Mr.Razorblades
New member
Who do you think gave the Law to Moses?
Moses, or maybe some beggars he overheard.
Who do you think gave the Law to Moses?
Many responses, such as your own, are symptomatic of an isolation of God from part of man's life, which is very problematic for Christians who claim to hold Dominus Deus, that Christ is the Lord of their life and the God of all. It is a sequestering of God and it is unBiblical and unChristian.
(spoken to Christians: ) You don't agree to disagree on abortion or murder, so why do you agree to disagree on the sanctity of marriage?
:e4e:
What do you mean in by in favor? I ask because I wasn't ambiguous about contract, which is what marriage amounts to so far as the state has any control and authority. So you must mean something else by it. I'm in favor of the government not interfering with contract absent the set outs I noted. Else it's like asking a vegetarian if he's in favor of someone else enjoying a steak. Just not applicable as descriptives go, unless you ask the sort who think they have a right to enforce inequity within the compact. That wouldn't be me.so are you in favor of same sex marriage?
When God revealed to us that man is made for women and women for man and that they are joined to be one flesh (as is quite obvious even to non-Christians historically), was there a disclaimer? Marriage is merely the consequence of that eternal truth, there is no such thing as a neatly separated "civil marriage" and "sacred covenant marriage." Marriage is merely a reflection of that eternal truth, which holds everywhere.
:e4e:
I do not agree. Europe and US are secular pluralistic societies, the opinions of any church or any other religion have no special influence on the laws in such a society, nor should they.
I suspect I do hold to a more liberal conception of Christianity and the Bible than you do. I think those texts can be questioned and that Christianity can change and I don't necessarily think that a changing Christianity is something new, it has changed in many ways many times. Even the sacred texts change, there is progression of thought within scripture itself.
Abortion and murder can be argued against on a secular basis.
In the end the question is not whether the churches or other religions should marry homosexuals, but whether the secular state that represents a pluralistic secular society can do it.
:e4e:
Moses, or maybe some beggars he overheard.
Natural Law doesn't have to require any more of a "guiding hand" than evolution does. Some believe God writes these instincts on some creature's heart and others see as a behavioural precept we figure out through reason. If you believe the latter, than you probably have no problem with same sex-marriage .
the purpose of marriage is to protect the child
and
the mother who takes care of it
There are tens of thousands of people all over the world whose definition of marriage comes from their Holy Scriptures, scriptures other than ours. Many people have very broad ideas about what constitutes a marriage commitment.
It is not my place to tell them that mine is the only valid definition.
I am a rather conservative christian person, married for almost 53 years to one person. This worked for me. I have five children, four of whom have been divorced. I hate divorce but I love my children.
What do you mean in by in favor? I ask because I wasn't ambiguous about contract, which is what marriage amounts to so far as the state has any control and authority. So you must mean something else by it. I'm in favor of the government not interfering with contract absent the set outs I noted. Else it's like asking a vegetarian if he's in favor of someone else enjoying a steak. Just not applicable as descriptives go, unless you ask the sort who think they have a right to enforce inequity within the compact. That wouldn't be me.
I wasn't asking you. I was asking someone who chooses to call himself a Christian.
I was just stating it because it's irrelevant who he heard it from. Natural law is a fairy tale.
I wasn't asking you. I was asking someone who chooses to call himself a Christian.
I wasn't asking you. I was asking someone who chooses to call himself a Christian.
It was to legislate the exchange of lands and familial partnerships in the early Church, 1600s - 500s. Who are you trying to kid? Marriage was and always will be a contract between two people. PERIOD. An offer is made, payment is made. Man made the offer, woman accepted woman received ring.
Just like I offer you a Tshirt that has Dirk Novitski's head shot on a dollar bill, and below it 3 quarters with Lebraun James head shot on them. You offer me $50USD, I accept and give you the shirt. That is a legal contract.
Gay marriage in no way would interfere with a sanctified marriage in the eyes of God. Which, btw, I don't find in scripture anywhere. :|
What the govt makes legal, doesn't affect what God sees as sanctified.
So it's NOT a real issue, it's just an excuse to show hate mongering, NOT serve someone, and other anti-christian acts.
Some of the folks in here, may enjoy the philosophy at www.godhatesfags.com its a well known Xian site on the topic. :|
It isn't, and you believe in natural law yourself. Gotta run, be back later :wave2:
It isn't, and you believe in natural law yourself. Gotta run, be back later :wave2:
I agree with every bit of that except the last sentence. :e4e:
why should two people who choose to live together get any more benefits then the mother of two children who is now living alone because without knowing it she married a homosexual
zippy2006 said:But the opinions of the constituents do and should, which is the point. It's also unfortunate that you consider God's Word opinion.
I disagree and I consider it problematic that someone could go through seminary and come out thinking that homosexuality is fine and dandy.
Incidentally, so can the corruption of marriage. That is precisely why marriage has remained pure for our entire history. God's command is just common sense.
But let's be honest, people can give perfectly logical rebuttals of your arguments against murder and abortion. Morality doesn't map perfectly to logicality. Every moral judgment enforced by the law is precisely what you claim can't exist because of SoCaS. You think general moral intuition is a sound basis for law, but not religion? It falls apart all over.
In the end it is a vote and we hope those voting for the moral option outweigh the others. The same goes for murder and abortion. The problem here is that you seem to be voting for the immoral option for some very odd reason.