Originally posted by scottycelt
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Marriage
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amateur51
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amateur51
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostYou are absolutely wrong, ahinton!
In the course of my working-life I had the pleasure of many friendships with colleagues whom I was told were homosexual (we never discussed our personal 'sexual orientation', that was considered a very private matter).
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amateur51
Originally posted by Flay View PostMarriage has always been defined in terms of a union between a woman and a man. To be legitimate (in English law at least) it requires consummation. Forgive me, but I am not really sure how that can be defined in terms of a female/female union. Would anyone care to explain?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThe Church of England ceased to be relevant to the lives of most citizens of this country many years ago entirely as a result of its own actions.
There are plenty of unpleasant people in the theatre too, as in most walks of life, Mr Pee :winkeye:
And I am not sure what you are inferring by your last remark, but I can assure you that the vast majority of my work colleagues do not find me unpleasant; and I have found it hard to think of anybody that I find unpleasant. Just because you and I have opposing views on certain issues does not make either of us unpleasant people. Just different.
And wouldn't the world be a dull place if we all agreed on everything?Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View Post
The point about the C of E being exempt from this legislation
Maria Miller has told them that Anglicans in England cannot marry someone of the same sex in their church.
They'll need to go to Chepstow for that sort of thing.The best music is the music that persuades us there is no other music in the world-- Alex Ross
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amateur51
Originally posted by gingerjon View PostThe odd thing about that is that nobody appears to have asked the CofE if they wanted to be exempt. The state church, unique amongst all religions in the UK from Jedi to Jehovah's Witness, has been told that it has no indiviudal conscience. Neither its individual ministers nor its leaders can think on this issue or ask the divine for guidance.
Maria Miller has told them that Anglicans in England cannot marry someone of the same sex in their church.
They'll need to go to Chepstow for that sort of thing.
Unlike its more staid co-franchise-holder, the Church in Wales has kicked up rough about this impertinence :biggrin:
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI think the Church in Wales has been told the same thing as the CoE, gingerjon.
Unlike its more staid co-franchise-holder, the Church in Wales has kicked up rough about this impertinence :biggrin:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-20729354
Oh well. Poor Chepstow, missing out on the rainbow flags.
It looks like All Saints, Gretna then.The best music is the music that persuades us there is no other music in the world-- Alex Ross
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scottycelt
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostYou are such a fibber scotty. I bet you mention the saintly and patient Mrs scotty every day, many times to your friends and colleagues and thus give a broad outline of your heterosexuality :smiley:
However, I could be in deep, deep trouble with the appropriate authorities (and Mrs scotty) if I ever tried to deny the very existence of the saintly and patient Mrs scotty ... one shocking criminal offence too far, I fear.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostYou are absolutely wrong, ahinton!
In the course of my working-life I had the pleasure of many friendships with colleagues whom I was told were homosexual (we never discussed our personal 'sexual orientation', that was considered a very private matter). The ones I knew all had a rich sense of humour and we had some great laughs, believe me.
So no need to feel sad for me, quite the contrary, and I, in turn, wouldn't wish to appear patronising by expressing any particular sadness for you!
Much more importantly I'm not really that fussed which Bruckner symphony I hear. The wisest comment I ever heard from a music-critic was 'what you consider to be the best Bruckner symphony always seems to be the one you've just listened to ...'
That has been my own happy and wonderful experience, ahinton!
Perhaps you didn't mean to do that, but what you wrote could be taken to read that way...
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i am over 65 and by definition have no further interest in such matters; this however had me in tears yesterday and still touches my rib today
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/...b_2470899a.jpgAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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amateur51
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Posti am over 65 and by definition have no further interest in such matters; this however had me in tears yesterday and still touches my rib today
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/...b_2470899a.jpg
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostI agree, the Church is completely irrelevant. I occasionally go to the Midnight Christmas Eve service, but that's about it. Believe me, I have as little time for the Church as I do for most other minority pressure groups. :whistle:
The point here, however, is that the new legislation on same-sex marriage rights is intended (at least as best I understand it) to be neither binding on any Church nor exonerating of any Church nor in any other way directly related to the practice of any Church; it is separate from the Church (by which I mean all Churches). I accept that the question of whether any Church will be prepared to conduct same-sex wedding ceremonies inevitably follows from this new legislation, but that's only because the Church is one organisation that has long conducted wedding ceremonies and it has accordingly to make its own decision on how it will approach, respond to and act in the light of this legislation; I suspect that, in time, it will end up (at least in many if not all Christian Churches) as an agreement in principle to conduct same-sex wedding ceremonies with the proviso that no individual bishop or other minister will be obliged by Church rules to do so if he/she raises a legitimate objection.
Although statistics that I have read show that, in countries where same-sex marriage is already legal, there has been a drop in opposite sex marriages, I have no idea, however, whether or not that is mere coincidence, but suspect that it is so because it's far from obvious why the one would or indeed could make any difference to the other except, perhaps, in the case of very small minority of bisexuals to whom such legislation has effectively provided the option of a same-sex or an opposite-sex marriage.
Do bear in mind that the new legislation in UK does merely enables same-sex marriage; it does not make it compulsory. Were it to be seen to undermine opposite-sex marriage over time, one might question the value of opposite-sex marriage in present-day society in that there is nothing in the new legislation to discourage opposite-sex marriage; I am, however, quite certain that it will have no such effect.Last edited by ahinton; 06-02-13, 12:15.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post:laugh::laugh:
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Stephen Whitaker
There has been a lot of ill-informed comment about what churches will be forced by this legislation to do, or not do; the above statement covers most points.
It also points out that pre-election, the Tories put out an equalities statement which was part of their manifesto and referred to consideration of gay marriage.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostThe point about the C of E being exempt from this legislation is that it means this is equality with a very small e, because the rights of gay couples to get married are not the same as heterosexual couples, who can choose a Church wedding if they so wish. So what is the point of this bill? If it's about equality, then it has failed. The difference between a Civil Partnership and a marriage carried out in a registry office or other licensed establishment is really nothing more than semantics.
A partnership/consortship (love that one) between people of the same sex should involve the same rights and duties as heterosexual partnerships when recognised by the state. Can't see why it should matter whether and how one of the consorts/partners/loving beings penetrates the other in privat circumstances after the act of recognision. The churches should do what ever they want, independently from the state, it's their decision, just as its the decision of the people to be part of the church.
As a matter of fact, the public gets used to it fast. in Germany, 66 % of the people are for gay marriage (not just recognision), up from 52 in 2006. Full on gay marriage will come in Germany as soon as the next leftwing government is in place (say 2021, maybe), possibly earlier; they can enjoy most of the benefits and have to adhere to most of the duties already anyway, so they can afford the wait.
I doubt that the British public will have more difficulties getting used to it.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostAlthough statistics that I have read show that, in countries where same-sex marriage is already legal, there has been a drop in opposite sex marriages; I have no idea, however, whether or not that is mere coincidence, but suspect that it is so because it's far from obvious why the one would or indeed could make any difference to the other except, perhaps, in the case of very small minority of bisexuals to whom such legislation has effectively provided the option of a same-sex or an opposite-sex marriage.
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