I really can't believe I'm having to post this.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081229/...s/civil_unions
For once I'm siding with the church. While I disagree with their stance I think this is an extremely dangerous precedent. This is the line that the religious right was afraid the gay rights groups would cross (and at least one gay guy was afraid would be crossed). I think that gay marriage should be allowed... I think the government should extend the same rights to gay couples as straight couples. That said... I don't think churches should be forced to recognize gay couples. If want to have the right to have a church I'm not a member of to force its views on me, I feel then that I shouldn't have the right to force my views on them. Even if I am a member of the church I don't think I have the right to force my differing beliefs on them... I have the freedom to leave if my views are that different than the church's official policy.
I'll be honest when I say I would like nothing more than to one day be accepted as a member of the LDS church as who I really am, not as I am expected to be... I actually would like a temple marriage to (and this feels awkward to say in the same sentence as temple marriage, shows just how strong social programming is... but that's a different thread) the man I want to spend my life with (if I ever find him )... that said, I don't want the cost to be the trampling of the LDS church's rights by the government forcing them to perform the ceremony. I'd rather remove my membership from the LDS church and join a church that would marry me of their own free will. Leaving my church is the price I'm willing to pay to preserve their Constitutional rights.
Anyone else have a take on whether or not this court case has crossed the line by forcing a church to perform a marriage they didn't agree with?
And while we're on the topic... sense it is likely that my long term options are, find a different church or find a different church, does anyone have suggestions?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081229/...s/civil_unions
For once I'm siding with the church. While I disagree with their stance I think this is an extremely dangerous precedent. This is the line that the religious right was afraid the gay rights groups would cross (and at least one gay guy was afraid would be crossed). I think that gay marriage should be allowed... I think the government should extend the same rights to gay couples as straight couples. That said... I don't think churches should be forced to recognize gay couples. If want to have the right to have a church I'm not a member of to force its views on me, I feel then that I shouldn't have the right to force my views on them. Even if I am a member of the church I don't think I have the right to force my differing beliefs on them... I have the freedom to leave if my views are that different than the church's official policy.
I'll be honest when I say I would like nothing more than to one day be accepted as a member of the LDS church as who I really am, not as I am expected to be... I actually would like a temple marriage to (and this feels awkward to say in the same sentence as temple marriage, shows just how strong social programming is... but that's a different thread) the man I want to spend my life with (if I ever find him )... that said, I don't want the cost to be the trampling of the LDS church's rights by the government forcing them to perform the ceremony. I'd rather remove my membership from the LDS church and join a church that would marry me of their own free will. Leaving my church is the price I'm willing to pay to preserve their Constitutional rights.
Anyone else have a take on whether or not this court case has crossed the line by forcing a church to perform a marriage they didn't agree with?
And while we're on the topic... sense it is likely that my long term options are, find a different church or find a different church, does anyone have suggestions?
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