Gee, I'm a Catholic!
I'll have to start calling myself an atheist agnostic pantheist Unitarian Buddhist Jewish Catholic now.
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A person who is baptized in the Catholic Church becomes a Catholic at that moment. One’s initiation is deepened by confirmation and the Eucharist, but one becomes a Catholic at baptism. This is true for children who are baptized Catholic (and receive the other two sacraments later) and for adults who are baptized, confirmed, and receive the Eucharist at the same time.
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It also worked in the 1950's and 60's with the Civil Rights movement. I don't suppose you looked up those quotes I posted earlier?I think that is what you should do for political expediency. You're trying to overturn thousands of years of tradition, and you're demanding it in one fell swoop. That's bad tactics.
In fact, it's such bad tactics, that I think your motives have to be questioned. In my opinion, what matters is the protection of people's interests. If you passed legislation that guaranteed homosexuals the ability to share property, and the ability to adopt children, and the ability create power of attorney, etc. etc. it wouldn't matter whether you called it "marriage" or "civil union" or if you passed 87 individual pieces of legislation that coincidentally protected the interests of all those people, even without creating anything that was separate or equal or whatever. The point is that there are a lot of different ways to accomplish what is truly necessary. If this is all about rights, then the terms used to describe it wouldn't matter.
However, if you passed those 87 pieces of enabling legislation, there is one thing you wouldn't accomplish. You wouldn't destroy the legal concept that there is something unique about the relationship between a man and a woman. I think you find it important to destroy that concept, not because of any rights withheld as a consequence, but becuase it's a concept you truly dislike. It seems likely that you dislike the concept because of its religious associations.
I advocate same sex marriages, with reluctance, because people like Scot are living under the same conditions that married couples have lived in. As a consequence, they need the same protections that married couples have enjoyed. For example, they need to know that if one of them makes a decision that hurts himself economically, but helps the family, he won't have to worry that the other will end the union and leave him with nothing.
Of course, if your view of marriage prevails, that won't work for him, because his partner would have no legal obligations. As with my 40 year old friend, if one partner decides after half a lifetime together that he wants out, it;s "Tough cookies. Get over it" for the other.
If the choice for civil unions presented itself, I'd vote for that. If a legislative solution presented itself with no name, I'd vote for that. I don't think justice and equality are the same thing, so neither one is more "just" than the other. Meanwhile, I want something that would protect my forty year old friend from what happened to her. Right now, it seems to me that covenant marriage is the best hope for that, so of all the proposals on the table, that's the one I currently favor.
It also worked in the 1950's and 60's with the Civil Rights movement. I don't suppose you looked up those quotes I posted earlier?
So, that is different than my summarization:
Am I correct in my assessment that you are in favor of same sex marriage, but it is your opinion that instead of advocating same sex marriage, we should instead not work towards same sex marriage but rather a "seperate but equal" system? You want to take this tact not because such a system is just, but because it is somehow less unjust than what currently exists and might not upset those who are against same sex marriage as much.
not because it is less unjust or less unequal, which doesn't really concern you, but is otherwise correct?
Not the same thing in this case or in any case?One difference. I am not saying that I am unconcerned about it being "less unjust". I am saying it is not "less unjust". Justice would be served regardless of how you did it, so it doesn't matter which path you took.
The difference is that your message suggests I'm unconcerned with justice or lack thereof. That's not true. I am unconcerned with equality, but that's not the same thing.
Which part of that does not apply to the pro-SSM movement?
"Conservative and faithful" crowds are not exempt from sin.
Not the same thing in this case or in any case?
Well you won't find it here, and it will take more than a few minutes when you do find it. Also, it seems unlikely you will call it "proof" because you will almost certainly reject their first principles.
It isn't hard to find. If you truly want to find it. I'm not sure you actually do.
No, it's trying to understand. I think you're position is fundamentally wrong. I'm trying to walk you through why, but to do that I need you to walk through your reasoning.(I can't help but wonder if the purpose of this is trying to understand a position, or hoping to get a quick, out of context quote which can then be pointed to for some sort of debate-winning point. I'll proceed based on the former.)
What is different in this case that keeps this from being an issue of justice as well?Not the same in this case.
Actually, I think you just settled that dispute in much simpler terms than I would've thought. Thanks.
Pee on a wafer.. get excommunicated...... kill several million jews.. still in the church.
Weather I object to their first priniples or not is irrelevent. The issue here is can you decry use of contraceptives as immoral and not decry sex between infertal couples from the first priniples stated.
I didn't have to. The ones I recognized were from a rather famous Baptist minister. I assume all of them were.
One difference. I am not saying that I am unconcerned about it being "less unjust". I am saying it is not "less unjust". Justice would be served regardless of how you did it, so it doesn't matter which path you took.
The difference is that your message suggests I'm unconcerned with justice or lack thereof. That's not true. I am unconcerned with equality, but that's not the same thing.
No, it's trying to understand. I think you're position is fundamentally wrong. I'm trying to walk you through why, but to do that I need you to walk through your reasoning.
What is different in this case that keeps this from being an issue of justice as well?
My apologies, I thought it was obvious. My mistakeYou asked "what is different", although you didn't ask "different from what". It would be impossible to compare this case with every other case, so I won't try. I can't think of any other case that is a good comparison to this case, but if you come up with a specific case you wish to compare it to, I'll compare it to whatever you wish.
In essence, you are saying that civil unions would be just despite being unequal. Why is inequality just for SSM but the inequality inherent in the "separate but equal" policies of racial segregation unjust?
What is the critical difference between the two situations that, in your mind, allows one inequailty to be just and another to be unjust?
If you are truly interested in Catholic teachings on this subject, the first principles applied, and the logic used to arrive at a policy based on those principles, you might find this document interesting:
http://www.va/holy_father/paul_vi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-vi_enc_25071968_humanae-vitae_en.html
I can think of two, very quickly. There are probably others.
First, in the case of "separate but equal" laws, it was very obvious that, in practice, the two were not equal. It was said that blacks only schools were equal to whites only schools, but in every case where there was school segregation, the black schools were inevitably underfunded, poorly maintained, poorly equipped, etc. Therefore, one of the reasons they were rejected is that they were not equal at all.
Second, "separate but equal" laws still restricted a fundamental right, which was the freedom of association. Whites weren't allowed to associate with blacks. Blacks weren't allowed to associate with whites. If we had opposite sex marriages and same sex civil unions, everyone would still be free to associate with whichever gender one wished, joining in either sort of union he chose.
I see nothing of first principles and how the reached the conclusion stated there.
What I mean is that I've read an awful lot of Catholic philosophy, and the logic in it is pretty strong. I haven't specifically read anything about hermaphroditism, but I'm guessing that their logic in that area is every bit as strong as it is everywhere else.
Also, I understand that these people are not hypothetical, but until one of them presents himself (pardon the limiations of the language) before a priest asking to be married, and the priest can't decide which side of the aisle he should stand on, it's a hypothetical situation.