Rorinthas wrote:
I was very sleep Deprived last night and I am sorry If I came across as overly harsh. This does show why I cannot support gay marriage laws. Wherever they go in stuff like this happens.
I want to live and let live Khross. If these two women want to live their lives peaceably in this manner, the consequences are their's to reap. If this is what this lesbian couple really wanted, then they would have simply found another farm. I'm tired of being the bad guy for having to point this out.
I don't think you're a bad guy, Rori. I'm sorry if my post was a bit sharper than intended, but I think you are treading in dark waters on this subject. You are angry and torn and frustrated and confused. You are a man of faith; and consistently enough a man of faith that almost no one here has any problems respecting your faith or you. You certainly don't draw the same kind of ire or vitriol as Beryllin was capable of sparking. So, think about that and chew on it.
There are always going to be people who want to use the law as a weapon. There are people who do not believe in "live and let live." This particular pair of lesbians seems to be of that ilk. I do believe this was their token contribution to the glut of social justice court actions sweeping the nation. I also believe it's a crying shame that social justice has become an epithet in some respect.
I am a heterodox Christian. If people haven't figured that out by now, I'll just say it. I'm a heterodox Christian. That said, you and I won't ever agree on dogma. We won't agree on doctrine for the most part either. Talya and I talk about religion a lot; she's either suspected this was the case for a long time, or I think I actually just told her once. I'm also a pantheist, which takes a really long time to explain in light of what I just admitted above.
I read more religious texts than anyone I know who isn't a Jesuit or working in the Vatican Archives. I don't think sexual orientation, preference, or disposition is anything to get worked up about. I also don't think what the Bible has to say on the matter should be taken any further than the sociologically obvious. Faith is absolutely and inherently personal. And God is either forgiving or not, I'm more inclined to believe the latter, and there's more written evidence to suggest that God is a capricious, vindictive **** in human terms than not. Yes, I said it that bluntly. Christ, on the other hand, is the encapsulated manifestation of Mercy and forgiveness. God is a capricious, vindictive ****, like any other autocrat. He doesn't care who you ****. He cares who you love and how you love. Homosexuality isn't a sin. Homosexuality was a sociologically problematic behavior: it did not necessarily contribute to social evolution and social sustainability at the time. We've moved past the need for restricting non-reproductive behavior. We don't need those social mores. We don't have to talk about disease or illness or other hygiene issues that were exacerbated by ignorance at the time, but that's another sociological problem. And that particular sociological problem affects most sexual orientations (Ace's -- you're probably free to go here).
Today, there are different sociological issues for the church to address, and the dogma and doctrine should reflect those needs. If the church is really about bringing humanity into closer contact with god, then it should be focusing on knowledge and science and understanding. It should focus on the inclusiveness project that most of humanity wants, not further segregation, separation, and denomination.
I call myself a heterodox Christian because I've read enough to know you (and by you I mean every denomination, every branch, every division) has it wrong at one point or another; and some to greater degree than others. We don't need to nail anyone to a tree this time (thank you, Douglas Adams). And, no, I'm not some prophet or saying I have all the answers.
But knowledge is never evil, and the churches of the world as hell bent on controlling knowledge instead of protecting free access to it. God is knowledge. God is absolute knowledge. No matter how we define it; no matter what books we use to reach him; god is knowledge, and religion should never be about controlling knowledge.
The issue here is one of business and laws; it's not about god and faith and tolerance. If you want to keep homosexuality a sin, that's your prerogative, but there was never a spiritual reason to call it sin. If there was, the Jews wouldn't have omitted lesbianism from Leviticus. If there was, Sodom and Gomorrah wouldn't have been the only two cities burnt with hell fire and brimstone. We know where the Isle of Lesbos is -- we'd be able to see the evidence there.
Faith should be a tool to bring people closer together and closer to knowledge and truth and understanding. When faith is used to separate, divide, and dissuade people from asking questions, it's lost sight of its purpose.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.