but never have orgasims?????
that is so cruel that words fail me.
quote:
Originally posted by Gill:
Would you mind defining 'works', please? Do you mean, it allows you to get on and function in life, or do you mean you are content.. or both? Or something else altogether?
THe joining of souls is a sacred matter in whatever path you follow - and i truly believe that if two people love each other they should be able to celebrate their love and have it recognised.
Hang in there Dolphin...
As for the issue of gays, my own personal standpoint is that gays in stable loving relationships can only be better than the alternatives (just as for straights); and legal recognition of that (inheritance issues etc.) can often be of some help.
On the other hand, since I'm not gay, and not an expert on relationships of whatever kind, possibly I shouldn't be shoving my nose in on that issue.
There are plenty of both, I think.
One cannot use tea for baptism, the Africa spa line for the unction or confirmation, or a roasted chicken for the Eucharist. (I had a bizarre dream that a dear friend who is a priest involved in Affirming Catholicism was doing that last.)
No offense to Twinings, the Body Shop, poultry farmers, or the gay community is intended.
And no offence taken!
(I hope they don't take away my toaster for this!)
David
Well-put. Though you're going to get the 'but we can make babies however' brigade now.
BTW for those who are committed to the idea of Evolution (I have an open mind here I hope) does our capacity for genetic engineering count as part of the evolutionary process? Should be a new thread but I can't be ar - er bothered.
David
Hiding his toaster under the bed in case someone wants it
gods greatest joke in creation is that he
created 76 sexes and only told us about two
d.
As far as the "legalize-it-but-don't-call-it-marriage" position goes, its creation of a secondary status is vaguely reminiscent of the unfortunate "separate-but-equal" policy followed by my country for the first half of the twentieth century. Unless there is some legitimate State interest in maintaining a distinction, the State should not discriminate against its own citizens.
If tea cannot be used for baptism, then I guess I will have to break it to Sven that his baptism was invalid. Alas!
(Anyone who wonders what the heck that's about - check the 'adventures of Sven' thread in Heaven. I had the privelege of baptising Sven in a mug of tea last year.)
Does your Gay friend want exactly the kind of
ceremony as heterosexuals have? Is it important it is called marriage?
I dunno but is it better to have some alternative ceremony for gay people which maj of pop would accept as legitimate or
call in marriage and then a lot of people (most?) not accepting such a ceremony as being a valid marriage.
Would you say its about the social legitimacy that marriage has?
I guess you noticed that my acceptance of gay relationships as being 100 percent equivalent to straight relationship "philosophically and theologically" speaking (legal rights I think should for adults be equal) is somewhat less than a 100 per cent. I am willing to argue the point...
I've been to several commitment ceremonies, gay male and lesbian, and I can only say this:
One notices efforts have been made to avoid looking like a parody of the Anglo/American "white wedding." No three-tier white cake, no figurines on top, no Wagner, no Mendelsohn, nobody giving anyone else away.
Similarities: People dress nicely, there's some sort of officient, frequently the Bible is quoted (usually II Corinthians).
I don't think societal good will is a tangible product like green beans or pig iron such that if gays and lesbians start having their ceremonies recognized, the heterosexual majority will somehow have their privilege diluted or diminished. However, I am also aware that sociology has nothing to do with emotion and tradition.
I seriously doubt that anyone out there has the bad taste to parody a straight wedding. (Well, OK the USA is a big country and I can't speak for everyone.) But if I attended a ceremony that mocked Christian traditions I'd walk out, even if good friends were involved.
In Chicago we have a brave Methodist minister who blesses homosexual liaisons among members of his flock. Headquarters told him not to do so. He did so anyway, the church held a charming mock-Stalinist show trial in a nearby suburb and took his pulpit away from him for six months (his interim filled in during his banishment). Back in the pulpit, he resumed blessing homosexual liaisons (which we all know have abolutely no legal merit at all), and was warned off even more strongly. So his church worked out a system wherein most of the ceremony took place in the sanctuary except for the actual blessing, in which all assembled left the church building, went out on the street beyond church property, and were blessed by the Rev. Dr. Dell.
The home church decided that wasn't allowed either.
I am not the first person who have noticed the irony that it is the most conservative, stable gays and lesbians who pine for these ceremonies the most. Moderate Democrats, Liberal Republicans--Chicago even has a gay Rotary club. I'm too old to care whether The Priest says The Words. I've seen the little man behind the curtain once too often to have such a yearning for the church's official blessing. But a congregation's support really bucks me up.
Some things were just the same as for straight couples getting married in our church. The couples were church members. They had a series of counseling sessions with the priest before the ceremony. They consider themselves united for life. They consider Christ to be the head of their households. And in both cases some of the liturgy was taken from the American BCP marriage service.
In both cases, however, the priest (two different priests, but they both made the same point) said that that what he/she was doing was blessing a relationship, not performing a marriage. And the priests both said that if they can bless animals, cars, houses, etc, certainly they can bless the devoted love between two people.
I think the tone of dialog has been very civil and a lot of discussion (some of it quite thought-provoking) was accomplished without rancor, and efficiently. Bravo.
A friend of mine maintains that ultimately Anglicanism will come down on a more pro-gay stance because it leans toward a Pelagian-mercy orientation, as opposed to Roman Catholicism or Calvinism, which lean toward an Augustinian-justice orientation. I can just barely understand that but I'll put it down for the intellectuals out there. He also invoked the Lambeth Quadrennial, about which I ought to know more but don't.
It was a good show. Thanks to you all.
Which puts a whole new light on several things but one was the concept i have often heard that Gay/lesbian relationships as we understand it are modern whilst this would suggest two ideas Paul may well have heard of Gay relationships similar to what we understand today and parts of the church have long since covertly blessed same sex relationships long. Indeed the article makes sense of a tombstone I read in Llangollen (Wales)
There seems to be a lack of clarifcation from the church in general about this whole issue.
However I don't think that you can legislate people into the kingdom of God ( great phrase Tubbs therefore it makes no difference to me what people do outside of the church as God still requires me to love them.
My questions is that when a couple (straight or Gay) enters church and then want to make a commitment to the life of the church should should they be allowed to carry on their lifestyle ( if they are co-habiting) or should the church address the issue and explain that if they want to become "members" they should get married, if they are Gay to stop the practice of and if they don't what should the church say then
The latter has been rather done to death in the past, although new insights are always welcome. I'm totally undecided on the issue and will pontificate no more until I've decided whether:
(a) as a straight man whether this is really something it's my job to have a fixed view on, and
(b) I actually have a view, fixed or otherwise.
[host hat on]
As regards the former, and indeed the whole question of church discipline - if you want to open this interesting can of worms it might be better to start another thread on the subject, and leave this one for the specific question of gay marriage.
[host hat off]
Not surprisingly I know many fellow gay people who (unlike me) are not celibate, and many of them mention Boswell.
It could be argued, also, that even if he were right in his claim that some same-gender people were married at different times and places for some centuries in the Church, this still seems to contradict not only passages of scripture but the early Church Fathers pretty dramatically. But I am yet unconvinced that his claims are sound. The interpretations he gave to what may be brotherhood ceremonies seem to me to be making many (to me, modern) assumptions... but it has been years since I have seen this book.
By “you can’t legislate people into the kingdom” I mean two things:
1) Christians have a responsibility to get involved and state what the Bible teaches [or what the Church teaches] on a particular matter and engage in dialogue with other groups involved in it. And part of this involves “seeking to understand” and loving the other person(s) rather than judging
2) If helping people follow that teaching involves giving practical help then, ideally, Christians will be involved in providing it.
3) Christians don’t have the right to enforce our views on others. [Particularly if people aren’t Christians]
I kind of agree that the two things are connected – that if someone wishes to join a church then they would have to abide by its stance on a particular issue OR adopt the policy of “don’t ask, don’t tell” OR find another church where it wouldn’t be an issue.
But the reason that this issue is so hotly debated is because many people don’t wish to do that and others don’t see why they should. [Put it this way, when you hear that someone attempting to decide how they’re going to live out their faith and their queerness gets asked by their homegroup leader if they’ve “ever wanted to be a woman” then you do wonder where some people have been for the last 30 or so years!].
But I also agree with Karl that church disapline [sp] is probably a matter for another thread … And if you want to use this particular issue as an example I’ll buy you some asbestos underpants as you will need them in Hell!
Tubbs
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
It could be argued, also, that even if he were right in his claim that some same-gender people were married at different times and places for some centuries in the Church, this still seems to contradict not only passages of scripture but the early Church Fathers pretty dramatically.
Bear in mind--the Church Fathers were interpreting the scripture, just as we do today, and also bear in mind that interpretations are just that. Two Christians may honestly disagree on a the meaning of a passage.
quote:
Originally posted by Siegfried:
Bear in mind--the Church Fathers were interpreting the scripture, just as we do today, and also bear in mind that interpretations are just that. Two Christians may honestly disagree on a the meaning of a passage.
But an interesting comment about same-sex unions. In Susanna Gregory's latest Matthew Bartholomew book, she mentions a gay relationship in a monastery in the 13th century. When I asked her about this, she said that they often went on privately, but not secretively.
Love
Angel
quote:
Originally posted by The_Colonel:
If the state wishes to marry same sex couples, or blood relatives, or humans to animals...
{counting to ten very very slowly}
Please tell me you are not equating same-sex marriages or homosexuality to incest and bestiality?
Experience tells us that the linking of homosexuality with other sexual practices is likely to raise the temperature of debate above what is acceptable in Purgatory; whether that link is explicit or implicit, intentional or not. Please take care when writing your posts to avoid potential misunderstanding or insult.
Alan
Purgatory host
quote:
Originally posted by The_Colonel:
While we're arguing about the whole concept of marriage, where the H£ll did 'the State' get the idea that it has the authority to marry people?
Marriage is also a legal contract between two individuals. In that form the state can quite rightly 'legalise'/'make legal'/endorse
a contract between two individuals.
bb
All the same Alan, if you think this should be withdrawn I will do so, but not by way of an apology.
I will render unto Ceasar, but I must also render unto God.
quote:
Originally posted by The_Colonel:
Well they are placed together as 'abominations' in one chapter of Leviticus, but apart from that who can say. I'm not trying to argue from my own 'authority' here, just committing the grave sin of allowing my religion to impinge on my opinion.All the same Alan, if you think this should be withdrawn I will do so, but not by way of an apology.[/QB]
Alan is on vacation, so you're getting me.
Alan cautioned against linking homosexuality with bestiality, etc., because it can lead to misunderstanding and insult. You have reiterated that linking more clearly by citing Leviticus. You are not likely to be misunderstood, but unless you adhere to the Levitical law in your own life, you are certainly being insulting. You would do well to withdraw the statement.
As for allowing your religion to impinge upon your opinion, I hope you don't mean to imply that others here formulate opinions without regard for their religion.
RuthW
Purgatory host
I do try to use The Law, as I have been taught and moderated under the Teachings of Christ, as a guide to the correct way of living.
My intention regarding the 'regard to religion' bit, was that there are many people of no religion who seem offended when those of us who do believe make a stand on what we consider a matter of faith, and do not use a humanistic or relativist 'logic' instead.
I would not presume to accuse one of my Brothers and Sisters of failing to take account of their own faith - or at least not in public.
The bit about religion informing opinion made me wonder because the vast majority of posters here are Christians and I think may be assumed to have opinions informed by their faith. It hadn't occurred to me that you would be writing of people not posting on these boards.
Anyway, I appreciate your withdrawing the comment.
RuthW
Purgatory host
quote:Why does it have to be "dishonest"? And what if we see the centre of marriage as not "romantic" in the emotional sense but in the contractual-agreement sense, whether brought on by arrangement or emotional impulses? Disagreement doesn't have to be based on dishonesty.
Originally posted by Merseymike:
And if we are seriously comparing the contemporary concept of romantic marriage with the arranged union , economic and contractual , or orthodox Judaism which describes the Biblical base of marriage, I think there's even more dishonesty going on to prove a point tham usual!
quote:What the hell does that mean?
if a person says to me, what is the largest mammal in the world – it's got big ears and a long nose? I would say it sounds very much like an elephant to me. If someone talks about union, fidelity, a monogamous relationship, love, blessing; I would say it sounds like marriage to me. And blessing [of same sex marriages], you see, I think is undermining our sacrament of marriage.
quote:Warning: bad pun alert.
Originally posted by RuthW:
Last night Susan Russell, Executive Director of Claiming the Blessing
quote:Liturgically innovative is only one term that comes to mind.
The Rt. Rev. Otis Charles, retired Bishop of Utah, has been removed from his position as an assisting bishop of California and his license to officiate has been revoked by the Rt. Rev. William Swing after The San Francisco Chronicle revealed that Bishop Charles had been “married” to a four-times divorced man at St. Gregory of Nyssa Church in San Francisco, April 24. The matter is under investigation, said the Rev. Canon Michael Hansen, the diocese’s executive officer.
According to the Chronicle, several hundred people, including Bishop Charles’ 8-year-old grandson, witnessed the wedding which lasted two hours and 45 minutes. Four clergy helped officiate at the service which began with drumming and ended when Bishop Charles and Felipe Sanchez Paris, 67, were lifted in chairs and carried outside.
quote:Dear Holly Roller,
Originally posted by Holly Roller:
I wish to agree, but would like to add, for me, it is incomprehinsible what the consequences will be for children envovlved in such a marraige. Would we in fact be allowing them to raise future homosexuals, teaching a life style contrary to almost all religious beliefs. Makeing it all seem normal is sinful, in my own humble opinion.
quote:There isn't a shred of evidence to back up your opinion, but there is evidence that your views are unfair to gay parents and their children as well as hurtful. Maybe you should reconsider them. You might also want to read some of the long thread in Dead Horses about Homosexuality and Christianity and you'll see that there are lots of Christians who do not share your views. Maybe you haven't come across such people before. Perhaps this could be an opportunity for you to realise that there are different views on this.
In summary, there is no evidence to suggest that lesbians and gay men are unfit to be parents or that psychosocial development among children of gay men or lesbians is compromised in any respect relative to that among offspring of heterosexual parents. Not a single study has found children of gay or lesbian parents to be disadvantaged in any significant respect relative to children of heterosexual parents. Indeed, the evidence to date suggests that home environments provided by gay and lesbian parents are as likely as those provided by heterosexual parents to support and enable children's psychosocial growth.
quote:
Hello everyone.
I apologize if this topic is elsewhere; I can't seem to find it, if so. If it is, would some host kindly close this and direct me correctly?
Onto my question. I'm quite confused by the Anglican Church of Canada's recent decision about blessing same sex unions.
As I understand it, currently the Diocese is the smallest independent unit of the Anglican communion. So the Diocese can currently decide whether to bless same sex unions, or not. So far the Diocese of New Westminster, here in the lower mainland of Vancouver, has done so.
Here's my confusion. The General Synod just decided not to decide on the motion "affirming the authority and jurisdiction of any diocesan synod, with the concurrence of its bishop, to authorize the blessing of committed same-sex unions " The motion was referred to the Primate's Theological Commission, "to determine whether the blessing of same-sex unions is a matter of doctrine and to report to the Council of General Synod by its spring 2006 meeting. "
So, as I understand it, the motion that was referred was basically asking for the status quo to be upheld.
Now what happens? Does that mean that all Canadian dioceses will not be able to allow same-sex unions? (And the Diocese of New Wesminster will have to reverse or suspend its policy?) Or does it mean that status quo still stands, until the Theological Commission determines whether or not such blessings are a "doctrinal matter"?
Any knowledgeable Anglicans out there?
thanks in advance!
quote:So if "gay marriage" isn't marriage what name do you want to give it?
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
How far do some of my sistren and brethren want to go in this game of "heterosexual role play"?
quote:I think this goes to the heart of the question. A "religious ceremony" implies some kind of institution. Adeodatus rejoices in everything that isn't institutional about this. I think we have an impasse.
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
It's entirely good that the occasion was clearly tailored to exactly what the couple wanted it to be.
quote:Indeed, it's up to them.
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
Now on the other hand, I entirely support those who seek a lifelong commitment, and who want to make public promises about it. I'm not clear about why they would want the 'blessing' of the church establishment for it, but hey, that's up to them.
quote:Or - let's agree to disagree. Let's be gay as a fiddle, and let's be queer as folk.
But please let's not all do it ... being queer is so much more fun than being gay !
quote:Only if you weren't murdering us, maiming us, 'curing' us, locking us up, or zapping our genitals with high voltages at the same time!
So if the right of marriage had been extended to same sex couples for the last 2000 years then things would be different?
quote:You are indeed, Zeke. I just look at the whole thing from a viewpoint where I find myself thinking, hang on, where along the line did Queer become Tame? When did we take "Relax" off the playlist and replace it with the Wedding March?
I hope that I am rightly detecting a willingness to respect the wishes of others for whom it is a great blessing
quote:Well, transsexual people are getting the right to marry in het fashion. Gay marriage will allow a gay transvestite to get married in a dress. Transsexual people who are gay or lesbian could get a gay marriage.
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
And seriously - the Queer community embraces lesbian and gay, but also bisexual and transgendered, and plenty more besides. Seems like in accepting "gay marriage", hetero-society has said it's willing to accomodate the first two but not the others. So what happens to them?
quote:Good question, no real answer. Like most things, you can take 10 Christian queers and they will all have a different point of view. Or they will apparently have the same point of view but with utterly different reasons for holding it.
Originally posted by dyfrig:
Is there a Christian Queer (or Queer Christian) voice? What does it have to say? What, erm, position does it take on, say, promiscuity?
quote:APW, once again my admiration is so deep I am lost for words.
And quite honestly, this particular queer Christian thinks there are more important things in the world. Which is not to say that I wouldn't like my relationship to have the same legal status as heterosexual couples', but I look out the door and I see the poor, the prisoners, the beaten women and the hungry children and my rich comfortable life is sometimes almost a reproach to me.
quote:I agree Arabella, but sometimes they are not exclusive.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
And quite honestly, this particular queer Christian thinks there are more important things in the world. Which is not to say that I wouldn't like my relationship to have the same legal status as heterosexual couples', but I look out the door and I see the poor, the prisoners, the beaten women and the hungry children and my rich comfortable life is sometimes almost a reproach to me.
That, of course, is an extremely unpopular point of view, but it is my own, and I prefer it to spending all my time thinking about how hard-done-by I am.
quote:Unbelievable! (I believe you, of course! But... unbelievable...)
Several weeks later, turns out that it was a lie concocted between the patients family and the Consultant, who didn't believe it was a good thing to be in a lesbian relationship...
When I was in hospital a couple of years ago, the Consultant tried to stop my partner visiting me too. She didn't succeed.
quote:It gets worse in some parts of the US. Recently in Virginia we had a nasty setback --
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Actually Zeke, you simply can't put together the complete set of rights - no legal contract short of adopting your partner gives you next-of-kin rights. ... It seems to be a lot worse in the USA than it is here in NZ, where we can rely on most judges to uphold the rights of a long term partner over biological family, particularly at the upper courts. There is also an Act of Parliament covering property in lesbian and gay breakups (it also covers unmarried heterosexual couples.)
quote:
Opponents assert the Marriage Affirmation Act could be used to void an array of contracts same-sex couples currently use to protect their rights, including medical care directives, wills, child care arrangements and joint ownership of property — all of which are legal arrangements the ACLU says fall under the rights provided by the U.S. Constitution.
The Virginia House of Delegates passed the measure by a veto-proof two-thirds majority last spring, and it became law July 1 without a signature from Gov. Mark Warner.
quote:Thanks Psyduck.
Originally posted by Psyduck:
ChristinaMarie:quote:Unbelievable! (I believe you, of course! But... unbelievable...)
Several weeks later, turns out that it was a lie concocted between the patients family and the Consultant, who didn't believe it was a good thing to be in a lesbian relationship...
When I was in hospital a couple of years ago, the Consultant tried to stop my partner visiting me too. She didn't succeed.
quote:Bully for you.
Originally posted by Young fogey:
This demolishes the simulacrum of me being piñata'd in Hell, but as any who read the blog (my sig is the link) know, for libertarian reasons I'm against the proposed 'federal marriage amendment' in the States.
quote:A variety of thoughts occur:
Originally posted by Laura:
quote:I wholly agree with this. ... I think they should issues civil unions to couples who request ...
Originally posted by Spawn:
Same-sex 'marriage' is a misnoma. ...I am talking about civil partnerships which grant rights to homosexual couples, cohabiting opposite sex couples, and also those who are not in sexual relationships such as siblings or carers etc.
...
Though civil union seems a serviceable expression, perhaps a different term is needed.
quote:seems to indicate that the court believes that a civil union could be created with all the privileges of marriage. I know some people are politically determined to have the "m-word" and will accept nothing less.
[69] Second, Canadian governments chose to give legal recognition to marriage. Parliament and the provincial legislatures have built a myriad of rights and obligations around the institution of marriage. The provincial legislatures provide licensing and registration regimes so that the marriages of opposite-sex couples can be formally recognized by law. Same-sex couples are denied access to those licensing and registration regimes.
quote:But that's exactly what churches have done and should be doing (if I have understood you correctly). Christian marriage is and should be a bigger deal from civil marriage, in many ways. The church should be making it much harder for men and women to sail into marriage ill-advised because "the church is where I have to get married." I do not expect that my church, the ECUSA, will "marry" gays. In some places, they do and presumably will continue to bless gay partnerships.
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
Of course, it's worth pointing out that "civil union" gives the church a complete out, as it is then possible for the church to say "not marriage, not our thing".
quote:This got to be contentious in the Ottawa Diocesan email list. Hypothetically, since this Diocese doesn't bless any same-sex relationships. Semi-hypothetically, in that Ontario does permit same-sex civil marriage.
Originally posted by Laura:
...In some places, they do and presumably will continue to bless gay partnerships.
quote:No one is taking rights away, Paige. They're pushing for rights they never had. Going into their homosexual relationship, they knew the state didn't sanction it. So why would they have expected something different? So far as looking them in the eyes and all that, it would be silly for me to explain to them why their rights are being taken away because, well, they aren't.
Originally posted by Paige:
Kyralessa---I confess that I really expected something better than your rationalizations to my questions. The "I didn't tell them to go form a couple, did I?" was particularly disappointing.
I thought it was telling that you admitted you couldn't go sit in that lesbian couple's living room, look them in the eyes, and explain to them why they deserve to have what few rights they currently possess taken away from them, simply because they are gay.
quote:Yes...so let's talk about polygamists, and ménage a trois families, and sibling and intergenerational marriage, and all the other sorts of relationships that have no legal standing in most states and therefore are, apparently, discriminated against.
When you are a reasonably intelligent person--as I know you are---it's really hard to justify discrimination, isn't it? It sounds so...whiny and self-serving.
quote:You're entitled to your opinion. I guess it's no worse than St Paul saying that Cretans are liars, evil beasts, and lazy gluttons. But the odd thing to me is that since one party is pretty clearly against same-sex marriage and the other party is at least for civil unions, if not full-fledged same-sex marriage, about 40% of that other party voted for this amendment. So forget the first party, whom we could accuse of voting party line instead of engaging their brains. What about that 40% of the other party? Perhaps it's them you ought to go ask just why they voted for the amendment, since their vote seems so much more inexplicable.
quote:Sorry, but you don't get to tell me what my answer is. Yes, as far as I'm concerned, they ARE all bigots. Was I supposed to be undone by the sheer numbers of those voting to discriminate?
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
Now here's a question for you, Paige: If this amendment was such a horrible thing, how come 71% of voters favored it?
...
"They're all bigots" is not an answer, sorry. Think for a bit and tell me just why 71% of voters in Missouri, including many future Kerry-voters, mind you, found it necessary to vote for this amendment.
quote:You'll have to talk to those who were around then; I wasn't. Bigotry disgusts me, whether it's against a race, as so often in the U.S., or against an ethnic group, like the hatred of Romanians and Hungarians for the Roma (also known as the gypsies). But bigotry is not what we're dealing with here, unless it's bigotry against all forms of "alternative families" instead of just one.
In the 1950s and 60s, the same percentage of folks would have happily supported similar language barring marriage between blacks and whites. Some states still have those laws on the books.
quote:The ironic thing, Paige, is that there have been cases where benefits were actually "taken away"; polygamy is a prime example. People were living in polygamous marriages in Utah in the early 1800s, but the U.S. government wouldn't leave them alone. What bigots! The insistence of the same-sex-marriage supporters to want to make only one exception to the current state of legal matrimony is simple hypocrisy; it asks that we replace one set of discriminatory rules with another, instead of throwing out everything discriminatory all at once.
In both cases, you have nothing but bigotry, prejudice, and a willingness to take benefits you (collective "you" in this case) would deny to others because you don't approve of them.
quote:The only place I hear about these people is the media; perhaps the real question is why the mainstream media has such a fascination with them when they're really more Weekly World News type stuff.
You also have a bunch of Taliban-like leaders waving the Bible around and assuring the crowd that God hates fags and wants "decent" Americans to make sure the homos don't have any civil rights.
quote:Speaking of words that are "telling"... You sound, Paige, like another "repudiating my past" liberal. The sort of liberal who says "Same-sex marriage must be right because the people I grew up around said it was wrong."
Having grown up in a church where you were told you were going to hell if you didn't accept the One True Interpretation of Scripture (which is whatever the preacher says it is)...
quote:Well, then genuinely fight against all intolerance, instead of just the featured selection of the intolerance-of-the-month club. If you persist in trying to force people to condone something they can't condone, then, as Missouri's vote makes clear, you will probably lose. But if you genuinely fight for the rights of all "marriage minorities," and not just everyone's favorite media darlings, then you might actually have a chance of achieving your goal. I, for one, am not interested in having the state tell me that same-sex marriage is a legitimate alternative to marriage. But I might well be interested in having the state quit defining marriage altogether.
...I have some sympathy with those who are willingly led down the path of intolerance---but I certainly am not prepared to sit back and let them chisel their nonsense into the law without a fight.
quote:This much of your post, I agree with 100%.
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
But I might well be interested in having the state quit defining marriage altogether.
quote:Wrong. Please go back and read the article about Ohio's Amendment 1. It will indeed take away gays and lesbians right to contract under the law---a right they have indeed had until now. That's what I was talking about. (I suppose Missouri gets a pat on the back for not taking it quite that far...)
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
No one is taking rights away, Paige. They're pushing for rights they never had. Going into their homosexual relationship, they knew the state didn't sanction it. So why would they have expected something different? So far as looking them in the eyes and all that, it would be silly for me to explain to them why their rights are being taken away because, well, they aren't.
quote:Because this affects people I know and love. Simple as that.
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
You tell me, Paige: Why is this only about same-sex marriage? Why not stand up for all the others in "nontraditional" relationships who want to make them legal?
quote:I could buy this if I thought you really had any intention of supporting the right of polygamists to marry (or any of your other nightmarish scenarios)---but they are just smokescreens. It's the same tactic people use when they put "gays" and "pedophiles" in the same sentence. "Oh my God!!! Grant them same-sex marriage today, and tomorrow my son and daughter will be wanting to get married to each other!!!!"
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
The insistence of the same-sex-marriage supporters to want to make only one exception to the current state of legal matrimony is simple hypocrisy; it asks that we replace one set of discriminatory rules with another, instead of throwing out everything discriminatory all at once.
quote:You know, Kyralessa....this is just too funny. You've just spent all this time telling me that 71% of your state population supports your position. Just which one of us is taking the "popular" position here, and not thinking too deeply about it?
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
Or are you just supporting that which is the popular thing to support these days, without thinking too deeply about it?
quote:You mean something like the sort of conservative who says "The Bible/The Church/My pastor says it, I believe it, and that settles it"?
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
Speaking of words that are "telling"... You sound, Paige, like another "repudiating my past" liberal. The sort of liberal who says "Same-sex marriage must be right because the people I grew up around said it was wrong."
quote:Well, finally something we might be able to agree on....
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
But I might well be interested in having the state quit defining marriage altogether.
quote:My understanding of the Orthodox rite for a second marriage is that it is penitential. If I were gay and entering into what I would expect to be a first and only life-long commitment, I would be pretty unhappy with having to have penitential language in the rite recognizing and blessing that commitment.
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
I liked the idea, somewhere on this thread, of modeling a same-sex marriage rite on Orthodox second marriage rites.
quote:And heterosexuals - anyone know the origin of that little piece of text? Smart Voter link to exact words. Apparently Citizens for Community Values was a major driver. They downplay any impact on unmarried hetero couples ... but I think they are disingenuous.
Originally posted by Paige:
... Please go back and read the article about Ohio's Amendment 1. It will indeed take away gays and lesbians right to contract under the law---a right they have indeed had until now. ...
quote:No, actually polygamous marriage is more biblical than same-sex marriage. And as I recall it isn't forbidden in the NT (except for church leadership) as homosexuality is. In sum, I am thoroughly puzzled by your highly selective openmindedness. The same arguments you make about allowing same-sex marriage, others could make about the "nightmarish scenarios" I listed--so why are those arguments right when you make them but wrong when they do?
Originally posted by Paige:
quote:I could buy this if I thought you really had any intention of supporting the right of polygamists to marry (or any of your other nightmarish scenarios)---but they are just smokescreens.
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
The insistence of the same-sex-marriage supporters to want to make only one exception to the current state of legal matrimony is simple hypocrisy; it asks that we replace one set of discriminatory rules with another, instead of throwing out everything discriminatory all at once.
quote:Let's suppose for a moment that this is true. In that case (a) if that's how marriage licenses started, good riddance to them; (b) you'd think same-sex marriage advocates would make more of it.
Does a gay marriage amendment belong in the Constitution?
No. The first official marriage licenses were mandated by government after the Civil War to prevent mixing of the races. No one would suggest that George and Martha Washington weren't married because they had no official state-authorized marriage license. Same with Abraham and Mary Lincoln.
quote:Please elaborate on why the state shouldn't have an interest on whether marriage is between people of the opposite sex, or between people of the same sex, but should have an interest on how many people a marriage is between, provided (as in any case) that they all enter into it of their own volition.
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Oh and a postscript: dragging polygamy into it seems like a desperate attempt to throw sand in the eyes.
quote:This is bang on, in my opinion. You've made the point I've tried to make elsewhere - only, you've done it better.
Originally posted by Mousethief:
From the state's point of view, marriage is a contractual relationship between two people which confers certain rights and responsibilities. And what I see the proponents of gay marriage asking is, what reason is there that the state should confer those rights and responsibilities on heterosexual couples, and not homosexual couples?
What I think the opponents of gay marriage are seeing is what marriage is from a religious point of view, and they are incapable of (or unwilling to) see the difference between the church's understanding of marriage, and the state's understanding of marriage. Which at the moment overlap in extension (depending on the church; there are churches at present which recognize gay marriage), but this is not necessary (or even good, in a state in which the government is meant to be religion-neutral).
In short, what we have are two different, but mostly overlapping, understandings of marriage. Whatever you think the church should do or say about gay marriage, is completely irrelevant to what the government should do or say about gay marriage. Or should be: for the government to codify (into law) one church's definition of marriage over another church's definition of marriage, is for the government to greatly overstep its bounds (I'm referring to the USA government here) : it is de facto establishment, which is against the Constitution.
Oh and a postscript: dragging polygamy into it seems like a desperate attempt to throw sand in the eyes.
quote:Tell the "underground" polygamists in Utah it's a dead issue. It seems to me the sand is getting in your eyes because you keep sticking your head in it.
Originally posted by Mousethief:
It's a dead issue. Show me the hordes of polygamists beating down the doors of the courthouse to register their "marriages" with the state. There aren't any. Hence, it's an irrelevant sand-in-the-eyes subterfuge.
quote:Polygamists' marriages are not legally recognized; I don't see how that can be considered "allowed to marry." As for "as long as they keep quiet about it," I'm floored that you would find this defensible. Why not rephrase it as "as long as they act monogamous in public"?
Originally posted by ChristinaMarie:
Polygamists have been allowed to marry in the States, as long as they keep quiet about it. It is when they go public that the fuss is made.
Don't forget polyandry.
quote:An interesting way of phrasing it. Why not? How would my being able to get married to my partner of 12 years affect your marriage?
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
I, for one, am not interested in having the state tell me that same-sex marriage is a legitimate alternative to marriage.
quote:Ah yes, if I don't agree with you, I must have my head in the sand. Clever retort.
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
Tell the "underground" polygamists in Utah it's a dead issue. It seems to me the sand is getting in your eyes because you keep sticking your head in it.
quote:When did I defend it?
Originally posted by Kyralessa:
Polygamists' marriages are not legally recognized; I don't see how that can be considered "allowed to marry." As for "as long as they keep quiet about it," I'm floored that you would find this defensible. Why not rephrase it as "as long as they act monogamous in public"?
quote:I think that this is why red herrings like polygamy (or indeed incest et. al.) are dragged into discussions about homosexuality. For the True Believer discriminating between the various sexual acts which comprise sexcrime is an intellectual leap, of which they are not capable. Obviously, if one is prepared to sanction homosexual acts one is equally prepared to sanction paedophillia. Obviously it is entirely inconsistent to support gay relationships whilst condemning polygamy. The idea that one might oppose polygamy on the grounds that it is inherently oppressive to women, whilst supporting civil unions for gay couples is clearly not on the cognitive map. Gay couples and polygamists are alike, on that part of the map which states 'Here be dragons'.
What was required of a party member was an outlook similar to that of the ancient Hebrew who knew, without knowing much else, that all nations other than his own worshipped 'false gods'. He did not need to know that these gods were called Baal, Osiris, Moloch, Ashtaroth and the like: probably the less he knew about them, the better for his orthodoxy. He knew Jehovah and the commandments of Jehovah: he knew, therefore, that all gods with other names and other attributes were false gods. In somewhat the same way, the Party member knew what constituted right conduct, and in exceedingly vague generalised terms he knew what kind of departure from it was possible.
quote:Kyralessa---Callan has given my answer to you, and done it much better than I could have.
Originally posted by Callan:
For the True Believer discriminating between the various sexual acts which comprise sexcrime is an intellectual leap, of which they are not capable. Obviously, if one is prepared to sanction homosexual acts one is equally prepared to sanction paedophillia. Obviously it is entirely inconsistent to support gay relationships whilst condemning polygamy. The idea that one might oppose polygamy on the grounds that it is inherently oppressive to women, whilst supporting civil unions for gay couples is clearly not on the cognitive map. Gay couples and polygamists are alike, on that part of the map which states 'Here be dragons'.
quote:Arabella---congratulations!!! That is excellent news.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
We have already booked our Civil Union - to finally be able to take responsibility for each other legally as next-of-kin is a huge weight off our minds. We did the big commitment ceremony thing 10 years ago, so this seems like an opportune moment to finally be allowed to be related legally! And its the other Ms Winterbottom's 50th birthday five days before the Act goes live in April 2005.
quote:No Bah from here, just happy congratulations from yet another! I think it's wonderful after you have been together all these years, and about time too.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Kiwigoldfish, your congratulations would look so much more, I don't know, congratulatory, if your sig file wasn't proclaiming Bah Humbug!
But thank you.
quote:That is so sad Lioba, and makes me feel like But I do sort of understand.
Originally posted by Lioba:
Congratulations, Arabella, to you and your spouse.
I wish my partner of 11 years and I could marry as well, but although it is legal here I'm afraid it would leave both of us unemployed because our christian employer would most certainly not like it.
quote:You're right - something of a mood mismatch, isn't it?
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Kiwigoldfish, your congratulations would look so much more, I don't know, congratulatory, if your sig file wasn't proclaiming Bah Humbug!
quote:I eagerly await my invitation.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
But thank you.
quote:Ooo. Forgot about that one in my thread on the Pope.
Originally posted by Tolven:
At the time a number of gay and lesbian people spoke up saying - "Well he's apologizing to the Jews, the Muslims, the slaves, the Galileos. Infact anybody you can just about think of except us."
quote:Oh good so it's no longer just us USians making asses of ourselves over this issue.
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
For those following this issue, the bill has been introduced in the Canadian Parliament as Bill C-38. Major media campaigns from the conservative side have made this the topic of the day in Canadian politics.
quote:The flap du jour is the reaction to US groups funding Canadian protests
Originally posted by Mousethief:
Oh good so it's no longer just us USians making asses of ourselves over this issue.
quote:For US shipmates: what would be the reaction if "Canadians for Equal Marriage" had provided 20 million postcards to opponents of the various US ballot initiatives last November?
The U.S. headquarters of the Knights of Columbus paid $80,782 to print 2 million postcards at its New Haven, Conn., printing plant, then shipped them to Canada, where they are being distributed in Catholic parishes across the country.
quote:Remembering the fuss in the USA over a semi-serious suggestion in the Guardian that readers mail voters in Ohio, I imagine they'd probably have organised a Kurdish invasion of Ontario.
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
For US shipmates: what would be the reaction if "Canadians for Equal Marriage" had provided 20 million postcards to opponents of the various US ballot initiatives last November?
quote:Well, mine is hardly likely to want me to do that -- his take on "the institution" is that as "scriptural marriage" includes at least both polygamy and monogamy, it's not at all clear what they're trying to protect. Like most of the clergy in the diocese he is bending over backwards to keep things cool despite what we all know he believes -- the only ones trying to heat it up seem to be your own most beloved and his half-dozen or so fellow-laborers in the field.
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
I don't suppose that my co-Ottawavian shipmates might have been informed by their priests of the usefulness of writing to their MPs to protect the institution.
Too late for me; I had long ago written to my local member of the Duma (as well as to the 3 other members of my personal acquaintance) to apprise them of my position;).
quote:No, but I have received any number of solicitations from fellow laity. Even some who're aware of my position on the matter.
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
...I don't suppose that my co-Ottawavian shipmates might have been informed by their priests of the usefulness of writing to their MPs to protect the institution....
quote:Can some CofE shipmates comment on the "fourteen dioceses" remark? There's only one in Canada, and as far as I know, the number of blessings is very small, around six or so... For one thing, the availability of civil marriage overran the whole thing quickly.
There were also moments, he said, when he was profoundly disappointed as some primates glossed over their own provinces’ struggles with the issue of homosexuality. Fourteen dioceses in the Church of England regularly allow blessings, he said, and “in one diocese alone, I suspect there have been more blessings than have ever occurred in Canada,” he said. “But it’s all done unofficially, in the shadows rather than out in the light of day. So there is a profound sort of hypocrisy here.”
quote:My own church has performed gay blessings in the past - fairly furtively, albeit with the consent of the Ordinary. I don't know whether we would these days, I'm afraid, although the matter hasn't recently arisen.
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
The current issue of the Anglican Journal (Canada) has an article which quotes Canadian Archbishop Hutchinson
quote:Can some CofE shipmates comment on the "fourteen dioceses" remark? There's only one in Canada, and as far as I know, the number of blessings is very small, around six or so... For one thing, the availability of civil marriage overran the whole thing quickly.
There were also moments, he said, when he was profoundly disappointed as some primates glossed over their own provinces’ struggles with the issue of homosexuality. Fourteen dioceses in the Church of England regularly allow blessings, he said, and “in one diocese alone, I suspect there have been more blessings than have ever occurred in Canada,” he said. “But it’s all done unofficially, in the shadows rather than out in the light of day. So there is a profound sort of hypocrisy here.”
quote:So, what's the Diocesan policy towards ECUSA and the Anglican Church of Canada?
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
...My own church has performed gay blessings in the past - fairly furtively, albeit with the consent of the Ordinary. ...
quote:See ww.anglican.ca for the details.
1. Official News Release: Theological Commission finds same-sex blessings to be a 'matter of doctrine'
2. Anglican Journal News: Canadians will not 'participate fully' in international meeting
3. Canadians to attend but not participate in meeting of Anglican Consultative Council
quote:A quick scout around suggests that we don't have one. If we do, its being kept pretty quiet...
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
quote:So, what's the Diocesan policy towards ECUSA and the Anglican Church of Canada?
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
...My own church has performed gay blessings in the past - fairly furtively, albeit with the consent of the Ordinary. ...
quote:Well, I know which I think is "destroying the fabric of traditional marriage." Not that I'd put all the blame on Britney Spears alone. Reality TV has to take some of the credit.
Originally posted by Go Anne Go:
Whereas they think marriage is just fine when it is Britney SPears "how fast can I get it annulled since I was drunk and not taking it seriously" getting married. Which is more wrong? I know what I'm thinking.....
quote:great news!!
Originally posted by iGeek.:
Well. whaddya know?
I wish I could qualify for immigration.
quote:Over 1000 US couples have married in Toronto - visiting is enough. There's a Gay Wedding Show now in T.O., big event. The 2003 WorldCon had Weddings as the first item in the program, a mass wedding.
Originally posted by iGeek.:
Well. whaddya know?
I wish I could qualify for immigration.
quote:Great post - hope it isn't prophetic for the Olympic bids.
Originally posted by Callan:
All this now needs is a gay Norwegian football commentator to put it in perspective:
Cardinal Ximenes, Cardinal Torquemada, Philip II, The Duke of Alva, St Ignatius Loyola, The Duke of Medina-Sidona, Francisco Suarez, General Franco, Jose Maria Escriva, Cardinal Trujillo, Can you hear me Cardinal Trujillo. Your boys took one hell of a beating tonight.
quote:Enough for what? Getting a piece of paper?
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
Over 1000 US couples have married in Toronto - visiting is enough.
quote:Stephanie Coontz, the director of public education for the Council on Contemporary Families, is the author of "Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage.".
My research on marriage and family life seldom leads me to agree with Dr. Dobson, much less to accuse him of understatement. But in this case, Dr. Dobson's warnings come 30 years too late. Traditional marriage, with its 5,000-year history, has already been upended. Gays and lesbians, however, didn't spearhead that revolution: heterosexuals did.
...
Giving married women an independent legal existence did not destroy heterosexual marriage. And allowing husbands and wives to construct their marriages around reciprocal duties and negotiated roles - where a wife can choose to be the main breadwinner and a husband can stay home with the children- was an immense boon to many couples. But these changes in the definition and practice of marriage opened the door for gay and lesbian couples to argue that they were now equally qualified to participate in it.
Marriage has been in a constant state of evolution since the dawn of the Stone Age. In the process it has become more flexible, but also more optional. Many people may not like the direction these changes have taken in recent years. But it is simply magical thinking to believe that by banning gay and lesbian marriage, we will turn back the clock.
quote:Originally posted by Tom of Tarsus:
Did anyone watch the Daily Show last night? He had Santorum on. It was an ok interview and I like that Stewart is able to have such civil discourse and agree to disagree. But I did want John to ask Santorum one question.
"Please give me an example of how a gay marriage or union would negatively impact the *ideal* "traditional" marriage? "
It so easy to get heated up in this debate. But I would like to see someone who is so against gay marriage answer that question with an answer and not just quoting the Bible or tradition.
Also, I see how those conservatives who attempt to have a heart are "all for equal rights" for gay unions and yet I haven't seen or heard any bill being presented to congress to enact some sort of gay civil union rights. So, it's easy for them to say they are for civil unions for gays as long as it isn't marriage when they know there is little to no chance of any such law being passed. An empty gesture at best.
Ouroborus
P.S. This is my first post so I guess I should say something about myself. I came over from The Parents Perspective because it is really dead now and I need some discourse and new people to discuss with. I'm 35, married with two boys (5/7). I'm agnostic but was raised Roman Catholic. I'm a flaming liberal and live inside the Washington D.C. beltway.
quote:Originally posted by tclune:
Just a warm welcome to you. You ought to find lots of good discourse here! Hope you enjoy the ride.
Yeah, that stuff is probably just lip service. At least I hope. Either all the way or nothing at all, if you want to be consistant. I may come down on the nothing at all side, but that isn't what you're wanting to discuss, and I can't get into it now. But when I saw the #!, I just had to extend a welcome.
Blessings,
Tom
quote:
Hi, O.
Let me second Tom's greeting. As to the Santorum interview, I found the show a complete yawn. When Stewart is "on," he is a joy to watch in interviews. But Santorum is such a dim bulb that there was no reasonable possibility of something interesting happening in the interview. And Stewart came across as being as dull as his guest.
I'm a Daily Show addict, but I confess that I am getting tired of the interview portion of the show. A steady stream of guests hawking uninteresting movies or books is the sort of thing that the show pokes fun at when it's on-target.
quote:In Oregon, where the anti-same-sex marriage constitutional amendment barely passed last year and civil unions were offered as a reasonable alternative, the lower house just gutted the bill with some legislative chicanery.
Originally posted by Ourobouros:
Also, I see how those conservatives who attempt to have a heart are "all for equal rights" for gay unions and yet I haven't seen or heard any bill being presented to congress to enact some sort of gay civil union rights.
quote:Greg, thanks for your thoughts and for your honesty. I hope this is a ship where we will welcome you warmly regardless of your sexuality or even sexual experience. Nice simile, too!
Originally posted by GregofCali:
<snip>
One day I would like to get married to the man I love, when I meet him.
Greetings shipmates, apprentice Greg here, gay as a box of birds. <snip>
quote:What a load of tripe!!! Please ask him to cite any evidence---other than his overheated imagination---for that nonsense.
Originally posted by Seeker963:
I'm asking because a long-time correspondent on another internet group believes that "pro-gay" Christians refuse to talk about a sexual ethic and that they see long-term relationships as heterosexist. He insists that gay Christians want the church to say that promiscuity is OK.
quote:Your friend is mistaken.
Originally posted by Seeker963:
Thanks, Rainbow Kate. I'm asking because a long-time correspondent on another internet group believes that "pro-gay" Christians refuse to talk about a sexual ethic and that they see long-term relationships as heterosexist. He insists that gay Christians want the church to say that promiscuity is OK.
quote:This has been my personal experience in the UK as well.
Originally posted by Paige:
You can tell him you "know" at least one "pro-gay Christian" who thinks he's full of ****. I am acquainted with many other people---gay and straight---who believe in full inclusion of gays and lesbians in the life of the church. To a person, they would tell you that committed monogamy is the standard Christians should strive for in ANY sexual relationship between consenting adults.
quote:Good for you, Spiffy!
That's also where I stood across the street from my friend Fred Phelps and realised that the only wah his message was going to be drowned out is if I stood up and said, "You're wrong", and I came out to my mother the very next day.
quote:I totally agree with you. I'd be interested in hearing what your partner has to say although I suspect it will be very much like all the other answers here so far!
Originally posted by RainbowKate:
You in fact encourage fidelity by encouraging people to marry and maintain convenental relationships. We want nothing more than to pledge before God and our communities that we want to honor and remain faithful to one another for the remainder of our lives- and in addition- which is part of the Episcopal wedding liturgy- to recieve the support and blessing of the community.
quote:Arabella---this brought an enormous smile to my face this morning. Bless you both!
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Oh, and just to be on proper topic, Rosie and I become civilised in just over three weeks - I picked up the license yesterday. Venue booked, invites out, witnesses arranged, music organised - catering still to be finalised, ditto Rosie's frock, I finished my jacket today.
quote:Also, worth pointing out that there is no act possible to a same-gender couple that is impossible to a different-gender couple. Since the churches have in general (not the RC church) dropped the notion of policing the acts of married heterosexuals ... well, that's the whole sexual ethic thing, point already made.
Originally posted by RainbowKate:
...At Gene Robinson's consecration there were a group of men who got up to protest by explaining in vivid detail what they believed gay men did in bed. Remarkable that people so offended by homosexuality do so very much reasearch on it.
quote:Please excuse the tangent, but I love your use of this expression! Makes me convinced you'll have finger bowls and ice cream forks, and use them appropriately. Congratulations to you and Rosie, and best wishes.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
a committed, monogamous, soon-to-be civilised relationship
quote:Exactly.
I have to confess I'm not one of those who wants only one narrow type of sexual relationship for everyone. I have plenty of Christian friends who are single - queer and straight - who have only occasional sexual relationships. I don't see anything particularly wrong with it, provided that respect and honouring of the other person is present. I don't think people should be condemned to endless celibacy just because Mr or Ms Right never appears.
quote:I have the impression that you are correct on that. Your whole “take” on the situation is actually quite enlightening.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
There are those who believe that lesbians and gay men are ontologically different from real human beings - that no good, no fruit of the Spirit could ever be demonstrated by one of us. All because of our perfectly, to be honest, boring and normal sex lives. Nothing else about us matters to these people.
quote:Well, I’m really pleased for you. I imagine that it must feel wonderful. Best wishes for a great day. And best wishes to igeek as well.
After 13 years it feels very odd to finally be able to legally commit. But quite wonderful.
quote:Thank you for asking her and thanks to her for her input.
Originally posted by RainbowKate:
Seeker: Here is my partner's input on your questions.
quote:Wrong. The Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15) binds Christians to some aspects of the dietary laws. So only those who keep kosher can pontificate about LGBT issues.
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
Mark 217, your post is appreciated but it misses two important distinctions.
1. We are no longer under the Law. So no, the Bible doesn't teach we should stone those caught in the act.
2. (And this is a common problem on this board, I've noticed.) We should distinguish between moral laws of the Torah and ceremonial and dietary laws.
Without going into all the theology, the moral aspects of the Law still apply. It is still wrong to kill, steal, lie, etc. Fortunately for rebellious sons, the penalties no longer apply.
Although the ceremonial and dietary laws still have much to teach us (Albeit, the "pots and pans" section is a bit turgid ), we are no longer under those as shown in the NT.
Man, I shouldn't think about such things so early in the morning.
quote:Actually there are gay fundamentalist Bible believing churches that disagree with this as well.
Originally posted by MarkthePunk:
Greta, the gymnastics in your writing impresses even this writer.
Yes, there are many areas where the Bible is not so clear. And you mention many of them. However, on the issue of homosexual conduct (as opposed to orientation), most Bible-believing Christians find the Bible quite clear.
Those that dispute that clarity engage mainly in one of two tactics: 1. interpretational gymnastics intending to make the Levitical or Pauline passages either extremely cultural or extremely narrow in meaning (e.g. saying Paul was only referring to temple prostitutes) or 2. simply refusing to except the Bible's authority in this area, which is becoming more open and common in the American mainline denominations.
As for a theocracy, I in no way advocate that. Government has to make decisions concerning morality. The question is whose morality?
In case someone finds me backward in this area, I do not think gay orientation is a sin. I think gay sexual conduct is a sin. I would say the same concerning hetero orientation and conduct except that it is blessed in marriage.
quote:In what sense is the Institution of Marriage separable from individual marriages. It seems excessively Platonic to me to regard the Institution of Marriage as some elevated cosmic value, like Mom's apple pie, which is inherently devalued by the merest whiff of some kind of alternative. Surely the only indicator of whether the institution of marriage is in a healthy condition is to establish whether or not people are a) getting married and b) getting divorced. Surely the whole point of tax breaks for married couples is not as a means of the government to demonstrate its commitment to the Institution of Marriage but to encourage individual couples to get and stay married.
No +Selby is an otherwise intelligent man but here he is at his least good. He's certainly intelligent enough to know that the argument about undermining marriage is not about individual marriages but about the institution. Of course, a civil partnership has no effect on my own marriage, but putting other relationships on a par with marriage - if you believe the institution of marriage to be the basic building block of society - certainly does undermine it. And of course, this argument is not solely about civil partnerships, but about the progressive de-recognition of marriage through the tax system which has taken place over the past two decades.
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
The fact is that if you believe that marriage is the best and demonstrably most stable way to bring up children, and additionally believe that marriage is God-ordained, then you will want to ensure that it is supported by society.
quote:Many people who want to support marriage might prefer it if the state kept its oar out.
Traditionally this has been done with tax breaks for marriage, and its unique regulation by the state.
quote:Sounds bollocks to me.
If over a period of time those tax breaks are removed, other relationships and family arrangements are given exactly equal status, then it is likely that less people will choose marriage and more people will choose to leave marriages.
quote:"Best" is not "only." What about children growing up in other family environments? If children are a reason for society to support marriage, then they are just as good a reason to support any relationship - indeed, even a single person. Children do not choose their families. Why should a child be penalized for being in what some might call a non-God-ordained family unit?
Originally posted by Spawn:
The fact is that if you believe that marriage is the best and demonstrably most stable way to bring up children, and additionally believe that marriage is God-ordained, then you will want to ensure that it is supported by society.
quote:Simply put the answer is that you cannot conceive children within a marriage of people attracted to same sex-partners (do we need a human biology lesson here?). Furthermore, it's important for a child to experience father and mother role models - so marriage is best. However, by that I do not mean that there are no other ways of bringing up children excellently - just that they are more hit and miss and than marriage.
Originally posted by John Holding:
AS I understand Spawn, it's giving the benefits of marriages to civil unions that devalues marriage.
The obvious answer is to permit same-sex marriage.
That way the benefits of marriage are reserved to marriages and not diluted or debased by being given also to other relationships.
John
quote:First of all, your post tried to predict my answers. Try not to do that.
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
Why would you want, as a Christian, to deprive a child of a loving couple to care for him/her?
quote:I've just noticed that that I mispoke. I meant to say that a loving couple who were married (ie in a more stable relationship, were a better choice for parenting than a loving and stable same sex couple.
Originally posted by Spawn:
Second, I don't want to deprive a child of a loving couple to care for them, I just think they should be the second resort rather than the first resort, but certainly not the last resort (stable same sex couples would come above warring unmarried couples as carers and parents, IMO). I just happen to think that children are better off by being care for by a father and a mother. Shoot me if you want.
quote:But what does your answer have to do with my suggestion?
Originally posted by Spawn:
quote:Simply put the answer is that you cannot conceive children within a marriage of people attracted to same sex-partners (do we need a human biology lesson here?). Furthermore, it's important for a child to experience father and mother role models - so marriage is best. However, by that I do not mean that there are no other ways of bringing up children excellently - just that they are more hit and miss and than marriage.
Originally posted by John Holding:
AS I understand Spawn, it's giving the benefits of marriages to civil unions that devalues marriage.
The obvious answer is to permit same-sex marriage.
That way the benefits of marriage are reserved to marriages and not diluted or debased by being given also to other relationships.
John
quote:I predict that here in the States anyway, after the Supreme Court does away with legal abortions there may be many babies in need of parents.
Simply put the answer is that you cannot conceive children within a marriage of people attracted to same sex-partners (do we need a human biology lesson here?)
quote:Let's protect children then and sanction same-sex marriage!
I meant to say that a loving couple who were married (ie in a more stable relationship, were a better choice for parenting than a loving and stable same sex couple.
quote:Are you serious? Do you think people marry, and stay married, because of tax breaks? That people will stay in a bad marriage as long as they get the tax breaks, and that they'll leave a good marriage if they don't?
Originally posted by Spawn:
If over a period of time those tax breaks are removed, other relationships and family arrangements are given exactly equal status, then it is likely that less people will choose marriage and more people will choose to leave marriages.
quote:She concludes that gay marriage will give gay partnerships an opportunity to prove their worth and thereby improve the quality of the argument.
Further no coherent case has yet been advanced as to how a couple of the same sex living together in a voluntary, permanent, faithful relationship in any way makes another couple's marriage more likely to break down. It is difficult to see how one couple's marriage undermines another couples' civil partnership, or vice versa. In fact the introduction of a marriage-like status for couples for whom traditional marriage is not an option is rather affirming of the status, rights and responsibilities of marriage. These are seen as such a good thing that more couples should have the opportunity of sharing in them.
quote:
What this Act does do, however, is challenge the a priori belief, held by some in the Church, that the social goods of marriage can be experienced and manifested only by heterosexual couples. Whether this belief is true is an empirical question. However, the evidence to determine whether or not same-sex partnerships can achieve the social goods of marriage will now be in the public domain.... Further, the fact of legal recognition of these relationships is likely to promote the general belief already widespread in society that gay partnerships can be just as stable, faithful, life-affirming, joyful and loving as heterosexual marriage can be. Therefore those in the Church who wish to maintain that homosexual partnerships are on scriptural or theological grounds a less good thing than marriage—or more bluntly that such relationships are sinful--will have to engage directly with this 'best' form of gay relationship.
quote:Seeing as a lot of married people in the US pay more in taxes than they would if they were single, so many in fact that it is known as "the marriage penalty," I think we can be sure that Spawn is completely wrong about this.
Originally posted by josephine:
quote:Are you serious? Do you think people marry, and stay married, because of tax breaks? That people will stay in a bad marriage as long as they get the tax breaks, and that they'll leave a good marriage if they don't?
Originally posted by Spawn:
If over a period of time those tax breaks are removed, other relationships and family arrangements are given exactly equal status, then it is likely that less people will choose marriage and more people will choose to leave marriages.
quote:It's claimed that DNA testing show that as many as a third of us are not in fact biologically the children of our legal fathers ... The origin of gametes seems to me to be a strawman, and a pretty understuffed one at that.
Originally posted by Spawn:
...Simply put the answer is that you cannot conceive children within a marriage of people attracted to same sex-partners ...
quote:[/QUOTE]
Originally posted by badman:
A canon lawyer who is also a specialist family law barrister has written an interesting article.
quote:Indeed it is. And its even more often claimed that 20%, 15%, 10% and 5% are. No-one knows really.
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
It's claimed that DNA testing show that as many as a third of us are not in fact biologically the children of our legal fathers ...
quote:I like living in Canada.
members of the force, also in their dress tunics, will form an honor guard at the wedding.
quote:According to the linked article, they will:
Originally posted by John Holding:
They may be planning to marry in uniform, but I'm not sure.
John
quote:Oh, I'd like to see Stephen Harper try to tell these boys they're not really married!
It is the first same-sex marriage within the RCMP. and the couple will wear the distinctive scarlet dress uniforms the force is known for worldwide the Chronicle Herald newspaper reports.
quote:Thanks for the link, the giant cheeseburger. I'd missed it. I don't think it is a signaling a "declining relevance of the RCC in the modern world." Have you been to Mexico? While I know that a number of Protestant groups (Pentecostalist and others) have increasing membership in Mexico, the RCC has great influence, relevance and cultural currency. The number of votives at churches near border crossings alone testifies to that fact. However, perhaps there is an increasing awarness that civic/state responsibilities and benefits should be separate from religious ones.
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
That's interesting MT, because a local congress in the second biggest "Catholic" nation in the world have just legalised the opposite. Could this be a symptom of the declining relevance of the RCC in the modern world?
quote:So, for example, if I were to say
Originally posted by MouseThief:
Quite simple, really. You must say something about gay marriage that nobody who doesn't already agree with you will agree with, or complain about something already said that you don't agree with and never will.
quote:That would be well within keeping of the rules of the game, as demonstrated thus far.
Originally posted by davelarge:
So, for example, if I were to say
"Well, it doesn't count as marriage unless it's between a man and a woman because that's what the bible says"
would count? Or is that just inflammatory?
quote:But of course we do, One for "us" and one for "them" (sorry, you weren't suggesting the same "one" were you?)
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
Why can't we have one standard of morality, one set of marriage rules, regardless of orientation? One standard for Bishops marrying, rather than a thrice-married Bishop causing minor fuss and another causing the Windsor Report?
quote:So what would happen if a legally married Canadian same-sex couple were to begin attending a church in Canada which did not formally bless same-sex relationships, but nevertheless, the couple expected to be treated as a couple? You know, one set of envelopes, one copy of the newsletter, being listed as a couple in the directory, that sort of thing. Would they be welcome at a marriage-enrichment course? Would it depend on the individual congregation or the local leadership? OliviaG
Originally posted by Henry Troup:
I was musing today about V. Gene Robinson, Jeffrey John, etc. I live in Canada, where same-sex marriage is the law of the land. And I'm an Anglican, which contextualizes the discussion.
quote:I would think so; but then, a lot does! After the mandated "Day of Dialog", I have a pretty clear idea of the spectrum of opinion in the parish I attend, and that it wouldn't be a huge deal there.
Originally posted by OliviaG:
...Would it depend on the individual congregation or the local leadership? OliviaG
quote:Just out of curiousity, did they go to another congregation or denomination? OliviaG
Originally posted by John Holding:
We're quite small, and the last same-sex married couple to be part of the congregation have now left, in despair at the delays in getting the national church to move.
quote:We are the only 'ones' too at our church. We have been at this church for 18 months and have had no problems nor did we have at our last church where we were both elders for a couple of years, at different times, though. We never flaunt it nor do we hide it, we have worn rings for the last 15 years of our 26 years of being 'together'. The minister is very supportive as is his wife and our elders. We have our suspicions that at least two couples in the church have gay sons but we don't dare ask, yet.
Originally posted by UKCanuck:
My partner and I are "the only gays in the village" at our parish church in South Wales. When we moved here from another very accepting parish in Essex 2½ years ago, we weren't sure what we would encounter.
It's one of the friendliest and most welcoming little village churches I've ever been in. We were accepted as a couple at face value without any question from day one.
quote:Not to another Anglican church, for obvious reasons -- their problem was not with us, but with the Anglican Church of Canada. They had specifically avoided the local "gay church" (which isn't, really, just the one that includes the "gay area") anyway, figuring that they wanted to be treated as people, not as gay people.
Originally posted by OliviaG:
quote:Just out of curiousity, did they go to another congregation or denomination? OliviaG
Originally posted by John Holding:
We're quite small, and the last same-sex married couple to be part of the congregation have now left, in despair at the delays in getting the national church to move.
quote:I have just finished spinning through my roladex and can affirm that I have comfortably queer practising Anglican friends in the dioceses of NS/PEI, Québec, Montréal, Ottawa, Ontario, Toronto, Huron, Rupertsland, Qu'Appelle, Edmonton, Kootenay, Athabasca, the Yukon, New Westminster and British Columbia; there are 14 other dioceses where I do not personally know what the situation is like on the ground. So I qualify my statement. Evidently, I know of no lesbians in Newfoundland, where I imagine there likely would be a large number.
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
What's this "nigh-universal in Anglicanism" thing you speak of? I don't think there's an Anglican church in Moncton (6) that could deal with an openly-gay couple (although don't ask don't tell would probably keep the lid on) and there are only two parishes in the diocese that openly state that they would accept such.
quote:Many of us are. But unlike bishops and the like, not many people are listening to us. And it would appear that most of the bishops people like to listen to don't think it a real enough danger: they'd rather talk about sex.
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
So why isn't the communion up in arms about the lay presidency issue in Sydney? Seems to me that's a far more obvious breach of canon.
I'm with Martin Luther King on this, I'm afraid. If you wait around for everyone to come to the party, you wait forever (well, that's rather a paraphrase of his fine words).
quote:Arabella, I'm intrigued, are you saying that the NZ Presbyterian Church has now clarified its position being anti towards gay ministers but in light of the financial penalties payable won't move on pushing out existing gay clergy?
There's doctrine now, but that happened after the fact (and still doesn't include existing gay ministers, who are free to be practising homosexuals because the church can't afford to pay out that many lifetime-loss-of-earnings payments following the employment law case that would be taken otherwise).
quote:Classic!
Originally posted by bradleys:
It had to come to this I suppose......!
quote:I am glad there are some sane people in Sydney.
Originally posted by bradleys:
It had to come to this I suppose......!
quote:
3 Eligibility
(1) Two people are not eligible to register as civil partners of each other if-
(a) they are not of the same sex,
(b) either of them is already a civil partner or lawfully married,
(c) either of them is under 16, or
(d) they are within prohibited degrees of relationship.
(2) Part 1 of Schedule 1 contains provisions for determining when two people are within prohibited degrees of relationship.
quote:Necessarily. Which doesn't provide any information as to whether any particular action is sinful. Now go and defend Gordo in Hell, there's a good boy.
Originally posted by Davy Wavy Morrison:
Is it still a sin to sin?
quote:Is marriage considered a sin now?
Originally posted by Davy Wavy Morrison:
Is it still a sin to sin?
quote:What's the distinction between civilly uniting, and getting married, for NZ hetero types?
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Certainly in NZ the two forms of partnership are considered equal. In NZ straight couples can civilly unite too, unlike in the UK, where it is only queer couples.
quote:hosting
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
quote:... Now go and defend Gordo in Hell, there's a good boy.
Originally posted by Davy Wavy Morrison:
Is it still a sin to sin?
quote:Legally none, as far as I can tell. I think, and this is only my understanding, heterosexual couples have opted for civil union because of an objection to the historically religious nature of marriage.
Originally posted by MouseThief:
quote:What's the distinction between civilly uniting, and getting married, for NZ hetero types?
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Certainly in NZ the two forms of partnership are considered equal. In NZ straight couples can civilly unite too, unlike in the UK, where it is only queer couples.
quote:Gotcha. Thanks!
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
Legally none, as far as I can tell. I think, and this is only my understanding, heterosexual couples have opted for civil union because of an objection to the historically religious nature of marriage.
quote:Is there a legal concept of annulment of a civil union, and if so is non-consumation a ground?
Originally posted by Arabella Purity Winterbottom:
...Legally none, as far as I can tell. ..
quote:I quite understand the idea that a CP is, in some ways, nothing like a marriage - clue's in the name, in fact. I understand that it is a legal way of tidying up matters that are more usually sorted out by marriage, thus a Good Thing for people who don't like, or aren't offered, church weddings.
Originally posted by leo:
There was also a strong desire for it not be be equated with 'marriage'. Sex didn't enter into it. That's why clergy in the C. of E. are allowed to enter into CPs.
However, later in the debate, spinster sisters and the like were dropped.
quote:Because that still leaves the issue of who gets to use the "M" word, or more accurately, who controls who gets to use the "M" word. You know, the old "I don't really care what they do, but don't call it marriage" argument. OliviaG
Originally posted by Archimandrite:
I don't understand why the state doesn't make all partnerships that any two consenting parties wish, for whatever reason, to contract, equal within the law, with one legal form covering everything from spinster sisters to Nuptial High Mass, and leave the religious element to decide what it does and doesn't want to bless.
quote:I understood that another facet of this was that "consumation" is a specifically heterosexual concept. I believe the legal definition revolves around the penetration of a vagina with a penis. Therefore, it's not applicable to CP's.
Originally posted by leo:
No, non-consummation is not a grounds - in the UK.
quote:and later
The divorce rate among Evangelicals,... has been as high or higher than the national average.
quote:So, how is remarriage after divorce, where Jesus says every sexual act is a sin (adultery) different from same-sex marriage, if you hold that same-sex acts are sinful?
a "majority" probably accept remarriage
quote:True.
Originally posted by cqg:
quote:I understood that another facet of this was that "consumation" is a specifically heterosexual concept. I believe the legal definition revolves around the penetration of a vagina with a penis. Therefore, it's not applicable to CP's.
Originally posted by leo:
No, non-consummation is not a grounds - in the UK.
quote:Exactly the same (in Canada) as same-sex marriage - they can refuse to permit it as a church marriage. And indeed, they have only social sanctions against those who proceed civilly.
Originally posted by mirrizin:
A church could very well not permit remarriage, but what enforcement power does it really have?
quote:(Expanding on mousethief's thought]
Originally posted by mousethief:
And yet, not to stray into dead horses territory, some percent of those people who think marriage is irrelevant are nevertheless against gays getting married. It's a strange phenomenon.
quote:Actually I get that. I don't want to join the armed forces, but I support the rights of women and gay people to do so. Why should a dim view of marriage (if I had it) prevent me from believing that people should get to choose it if they want it?
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
Not as strange as those who believe it is obsolete and irrelevant working so hard for gays and lesbians to legally participate in an obsolete institution.
quote:Andrew Sullivan and Jonathan Rauch were, apparently right: they've argued for years that this would be the end result of enacting civil unions instead of marriage for gay couples....
When France created its system of civil unions in 1999, it was heralded as a revolution in gay rights, a relationship almost like marriage, but not quite. No one, though, anticipated how many couples would make use of the new law. Nor was it predicted that by 2009, the overwhelming majority of civil unions would be between straight couples.
It remains unclear whether the idea of a civil union, called a pacte civil de solidarité, or PACS, has responded to a shift in social attitudes or caused one. But it has proved remarkably well suited to France and its particularities about marriage, divorce, religion and taxes — and it can be dissolved with just a registered letter.
“We’re the generation of divorced parents,” explained Maud Hugot, 32, an aide at the Health Ministry who signed a PACS with her girlfriend, Nathalie Mondot, 33, this year. Expressing a view that researchers say is becoming commonplace among same-sex couples and heterosexuals alike, she added, “The notion of eternal marriage has grown obsolete.”
quote:I think its just underlined the fact that marriage in a secular context is really just a (temporary) legal contract that two people enter into i.e. no different from a civil partnership. The name is fairly irrelevant. IMO conservative Christians should just treat all secular marriages as 'civil partnerships' and stop fussing about labels.
The institution created so that gays and lesbians wouldn't "dilute" the specialness of the heterosexuals-only thing called marriage is making "marriage" less popular.
The irony is delicious.
quote:Not really.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
Now it is illegal to not perform gay marriages.
Link here.
quote:Well, yes. Exactly. You make a good point on how this will be distorted.
Originally posted by John Holding:
quote:Not really.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
Now it is illegal to not perform gay marriages.
Link here.
It's illegal to not perform gay marriages if you are paid by the government to perform civil marriages for those legally entitled to them, which includes same-sex couples.
It's still legal for churches to discriminate against same sex couples by refusing to perform their marriages.
John
quote:In short, sharkshooter is apparently appalled that someone can be fired for not doing their job.
Originally posted by John Holding:
quote:Not really.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
Now it is illegal to not perform gay marriages.
Link here.
It's illegal to not perform gay marriages if you are paid by the government to perform civil marriages for those legally entitled to them, which includes same-sex couples.
It's still legal for churches to discriminate against same sex couples by refusing to perform their marriages.
John
quote:I said nothing of the sort.
Originally posted by Crœsos:
...In short, sharkshooter is apparently appalled that someone can be fired for not doing their job.
...
quote:And I guess that's what we have to do if the law changes so we can no longer, in good conscience, do everything that is now required. Sharkshooter, I don't think my conscience would direct me in the same way as yours but I hope I'd take your approach in situations where my conscience did prompt me.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:I said nothing of the sort.
Originally posted by Crœsos:
...In short, sharkshooter is apparently appalled that someone can be fired for not doing their job.
...
If I were in that position, I would have already resigned my position, knowing that I could no longer fulfil the requirements of the job.
quote:And commissioners who took the job in Virginia (or in any other state) before Loving v. Virginia were in that same position, too.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
The difference is, those other classes of couples were legally entitled to be married when the job of commissioner was taken vis-a-vis gay couples were not so legally entitled.
Therefore, we have a contrast between someone who took the job knowing they could not perform it vs someone for whom the terms and conditions of the job changed such that they could no longer perform the job. The situations are not the same, or even similar.
quote:Normally some kind of grandfathering or accomodation is made when this kind of thing happens, especially in the government, where policy can change like the wind. But like I said, I don't expect that will happen.
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
But surely anyone who accepts a job understands that corporate/government policy may change. ...
quote:On "The National" last night they said that the court left open an option where the province could create a secondary body where non-gay accommodating marriage commissioners could be assigned the non-gay "overflow" from gay accommodating marriage commissioners. They didn't go into specifics, nor it they say whether the province would create such a body.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Normally some kind of grandfathering or accomodation is made when this kind of thing happens, especially in the government, where policy can change like the wind. But like I said, I don't expect that will happen.
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
But surely anyone who accepts a job understands that corporate/government policy may change. ...
quote:But normally when new laws are announced, don't they only take effect some time later anyway? If that was the case with this particular law then there is already an accommodation period.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Normally some kind of grandfathering or accomodation is made when this kind of thing happens, especially in the government, where policy can change like the wind. But like I said, I don't expect that will happen.
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
But surely anyone who accepts a job understands that corporate/government policy may change. ...
quote:"Eventually" can be a long time if it's approximately the length of a civil service career. To pick a similar historical example, the U.S. Army would have had to maintain racially segregated units until the eighties to accommodate racists who signed up before the military was desegregated in 1948.
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
Eventually, all the dissenters would cycle out of the system.
quote:Thus joining a long list of people who have had their jobs reclassified or rendered redundant for all sorts of reasons - organization restructure, hostile takeover, technological change, etc. C'est la vie. Anyone know how the buggy-whip-makers' class-action suit against Henry Ford is going? OliviaG
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
... Therefore, we have a contrast between someone who took the job knowing they could not perform it vs someone for whom the terms and conditions of the job changed such that they could no longer perform the job. The situations are not the same, or even similar.
quote:Doesn't happen for anyone else when their job description changes. They'll either deal or find a new line of work.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Normally some kind of grandfathering or accomodation is made when this kind of thing happens, especially in the government, where policy can change like the wind. But like I said, I don't expect that will happen.
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
But surely anyone who accepts a job understands that corporate/government policy may change. ...
quote:I'm not sure that's correct, at least under UK Employment Law, which is not I have to admit my area of specialism (except that I am a lawyer who also happens to be an employer); there is at least a general principle that an employer cannot unilaterally (ie: without the agreement of the employee) vary the terms and conditions of that employee's contract of employment, unless it is to comply with a change in the law. It's that last phrase that's open to interpretation, I guess. It's pretty clear-cut in some instances eg: law changes to require all construction workers to wear hard-hats = all building companies have to enforce this change by effectively varying the T&Cs for their employees. The Civil Partnership Act may be different in its effect, however: it requires public bodies such as Registry Offices to perform civil ceremonies for same-sex couples but it doesn't necessarily flow from this that Registry Offices are able to consequently unilaterally vary the T&Cs for an employee, particularly not if there are other employees willing to have their T&Cs thus varied. Dunno.
Originally posted by Niteowl2:
quote:Doesn't happen for anyone else when their job description changes. They'll either deal or find a new line of work.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Normally some kind of grandfathering or accomodation is made when this kind of thing happens, especially in the government, where policy can change like the wind. But like I said, I don't expect that will happen.
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
But surely anyone who accepts a job understands that corporate/government policy may change. ...
quote:Again, though, the employee has to be willing to sign the new contract, otherwise s/he is unfairly dismissed and entitled to compensation. Of course, such employees may be under considerable commercial/financial/moral pressure to sign but they are not legally obliged to do so; they cold refuse, be dismissed and then take the employer to an Industrial Tribunal for unfair dismissal.
Originally posted by tomsk:
Changes to contracts can be brought about by dismissing an employee and re-engaging them on a new contract. I think this is mainly used for wholesale restructures of organisations and to worsen (sorry modernise) terms and conditions. There are lots of places with different levels of benefits etc for different employees.
quote:Can I insist a kosher butcher sell me a a pork chop? Can I insist a Jewish deli serve me a ham and cheese sandwich, or a Jewish restaurant serve me a steak with a glass of milk? Can I insist a variety store run by a conservative evangelical Christian sell me a porn magazine?
Originally posted by Niteowl2:
There have been court cases here in the U.S. over pharmacists right to refuse filling birth control scripts for religious reasons. ...
quote:Not exactly. The law allows, but does not require, him to perform a same-sex marriage. It is his employer that is now requiring him to do it. It is therefore about employment law, not marriage law.
Originally posted by John Holding:
..., this is about whether a paid agent of government is allowed to refuse to carry out the law.
...
quote:It should be noted that, unlike all the other examples you cited, pharmacists have what is essentially a government-mandated monopoly on the distribution of certain drugs, placing them outside a strictly free-market setting where they can carry or not carry whatever products they like.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Can I insist a kosher butcher sell me a a pork chop? Can I insist a Jewish deli serve me a ham and cheese sandwich, or a Jewish restaurant serve me a steak with a glass of milk? Can I insist a variety store run by a conservative evangelical Christian sell me a porn magazine?
Originally posted by Niteowl2:
There have been court cases here in the U.S. over pharmacists right to refuse filling birth control scripts for religious reasons. ...
In all cases (the ones mentioned here and other similar cases), should the "rights" of the purchaser trump the "rights" of the seller to not sell something in opposition to their religious beliefs?
Obviously, in some cases yes, in others no, according to the law.
That is my issue.
quote:Marriage commissioners do not have a monopoly on performing marriages.
Originally posted by Crœsos:
... pharmacists have what is essentially a government-mandated monopoly on the distribution of certain drugs, placing them outside a strictly free-market setting where they can carry or not carry whatever products they like.
quote:That is exactly what I said.
Originally posted by Leaf:
... If they feel compelled by religious conscience to deny some of those citizens their civil rights, they are by all means free to quit and retrain.
...
quote:Because they took the king`s shilling and thereby agreed to the king`s terms, even when they change.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
... why, when there are other commissioners and clergy willing to perform the marriage, must some who are not willing be forced to do so?
quote:Because some people want people who disagree with them to lose their jobs.
Originally posted by Leaf:
quote:Because they took the king`s shilling and thereby agreed to the king`s terms, even when they change.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
... why, when there are other commissioners and clergy willing to perform the marriage, must some who are not willing be forced to do so?
quote:They can disagree all they want, as long as they do their jobs.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Because some people want people who disagree with them to lose their jobs.
Originally posted by Leaf:
quote:Because they took the king`s shilling and thereby agreed to the king`s terms, even when they change.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
... why, when there are other commissioners and clergy willing to perform the marriage, must some who are not willing be forced to do so?
quote:Suppose you lived in a country where a religious caste system was a big problem - leading not just to employment discrimination but also sometimes to much worse: assaults and murders against untouchables eg. if an untouchable was thought to be dating someone from a higher caste. The government decides to tackle this injustice across the board, and makes it illegal to discriminate against people on grounds of caste. Despite this, the upper caste employees demand to be accommodated, somebody else should have to deal with those nasty untouchables so they don't sully their dainty little hands and consciences.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
... why, when there are other commissioners and clergy willing to perform the marriage, must some who are not willing be forced to do so?
quote:Yes: they are called "voters" and "politicians".
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
Because some people want people who disagree with them to lose their jobs.
quote:It's not a disagreement. It's the law. The law says "no discrimination". Their job is to carry out the law.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Because some people want people who disagree with them to lose their jobs.
Originally posted by Leaf:
quote:Because they took the king`s shilling and thereby agreed to the king`s terms, even when they change.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
... why, when there are other commissioners and clergy willing to perform the marriage, must some who are not willing be forced to do so?
quote:I'm sorry, but there is no continuum here at all. They are completely different categories, one being what you sell, the other being who you sell things to.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Indeed, there is evidently a continuum from "should a white supremacist refuse to serve a black man" (no) to "should a Muslim butcher refuse to sell pork" (yes), with the example under discussion here falling somewhere between the two and being complicated somewhat by the fact that these are state rather than privately-owned organisations we are talking about.
quote:What about changes to your pay and pension?
Originally posted by mousethief:
If you get a job with the government thinking, "the law will never change in such a way as that I may have to do something I disagree with at some point" you're probably too stupid to be working for the government at all.
quote:Sorry for coming in to this a little bit late, but the registrar in question lost the case (on appeal I think) because her contract of employment with the council had an anti-discrimination clause.
Originally posted by tomsk:
Sharkshooter, I don't know if you've seen this but the case of Ladelle v Islington involved a Christian registrar trying to opt out of conducting civil partnerships (the closest thing Brits have to gay marriage) (this seems to be what Canada may do). Islington sacked her. She claimed religious discrimination. Islington had an equal opportunities policy which it wanted everyone to uphold. The court decided the requirement put her at a disadvantage as a Christian, but was a legitimate objective to require staff to comply. This was a case where the law had changed by the introduction of civil partnerships. I'm not sure how that was dealt with vis-a-vis contracts of employment but it appears she was simply required to do the work as she was a registrar and the Council was required to register civil partnerships. i wouldn't be surprised if her job was to 'carry out civil registration duties in accordance with the law'.
quote:*hollow laughter*
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:What about changes to your pay and pension?
Originally posted by mousethief:
If you get a job with the government thinking, "the law will never change in such a way as that I may have to do something I disagree with at some point" you're probably too stupid to be working for the government at all.
P-C - point taken.
quote:What about them?
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:What about changes to your pay and pension?
Originally posted by mousethief:
If you get a job with the government thinking, "the law will never change in such a way as that I may have to do something I disagree with at some point" you're probably too stupid to be working for the government at all.
quote:Notwithstanding what Think2 says (which I am surprised at), the employment advice we have always been given as business owners is that employers cannot unilaterally alter core T&Cs such as pay and pension conditions without the employees' consent.
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:What about them?
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:What about changes to your pay and pension?
Originally posted by mousethief:
If you get a job with the government thinking, "the law will never change in such a way as that I may have to do something I disagree with at some point" you're probably too stupid to be working for the government at all.
quote:That's not anything like what I've experienced in the US, where the employer calls all the shots and whatever they give you, you say "thank you" and be glad for that. Unless you're in a union.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Notwithstanding what Think2 says (which I am surprised at), the employment advice we have always been given as business owners is that employers cannot unilaterally alter core T&Cs such as pay and pension conditions without the employees' consent.
quote:I'm guessing that "consent," for US purposes, consists of little more than the employer telling the peon that they just got a paycut, rather than waiting for them to find it in their next lower paycheck. i.e. notice so they can quit prior to implementation of new policy.
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:That's not anything like what I've experienced in the US, where the employer calls all the shots and whatever they give you, you say "thank you" and be glad for that. Unless you're in a union.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Notwithstanding what Think2 says (which I am surprised at), the employment advice we have always been given as business owners is that employers cannot unilaterally alter core T&Cs such as pay and pension conditions without the employees' consent.
quote:What's that?
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Don't you have contracts of employment in the US?
quote:Yes, but they cover the minority of employed people. Maybe 10% if I had to take a guess.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Don't you have contracts of employment in the US?
quote:The difference is this:
Originally posted by Nicolemrw:
Sharkshooter, there was quite recently a case here in the US, down south somewhere, of a Justice of the Peace who, quite illegally, refused to marry interracial couples. He felt it was immoral for the races to mix that way, and that the children that would result from mixing races would be at a disadvantage.
Should he have been allowed to continue to do this?
If your answer is no, what's the difference between this and the case under discussion?
quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
There is no more difference between a white man and a black man than there is between a tall man and a short man. That is to say, the difference is in appearance only.
quote:I've pretty much responded to this on another Dead Horses thread. So this is just a cross-reference.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:The difference is this:
Originally posted by Nicolemrw:
Sharkshooter, there was quite recently a case here in the US, down south somewhere, of a Justice of the Peace who, quite illegally, refused to marry interracial couples. He felt it was immoral for the races to mix that way, and that the children that would result from mixing races would be at a disadvantage.
Should he have been allowed to continue to do this?
If your answer is no, what's the difference between this and the case under discussion?
There is no more difference between a white man and a black man than there is between a tall man and a short man. That is to say, the difference is in appearance only.
That is not the case with the difference between a man and a woman. I am not suggesting that a man is better than a woman, or visa versa, but simply that they are different. Significantly different.
So, for a black man to marry a woman, white or black is irrelevant. Whereas, for a man to marry, the gender of the partner is relevant.
(I am actually amazed that you think skin colour differentiates between people as much as gender does. This idea had never crossed my mind before, and I just realized it is the basis for much of the arguments.)
So, in case it is not obvious, in the situation you proposed, to refuse to perform the marriage of a black man to a white woman is different, and would be unacceptable.
quote:Surely it's a matter of biological fact rather than an individual's opinion as to whether one person is 'different' from another?
Originally posted by Josephine:
quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
There is no more difference between a white man and a black man than there is between a tall man and a short man. That is to say, the difference is in appearance only.
But that JP that refused to perform the marriage disagreed with you. He considered black folks and white folks to be different kinds of folks -- so different that it was immoral, and a violation of God's will and God's law, for them to marry each other.
So the question is, does each person authorized to perform marriages for the state get to decide for themselves when people are pretty much the same, and when they are different kinds of people, and whether different kinds of people should be allowed to marry?
It seems like you're saying, "My opinion is the one that is True and Correct. If they believe like I do, then they should be able to follow their conscience. If they disagree with me, they're wrong, and should do what the law requires." But I can't imagine that's what you meant. So help me understand....
quote:However, it's a matter of opinion whether the difference is a relevant one or not.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Surely it's a matter of biological fact rather than an individual's opinion as to whether one person is 'different' from another?
quote:Which begs the question as to why a differing genital configuration is relevant to legal marriage whereas melanin concentration or blood type are not. If the argument is made that marriage law should reflect these differences between men and women, does that mean the law should treat husbands and wives differently? A hierarchical gender structure within marriage is certainly Biblical in origins, but modern marriage law has largely moved away from this position in most Western nations.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
...and, indeed, in what circumstances the difference may or may not be relevant. I was responding though to Josephine's skin colour analogy which, as a matter of biological fact, is significantly different from the differences between men and women.
quote:That men and women are different is a fact. That black skin and white skin are different is a fact. That the difference between men and women is a different difference than the diffence between blacks and whites is a fact.
Originally posted by Matt Black:
...and, indeed, in what circumstances the difference may or may not be relevant. I was responding though to Josephine's skin colour analogy which, as a matter of biological fact, is significantly different from the differences between men and women.
quote:1. All of the differences listed above -- melanin concentration, stature, genital configuration -- are biological, at least in terms of the individuals' genetic make-up. All result in differences of appearance.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
There is no more difference between a white man and a black man than there is between a tall man and a short man. That is to say, the difference is in appearance only.
That is not the case with the difference between a man and a woman. I am not suggesting that a man is better than a woman, or visa versa, but simply that they are different. Significantly different.
So, for a black man to marry a woman, white or black is irrelevant. Whereas, for a man to marry, the gender of the partner is relevant.
(I am actually amazed that you think skin colour differentiates between people as much as gender does. This idea had never crossed my mind before, and I just realized it is the basis for much of the arguments.)
So, in case it is not obvious, in the situation you proposed, to refuse to perform the marriage of a black man to a white woman is different, and would be unacceptable.
quote:Back in the 80s, when I was training for ordination, I did an elective on discrimination and prejudice. A group of black students, from a Pentecostal training college, joined us one day to talk about their experiences. I remember asking the women present about gender discrimation; they replied they weren't aware of it at all, in relation to the mass of race discrimation they lived with every day. One anecdote does not make a case, but I've often wondered about that reply.
I am actually amazed that you think skin colour differentiates between people as much as gender does. This idea had never crossed my mind before, and I just realized it is the basis for much of the arguments.
quote:Actually the conversation is about sharkshooter's apparent horror that civil servants aren't allowed to import their religious doctrine into the performance (or, in this case nonperformance) of their duties. No one is suggesting that religious institutions be forced to perform marriages they object to on religious grounds, except for those religions that don't want to admit their position on this issue is based in bigotry and want a high-sounding justification like "freedom of religion" to hide behind in their efforts to tinker with civil law.
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Well, there's a reason it's called Dead Horses. I don't know if it's any consolation to Sharkshooter, but I half-agree with him.
I think that we have been engaged in two different conversations. One has to do with civil actions, where discrimination of any sort needs solid justification (e.g., for civil marriages, most accept that 7-year old children may not contract them; this would be acceptable discrimination to pretty well everyone).
The other has to do with religious actions, where other rules of justification can apply-- as I mentioned before, some churches would not allow divorcé/es with living spouses to marry, or the unbaptized with the baptized. While we might not like these judgements, churches may make them, and their adherents comply or take their business elsewhere. A man who wishes to marry another man in an Orthodox church either stays unmarried, or goes elsewhere.
It happens that most north Americans do not see a difference between ecclesiastical and civil marriages as, for most of our history, the officiants were the same. For most Europeans, the two ceremonies are separate; the ecclesiastical one has no civil relevance, and normally follows after the visit to the city hall/ mairie/ ayuntamiento for the legal ceremony.
quote:Bingo. In fact, your assumptions about the ontological significance of sex are not universally shared, and in fact contradict current scientific thinking about the line between male and female. As your "Aha!" moment vividly illustrates, if you're going to win people to your way of thinking, you have to be able to make your case to people who don't already agree with you. In this case, people who don't have a prior belief that male != female but are dichotomously separate and exclusive are not going to see same-sex marriage as a "change" (when Lynn on the other thread spoke of wanting to retain Jesus' teaching on marriage my thought was well, duh) and so any argument against such a "change" is bound to fall on deaf ears.
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
(I am actually amazed that you think skin colour differentiates between people as much as gender does. This idea had never crossed my mind before, and I just realized it is the basis for much of the arguments.)
quote:To bring it onto this thread as requested by Louise:
Originally posted by Lynn MagdalenCollege:
So when the law changes in a way that has a bearing on their faith or some other personal element, that's their problem and there is no recourse but to resign? Okay.