Is there some reason why it can't be both? Is there some reason why it can't be reiterated for emphasis or repeated for the benefit of those who didn't "get it" the first time?
No reason it can't be both, but if it is both, then your apparent denial that it is both in post 8874 does not work. In that post you accuse me of error when I suggest that it is not only a question. Not agreeing is not the same as not getting it. That makes no sense at all.
I have read and reread Post 8874, and I'm sorry, but I don't understand what you're saying. . .don't understand your point. Blame it on my "density."
Yes indeed, "sin" requires an act that the person making the accusation considers wrong or evil. I am suggesting that your church considers homosexual unions and homosexual marriages a sin, since its stated policy is that all sexual unions are wrong outside of marriage, and since it actively seeks to keep homosexuals from marrying.
That's an accurate summation of the Church's position.
The protection of marriage is obviously impossible if marriage is forbidden, is it not?
Marriage was instituted primarily as a means to raise children with legally sanctioned protection. What protection do two adult males, who will not have children, receive as a result of being married? Perhaps you're referring to financial matters.
Insofar as you share that viewpoint, you share that viewpoint. Insofar as you argue for that policy, you cannot reasonably disavow it.
Correct, and I don't disavow it.
We are talking about specific policies and acts of the church here, and your defense of them, and simply mincing words by trying to suggest that "sin" is a poor choice of vocabulary.
My defense of "specific policies and acts of the Church" is based on the fact that they have a right to take a position on matters of morality. The fact that you don't consider same-sex marriage a moral issue, doesn't alter the right of the Church to take the position it has taken.
Are you now saying that homosexual unions are not considered wrong by your church?
Don't you already know the answer to that?
: Has church policy changed? Are you saying you do not agree with LDS policy on this subject? Are you contending that you have not argued in favor of LDS policy here?
1) No. 2) No. 3) No. I support Church policy. I'm intrigued, though, as I ponder why that matters to you.