Re: Gay Marriage
Not sure if I agree with you on this one or not. I believe you should have as much freedom as you want, so long as it doesn't interfere with anyone else's freedom, and you are accountable for the consequences of your decisions.
If you want to live a homosexual lifestyle that's between you and God, you should be free to do so according to the above terms. Don't expect special treatment for it.
You should be free to express your opinion that this is how you were meant to be, acknowledging it is your your opinion and not everyone will agree with you, and accepting that there are people who have differing opinions.
However, I should also be free to express my opinion that I believe your lifestyle is decidedly unbiblical, morally wrong, and even flies in the face of Darwinism (if you believe in that sort of thing, and I don't). I also accept there are those who will not agree with my opinion. I will note here that I have several Gay friends and relatives, they know my opinion, but they also know I accept them as friends despite my disagreement with their lifestyle. We have interesting discussions about it and remain friends.
Where I do get highly disturbed is when some homosexual activist believes he/she/it has the right to forcibly alter over 6000 years of biblical teachings. Marriage is an institution of the church, not of the government, and to think that you can undermine the teachings of a church you have no desire to be part of simply to feel justified in your immoral lifestyle stretches beyond the limits of freedom. What about the freedom of the church?
If you want to shack up with your "domestic partner" go for it. Call it whatever you want, but don't call it a marriage. It's not.
And by the same token, it's not okay for homosexuals to be stoned to death. Stoning was also the biblical penalty for adultery, and Jesus himself faced down a mob intent on killing an adulterous woman - He never spoke a word to the mob, and we can only imagine what he scribbled in the sand, but even the woman was told to go in peace and sin no more.
Not sure if I agree with you on this one or not. I believe you should have as much freedom as you want, so long as it doesn't interfere with anyone else's freedom, and you are accountable for the consequences of your decisions.
If you want to live a homosexual lifestyle that's between you and God, you should be free to do so according to the above terms. Don't expect special treatment for it.
You should be free to express your opinion that this is how you were meant to be, acknowledging it is your your opinion and not everyone will agree with you, and accepting that there are people who have differing opinions.
However, I should also be free to express my opinion that I believe your lifestyle is decidedly unbiblical, morally wrong, and even flies in the face of Darwinism (if you believe in that sort of thing, and I don't). I also accept there are those who will not agree with my opinion. I will note here that I have several Gay friends and relatives, they know my opinion, but they also know I accept them as friends despite my disagreement with their lifestyle. We have interesting discussions about it and remain friends.
Where I do get highly disturbed is when some homosexual activist believes he/she/it has the right to forcibly alter over 6000 years of biblical teachings. Marriage is an institution of the church, not of the government, and to think that you can undermine the teachings of a church you have no desire to be part of simply to feel justified in your immoral lifestyle stretches beyond the limits of freedom. What about the freedom of the church?
If you want to shack up with your "domestic partner" go for it. Call it whatever you want, but don't call it a marriage. It's not.
And by the same token, it's not okay for homosexuals to be stoned to death. Stoning was also the biblical penalty for adultery, and Jesus himself faced down a mob intent on killing an adulterous woman - He never spoke a word to the mob, and we can only imagine what he scribbled in the sand, but even the woman was told to go in peace and sin no more.
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