The mere mention of marriage in this proposition brings about the religious-right to their banner-waving feet...the reality is that this is a fight on semantics. The religious people (and the proponents of Prop. 8 ) do not wish the union of homosexuals to be called a marriage...marriage having been instituted by God between a man and a woman...thus making this a religious issue.Harry12345 wrote:Homosexuality being less than desireable is not an exclusively religious moral either!BavarianWheels wrote:True, but none are exclusively "religious" morals.zoegirl wrote:This seems a bad argument, we already legislate morality, murder, rape, child abuse, cheating, lending laws and regulations, many of which directly come from religious beliefs.
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It is my belief that God doesn't really care whether man institutes laws concerning marriage...because God has already given His people His thinking (or law) on it. Christians think that allowing homosexuals to "marrry" will throw this world into a tailspin of sexual perversion. They think by outlawing homosexual marriage they are doing God's will...I believe it's not what God/Christ is concerned with. The Cross is what draws men to God...not our petty civil legislations of God's morality. Let us do what Christ asks us to do, "...Therefor go and make disciples of all nations...teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you..." Let's do our only part on the salvation of other men...to witness of Christ, and let Christ do the rest. John 12:32
We need only to look back at Israel as they legislated the "do's and don'ts" of God's Law. Legislating religious moral laws on society (apart from the obvious murder, rape, all others that keep society in check) only leads to legalism as the allowing of one leads to the eventual adding of more and more.
Once again,
to vote YES on Prop. 8 = a vote for the state legislating your religious morals.
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