My goodness this thread/topic is #825 posts in....sheesh....ooodaathought it....
Gay marriage thread
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Julien Sorel View PostIf I could offer an answer? Yes, the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales and Scotland has the right to lobby the Government in common with other organisations. Generally organisations lobby governments over issues in which they have an interest (or in which, in a strong sense, they are interested). We're talking about secular marriages, not legislation which requires the Roman Catholic Church to marry same sex couples (in fact the new law will prohibit that). So unless the Roman Catholic Church owns marriage I don't see what interest it has in the matter. There are other marriages the Roman Catholic Church refuses to recognise, aren't there? My understanding is if a Roman Catholic marries in an Anglican church without permission from their Bishop (is that correct?) then in the eyes of your church they never married?
The Government doesn't 'own marriage' either. The Church has a far greater interest in the meaning of the institution than most. You may as well claim that no one should have a view on anything if they are not directly affected in some regard or none at all.
Wouldn't be much point in Platform 3, then...
As to your final point I have no personal experience but my understanding has always been that if a Catholic marries in an Anglican church without special dispensation he/she would be legally married, of course, but the marriage would not be canonically recognised by the Catholic Church.
That seems wholly reasonable and utterly logical to me and is somewhat different from what you might have inferred by your question.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThe Government doesn't 'own marriage' either. The Church has a far greater interest in the meaning of the institution than most.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAs to your final point I have no personal experience but my understanding has always been that if a Catholic marries in an Anglican church without special dispensation he/she would be legally married, of course, but the marriage would not be canonically recognised by the Catholic Church.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAnswer to what? you hadn't posed a question in either of the two posts I quoted from.
Ah, now you ask a question.
& my answer is that I view lobbying by the Catholic Church in the same way that I view lobbying by any other organisation. But then the Catholic Church goes beyond that, in instructing its congregations to vote against politicians who support legislation the church opposes, for example.
Do you seriously expect it to 'instruct its congregations' to vote FOR politicians who support legislation the church opposes?
Mr Miliband has never been known to tell his assembled congregations how dangerous it might be to vote Tory?
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNow, how about you answering a question I posed a while back - has the O'Brien debacle taught you any lessons, or given you any pause for thought? Or is it just shovel that one under the carpet & carry on as if nothing happened?
My post on the matter was as strong as I could possibly make it and I think you were the first to express some astonishment at the strength of it.
Rather than sweeping anything under the carpet I can assure you it felt more like hanging the dirty washing out while all the neighbours were in the garden.
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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAs to your final point I have no personal experience but my understanding has always been that if a Catholic marries in an Anglican church without special dispensation he/she would be legally married, of course, but the marriage would not be canonically recognised by the Catholic Church.
That seems wholly reasonable and utterly logical to me and is somewhat different from what you might have inferred by your question.
Of course the Government doesn't own marriage. But, again, there seems to me to be unreasonable mission creep in
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThe Church has a far greater interest in the meaning of the institution than most.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostCertainly has, Flossie. Gave me much pause for thought and taught me a huge lesson, and hopefully some very much more important people as well. Never too old for salutary lessons, you know.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostYou say so, but I really can't see any evidence of it in subsequent posts from you.
Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
... he'd probably then severely admonish me about the effect on the environment and the third-world manufacture of the T-shirt, Mr Pee.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by jean View PostI don't expect it to 'instruct' them to do anything at all.
I have been advised to study carefully what each candidate's position is on certain issues and vote according to my beliefs.
That is the job of any pastor. To remind his flock of such things.
All mercifully free of any political spin. Clear and straightforward. Individuals still vote as they see fit.
In any case, to return the opposing argument, if you're not a Catholic what real business is it of yours?
I detect a distinct lack of consistency around here ...
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amateur51
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostI used the word 'instruct' as a direct quote. I've never been told who to vote for from a pulpit.
I have been advised to study carefully what each candidate's position is on certain issues and vote according to my beliefs.
That is the job of any pastor. To remind his flock of such things.
All mercifully free of any political spin. Clear and straightforward. Individuals still vote as they see fit.
In any case, to return the opposing argument, if you're not a Catholic what real business is it of yours?
I detect a distinct lack of consistency around here ...
However your suggests not
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Originally posted by scottycelt View Post
On the contrary, Catholic adoption agencies, which even non-Catholics in the business acknowledge provided a vital service to abandoned kiddies, were forced to close because of conscientious Catholic opposition to gay adoption. These agencies were not demanding non-Catholic agencies had to be against gay adoption, all they asked was their own organisations would continue as they always had done before. No, it was 'stuff your principles, do as you're told or close'. So, quite naturally, the agencies closed.
So one would conclude that those running these agencies view their own dogma as more important than the welfare of children ..... says it all really
Or maybe they can add that suffering onto their traditional guilt ?
The other bit of the Ten Commandments they have also decided not to follow is , of course, #5
(the bit about not killing people which seems to be optional for most , but not all , "christians" .......... )
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