As to earlier points, Kabe is my hero and has answered quite nicely.
To your current question, Smiley, it's kinda both. Because if you had followed my link, you'd have seen that the Church has no problem with any sexuality. They have a problem with acting upon sexuality in an unchaste way. And unfortunately, the current definition of being chaste means that homosexuals have the greatest challenge.
On the other hand, the growing number of people discussing it and wishing a change does mean that this question is going up the ladder again. Whether or not it will change is a different matter as is how long it might take (to give an idea: for Catholics in America to be allowed to kneel during the Eucharistic Prayer--a fairly minor preferential difference from the rest of the world--was a 50 year debate).
Who knows? Maybe they'll gain greater insight into the Biblical interpretation. Maybe it'll be for the way some wish. Maybe it'll be the opposite. Maybe they'll keep the status quo. But until then, the lay Catholic may say they wish a change, but to be in full communion with their chosen religion/faith, they have to say they are against homosexual acts.
That said, that doesn't mean that you don't have the choice of free will. Which is why I personally wouldn't stand against you gaining legal rights. If you choose to do as you wish, be it a sin or no, then under separation of church and state, or simple fairness, you should at least be legally protected. Everything else is up to God.
And yes, I had a long talk with my priest about that viewpoint once and he saw no problem with it.
To your current question, Smiley, it's kinda both. Because if you had followed my link, you'd have seen that the Church has no problem with any sexuality. They have a problem with acting upon sexuality in an unchaste way. And unfortunately, the current definition of being chaste means that homosexuals have the greatest challenge.
On the other hand, the growing number of people discussing it and wishing a change does mean that this question is going up the ladder again. Whether or not it will change is a different matter as is how long it might take (to give an idea: for Catholics in America to be allowed to kneel during the Eucharistic Prayer--a fairly minor preferential difference from the rest of the world--was a 50 year debate).
Who knows? Maybe they'll gain greater insight into the Biblical interpretation. Maybe it'll be for the way some wish. Maybe it'll be the opposite. Maybe they'll keep the status quo. But until then, the lay Catholic may say they wish a change, but to be in full communion with their chosen religion/faith, they have to say they are against homosexual acts.
That said, that doesn't mean that you don't have the choice of free will. Which is why I personally wouldn't stand against you gaining legal rights. If you choose to do as you wish, be it a sin or no, then under separation of church and state, or simple fairness, you should at least be legally protected. Everything else is up to God.
And yes, I had a long talk with my priest about that viewpoint once and he saw no problem with it.
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