- Jan 29, 2010
- 21,000
- 5,140
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Catholic
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Democrat
In the US, the situation with regard to SSM is similar to that of inter-racial marriage 70 years ago. More and more states will accept until the vast majority have done so. At that point, the Supreme Court will declare that the right to marry cannot be denied to SSM by the states. The changes in the past 10 years have been dramatic, but it will take a generation for the politics to change in a significant number of red states.
Many will speak out against it as being disruptive to society and an abomination to all people and to God. They will be aghast as seeing a homosexual couple holding hands or kissing in the park as they were with regard to interracial couples 70 years ago. They will continue to fight against secular rights for those with whom they disagree, many of which have been married in Christian churches.
None of this needs to change the definition of marriage in various Christian churches. The Church does not need to change because society changes. The Church may very well state that it is maintaining the same requirements for marriage as it always has and that they will not change. And, of course, we know that this is all nonsense. The attitudes toward divorce and remarriage has changed. The attitudes toward inter-racial marriage have changed (note that Anglicans was relatively early in changing this). Even the attitudes toward fornication have changed. To suggest that the Church has not changed its attitudes or definitions for centuries is disingenuous at best.
We must understand what we have done. WE have decided to take on kind of sin and make it paramount in our ideas of Church, even splitting Churches over the definition of marriage. And we have pushed homosexuals further and further from Orthodox Christianity.
May God have Mercy on us all!
Many will speak out against it as being disruptive to society and an abomination to all people and to God. They will be aghast as seeing a homosexual couple holding hands or kissing in the park as they were with regard to interracial couples 70 years ago. They will continue to fight against secular rights for those with whom they disagree, many of which have been married in Christian churches.
None of this needs to change the definition of marriage in various Christian churches. The Church does not need to change because society changes. The Church may very well state that it is maintaining the same requirements for marriage as it always has and that they will not change. And, of course, we know that this is all nonsense. The attitudes toward divorce and remarriage has changed. The attitudes toward inter-racial marriage have changed (note that Anglicans was relatively early in changing this). Even the attitudes toward fornication have changed. To suggest that the Church has not changed its attitudes or definitions for centuries is disingenuous at best.
We must understand what we have done. WE have decided to take on kind of sin and make it paramount in our ideas of Church, even splitting Churches over the definition of marriage. And we have pushed homosexuals further and further from Orthodox Christianity.
May God have Mercy on us all!
I'd be cautious about that conclusion. There are areas that are seeing the advance of homosexual relationships as a threat to their social order and so are reacting against it. Also, although there are more states and nations that will probably legalize it in the near future, there are also those that are unlikely to do so. IOW, some growth can be expected, but not a clean sweep by any means.
Not in TEC. It is too committed already to stop at anything short of what the gay lobby wants.
But in other churches, sure. What the government decrees is not in any way what the church is obligated to consider moral. Historically, the churches have often opposed government policy, so this wouldn't be any different.
Upvote
0