- Joined
- Jul 13, 2015
- Messages
- 19,207
- Location
- Western Australia
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Catholic
- Political Affiliation
- Moderate
- Marital Status
- Single
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
Moral questions and legal fiat
I posted in my reply to the Australian Same Sex Marriage Postal Survey (that's the official name) on Saturday. I answered "yes" to the question "Should the law be changed to allow same-sex couples to marry?". My archbishop wrote a letter advocating a "No" answer but he did so in a letter stressing that he thinks Catholics can "propose but not impose" their view and the reasons behind it and I agree with him both for the reasons to say "no" and in his careful distinction between proposing and not imposing hence my decision to vote "yes" - a "no" answer would be asking the Parliament to keep marriage exclusive of same-sex couples and thus to continue the imposition of a legal definition that denies same-sex couples from participating in the benefits of marriage under the law. I think that the argument against imposing a view on others who disagree outweighs the arguments for saying "no" and allowing the continuance of the legal imposition of inequality under the law. What do you folk think?
I posted in my reply to the Australian Same Sex Marriage Postal Survey (that's the official name) on Saturday. I answered "yes" to the question "Should the law be changed to allow same-sex couples to marry?". My archbishop wrote a letter advocating a "No" answer but he did so in a letter stressing that he thinks Catholics can "propose but not impose" their view and the reasons behind it and I agree with him both for the reasons to say "no" and in his careful distinction between proposing and not imposing hence my decision to vote "yes" - a "no" answer would be asking the Parliament to keep marriage exclusive of same-sex couples and thus to continue the imposition of a legal definition that denies same-sex couples from participating in the benefits of marriage under the law. I think that the argument against imposing a view on others who disagree outweighs the arguments for saying "no" and allowing the continuance of the legal imposition of inequality under the law. What do you folk think?
Last edited: