Frankly, this issue ticks me off for a couple of reasons. It is meant to divide people and hurt others, from both sides. (I.e. people attacking the Miss California candidate for expressing her opinion) So often these debates don’t even look for a solution, they just turn into a circle of “You love sin, you’re going to Hell you pinko liberal” and “You’re a religious nut, why don’t you go hunting with Dick Cheney.” This doesn’t help anything and rolls over the problem. Also because, namely the Right, thinks that disagreement is equal to damnation and equates opponents to murderers and rapists. (You know the whole
Let me state my background. I’m a Christian first, bar none, no apologies. Anyone who would like to question my faith, I really don’t care. I recall certain Jewish leaders doing the same thing. That being said, if
Now that there is that background, I’ll state my opinion and solution. The reality of this debate, and why so many neo-conservative Christians, as well as pro-gay marriage liberals miss the point is they argue about the definition of marriage. The problem with this is inherent. One of the first premises of debate is to agree on what is acceptable as fact. Without that, understanding can not be made. Neo-cons look to the Bible for their definition, which is perfectly acceptable. However, pro-gay marriage couples don’t always accept this as fact, killing the debate before it starts and turning it in to the equivalent of an ideological squabble.
The core of what this debate should truly be about is equal rights, not about whether I or anyone else believes homosexuality is right or wrong. Since
The reality is that almost all gay marriage opponents deplore the idea because they believe it to be sinful. Since homosexuals disagree with the premise of “sin,” the debate will go nowhere. Therefore, both sides will also disagree on what “marriage” is. Is marriage something ordained by God, or is it simply a joining of two human beings who care for each other for the sake of insurance, medical, and tax reasons. (No, this isn’t what I think marriage is) The mistake made is that the State is dabbling in some believe is a religious issue and what others believe is a purely secular issue.
So how do we solve this issue by giving everyone equal rights under the law, while still respecting what each group inherently believes? Here’s how: you look at what both sides desire and see how to give each group what they want. Homosexuals aren’t seeking the Judeo-Christian God’s blessing on their relationship; they want equal rights. Most Christians, though they may disagree with homosexuals having marriage rights, aren’t looking to make being gay illegal; they simply want the preservation of what they believe is a sacred institution blessed by God. Solution: Take the definition of marriage out of the hands of the U.S. Government and give it back to God Almighty who ordained it in the first place. My solution is that the
Let me again reiterate, I’m a Christian, end of story. Whatever law my country makes, whoever is elected to the highest office in the land, and however much I may hate what either may do, my God reigns supreme without their permission, no matter what they say. When Jesus said to “render to Caesar what his Caesar’s and God what is God’s,” that wasn’t just about money. It involves our FULL allegiance and our trust. My trust is in God, and frankly I don’t really care what my country has to say about that or what laws they make giving others more rights or so on and so forth. Rather than complain about homosexuals trying to change the definition of marriage, let’s take the term out of the argument, since that is what God talks about. My hope is that this bill passes in