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The church and homosexuality
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singletrackedFree Member
So it appears that the position of the church has changed in a mere 13 years from irreformably against contraception to reluctantly accepting it.
You think they reached this position through revelation and the word of god? Or that they face compromise or death in the face of modern secular standards?
Neither. I don’t think it was from the word of god, otherwise there would have been some kind of papal announcement. I don’t think it was from fear of ‘death’. I don’t think people were leaving the catholic church because of some of the views being expressed about condoms. I think they had a think about it and decided that they might need to change their mind. But it does demonstrate that any teachings were not a part of doctrine, and so not actually fundamental to catholicism.
singletrackedFree MemberI live in a country whose head of state and head of the state church are one and the same person. It is also a country in which senior figures in this state church hold unelected positions within the upper chamber of the legislature.
That’s why the position/teachings of the christian church bother me. Perhaps you live in a different country?
I think I probably do, but many of the people in you legislature, are not senior figures in the state church. Work with them first, they are the people you can influence.
That’s a whole lot of voters, but I bet a whole shedload of them disagree with what religion HQ say to the government.
then they need to make their feelings known, it could be a simple vote winner for anyone looking to move into government
rudebwoyFree Memberphew, thats three more pages since i left to go the bookies,watched a horse called Turbulent Priest, it was 100/1- ran okay for a bit then gave up the struggle and pulled up.
molgripsFree MemberIt is also a country in which senior figures in this state church hold unelected positions within the upper chamber of the legislature.
Hang on.. what’s the difference between having a senior church figure in the legislature and a lay person who is in fact devoutly religious?
singletrackedFree MemberThat certainly my position. All the would be required for me to change my mind is evidence. Just as I’d believe any scientific ‘truth’ to be false, if I were presented with evidence to the contrary
but would you need to understand that evidence and see it for yourself or would you be happy that the leading minds in science have recognised that their idea of the scientific concept was previously wrong? That just seems like faith in scientists to me
miketuallyFree MemberHang on.. what’s the difference between having a senior church figure in the legislature and a lay person who is in fact devoutly religious?
One is put there by the head of state. One is elected by their constituents. One is democratic, the other not.
molgripsFree MemberWell no. A lord isn’t elected.
Let’s not get into a debate about democracy – that’s not what I want to ask here.
The question is specifically why do you have a problem with there being bishops in the lords WITHIN the current unelected system, and not lay people who may be religious?
miketuallyFree Memberbut would you need to understand that evidence and see it for yourself or would you be happy that the leading minds in science have recognised that their idea of the scientific concept was previously wrong? That just seems like faith in scientists to me
Trust in a system of evidence, peer review and experiment is not faith. There is a world of a difference.
miketuallyFree MemberThe question is specifically why do you have a problem with there being bishops in the lords WITHIN the current unelected system, and not lay people who may be religious?
Because if the lay religious MP voted for or against the general view of the electorate because of their faith, the electorate can do something about it at the next election.
To pick a topic at random: gay marriage. If the general view of the population is that two people who love each other should be able to get married but an MP votes against this because of their religious beliefs, there is a channel through which the electorate can make their views know.
If the bishop votes against it there is no recourse.
grumFree MemberThe question is specifically why do you have a problem with there being bishops in the lords WITHIN the current unelected system, and not lay people who may be religious?
I have a problem with the concept of the House of Lords generally, yes. But within that I specifically have a problem with the idea of Bishops getting to vote on our laws, especially given the intolerance many of them are espousing in their official religious capacity.
singletrackedFree MemberFair comment. The only problem there is, if we stop generalising and start picking out individual groups like, say, Catholics, the discussion spirals into “why are we picking on the Catholics?”
But when you generalise, you leave large holes in your argument. No one would expect to get away with an argument say “why do Englishmen …”
Trust in a system of evidence, peer review and experiment is not faith. There is a world of a difference.
but then what do you call it when the belief system was shown to be wrong? It can only be belief, you can’t know something which is subsequently shown to be wrong
rudebwoyFree MemberBishops, men in long dresses, funny hats, must be a party !
The elected house is bad enough, the appointed one is a bad joke well passed its time. I have no time for unaccountable mouthpieces of privilege, they are a parasitical layer of obfuscation .
singletrackedFree MemberTo pick a topic at random: gay marriage. If the general view of the population is that two people who love each other should be able to get married but an MP votes against this because of their religious beliefs, there is a channel through which the electorate can make their views know.
If the bishop votes against it there is no recourse.
Well, Bishops can change their mind, I don’t know the CoE, but I don’t think the case against gay marriage is doctrinal. In fact, as i understand it, most churches don’t actually perform marriages. Marriage is a civil procedure, and by definition within the law, only allows it to take place between a man and a woman. Priests are only blessing the union. This blessing can be applied to all such partnerships, and has been applied to same sex couples too. It seems that the injunction to gay marriage is not something which Christians forbid, it seems that it is something which the English forbid. Why do you English do that?
grumFree MemberIt seems that the injunction to gay marriage is not something which Christians forbid, it seems that it is something which the English forbid
I think this is pretty disingenuous TBH. What do you think the most common opinion on gay marriage would be amongst christians worldwide? Happy tolerance?
molgripsFree MemberBecause if the lay religious MP voted for or against the general view of the electorate because of their faith, the electorate can do something about it at the next election.
Nonono you misunderstand.
Given that the Lords is unelected, what’s the difference between a bishop and a devout lay person?
grumFree MemberWell, they don’t forbid it the way you English do
Um…. there’s only 10 countries in the world that recognize gay marriage.
I don’t think any of them are officially christian countries, strangely enough.
Given that the Lords is unelected, what’s the difference between a bishop and a devout lay person?
That one is officially representing the opinions of an organisation that legitimises/encourages bigotry, whereas the other should hopefully realise that he shouldn’t allow his personal beliefs to cloud his professional judgement?
RustySpannerFull MemberBelief based on rational analysis differs fundamentally from belief based on faith.
By it’s nature it is subject to change as evidence is presented, tested and challenged.Theologians have often used logical arguments to prove the existance of god, but these arguments are not rational or verifible as they present no evidence that can be tested.
Hence the comments re the irrelevance of theology.
CougarFull MemberThe link between the stance of the Catholic church with regard to condoms and Aids in Africa is often cited. This is strange as Catholicism is not the majority Christian religion in Africa. Then even in the countries with a large proportion of Catholics, AIDS is not noticeably more widespread.
The whole AIDS / Africa thing is very complex with a number of contributory factors, not least of all the large number of parasites looking to line their own pockets at the expense of the lives of others. I’m looking at you, Mathias Rath.
However, even if they’re not the majority doesn’t mean that they aren’t at least part of the problem, and even if as you suggest they aren’t part of problem then it’s still bloody irresponsible for influential people to be condemning condom use in areas where HIV is rife, don’t you think?
Regardless, that wasn’t really the point I was making. The question asked was about who preaches against condom usage; this was but one example.
why do you have a problem with there being bishops in the lords WITHIN the current unelected system, and not lay people who may be religious?
Because they’re there because they’re religious rather than despite it?
But when you generalise, you leave large holes in your argument. No one would expect to get away with an argument say “why do Englishmen …”
Because Englishmen, as a demographic, tend not to subscribe to an organised belief system which tells them how to think and behave. Nor do they have the ear of the government to help them do as they please, despite this apparent “democracy” we live in.
I take your point, but it is a little of a catch-22 situation.
gonefishinFree MemberGiven that the Lords is unelected, what’s the difference between a bishop and a devout lay person?
The lay person is there presumably on the basis of expertise on some area (although granted that is not always the case), their faith is not relevant to this and they will presumably not be guided by the fact. The bishop is there solely because of the elevated position he holds in a particular religion with no requirement for any other expertise. That is the difference.
molgripsFree MemberThat one is officially representing the opinions of an organisation that legitimises/encourages bigotry, whereas the other should hopefully realise that he shouldn’t allow his personal beliefs to cloud his professional judgement?
Is that their actual purpose and brief? To represent their organisation?
The lay person is there presumably on the basis of expertise on some area (although granted that is not always the case), their faith is not relevant to this and they will presumably not be guided by the fact. The bishop is there solely because of the elevated position he holds in a particular religion with no requirement for any other expertise
Lots of presumablies and hopefullies there.
So you trust the lay person not to let faith cloud their judgement, but not the Bishop?
EDIT from the CoE website:
“they seek to be a voice for all people of faith, not just Christians.”
Hmm.. interesting.. there are quite a few of those in the UK aren’t there? There does seem to be an official difference after all.
CougarFull Member“they seek to be a voice for all people of faith, not just Christians.”
Seems like a sensible claim to make if you want to maximise your chances of retaining power.
The rest of us godless heathens can get fecked though, presumably.
molgripsFree MemberWell not really, we can be represented by the 96% of Lords who are not Bishops.
gonefishinFree MemberSo you trust the lay person not to let faith cloud their judgement, but not the Bishop?
Pretty much yeah. After all the bishop has no other reason to be there. Oh and the presumablys are there to highlight the general imperfections in the upper house.
grumFree MemberWell not really, we can be represented by the 96% of Lords who are not Bishops.
But they represent religious people too surely – why do the religious need special extra representation?
So you trust the lay person not to let faith cloud their judgement, but not the Bishop?
*sigh*
Not necessarily but the lay person isn’t there specifically to represent (intolerant) religion.
In the 14th century, religious leaders and landed gentry formed the ‘Upper House’ (the Lords) as, respectively, the Lords Spiritual and Lords Temporal. Local representatives formed the ‘Lower House’ (the Commons). Apart from a brief interruption following the English Civil war, religious leaders have played an active role in parliament ever since.
It’s absolutely ludicrous that in the 21st century we are still ruled, at least in part, by our unelected ‘betters’.
molgripsFree MemberAfter all the bishop has no other reason to be there
I dunno.. Bishops have generally spent a career thinking carefully about people’s problems and issues, like judges.
Many of the ones I’ve heard speak have sounded pretty intelligent and switched on. Not all, of course.
It’s absolutely ludicrous that in the 21st century we are still ruled, at least in part, by our unelected ‘betters’.
Ok well I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that there is definitely a place for an unelected house. Since the democratic system is pretty much bound to produce garbage.
But that is another thread, shall I start it?
miketuallyFree MemberI don’t have a issue with religious people have positions in parliament, so on that basis there’s no difference. It is the link between church and state which is the issue.
crikeyFree MemberWe do seem to have wandered away from stylish gentlemen and ladies who follow the tennis…
miketuallyFree Memberbut then what do you call it when the belief system was shown to be wrong? It can only be belief, you can’t know something which is subsequently shown to be wrong
Science gives the current best hypothesis, as supported by the available evidence. There are no absolute truths, merely theories that are currently supported by the available evidence. If new evidence is found, the theories are reformulated to account.
Belief doesn’t come into it. I don’t have a belief in gravity or evolution or bacteria.
miketuallyFree MemberOk well I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that there is definitely a place for an unelected house. Since the democratic system is pretty much bound to produce garbage.
I don’t have too much of an issue with an appointed upper house. It’s essentially a representation of the past x years of the elected lower house and can add stability and prevent more short-termist actions of the lower house. During the Blair years the Lords stopped a lot of the dodgier policies.
But bishops in the Lords skews the house away from being representative. If a proportion of the population were religious, these people would be represented anyway.
JunkyardFree MemberThat one is officially representing the opinions of an organisation that legitimises/encourages bigotry, whereas the other should hopefully realise that he shouldn’t allow his personal beliefs to cloud his professional judgement?
Is that their actual purpose and brief? To represent their organisation?No they are there to represent the views of people who dont believe in god and to ignore all the beliefs of their church. Is that your assertion? they are either there to do gods work or do ignore it. Which do you think it is? Which do they think it is
Any member of any organisation given a place to represent that organisation is clearly there to do just that. Its stupidity [ though intellectually possible, if laughable, to do as you are doing] but it is prima facie bollocks.The lay person is there presumably on the basis of expertise on some area (although granted that is not always the case), their faith is not relevant to this and they will presumably not be guided by the fact. The bishop is there solely because of the elevated position he holds in a particular religion with no requirement for any other expertise
Lots of presumablies and hopefullies there.as opposed to your view which is fanciful to the point of silly
So you trust the lay person not to let faith cloud their judgement, but not the Bishop?
does anyone trust either to do so? Which do you think is most likely to let their faith cloud their judgement – the lay person or the person who has dedicated their entire life to doing gods work. Its a tough one that eh.
EDIT from the CoE website:
they seek to be a voice for all people of faith, not just Christiansand the full quote
Their presence in the Lords is an extension of their general vocation as bishops to preach God’s word and to lead people in prayer. Bishops provide an important independent voice and spiritual insight to the work of the Upper House and, while they make no claims to direct representation, they seek to be a voice for all people of faith, not just Christians.
Reads a bit different with the full quote or the entire page 🙄
As the quote is at the bottom that is some selective quoting you have done there to spin your view. I would be embarrassed tbh if I had done itporter_jamieFull Membercould somebody summarise in a couple of sentences please?
singletrackedFree MemberThe Bible according to singletrackers.
There was very little of this
Oh yes he is!
Oh no he isn’t!There was none of this.
Did you just feel the need to make some contribution? No matter how facile?
grumFree MemberSo singletracked, I’ll ask again. Why has the bit about the mixing of fabrics in the bible been conveniently forgotten, but not homosexuality? Or the ban on eating pork or shellfish? Or women wearing gold? Or having tattoos?
rudebwoyFree Membercould somebody summarise in a couple of sentences please?
Dog with Bone
molgripsFree MemberWhich do you think is most likely to let their faith cloud their judgement – the lay person or the person who has dedicated their entire life to doing gods work. Its a tough one that eh.
I don’t know. Neither do you. I think you are being rather judgemental there, I’d be embarassed if I’d said that.
😉
meftyFree MemberSo singletracked, I’ll ask again. Why has the bit about the mixing of fabrics in the bible been conveniently forgotten, but not homosexuality? Or the ban on eating pork or shellfish? Or women wearing gold? Or having tattoos?
He already had in his discussion of the relative importance of the New and Old Testament.
singletrackedFree MemberThanks mefty.
Also, depending on the level of generalisation you are applying, the Catholic church blesses same-sex unions, as do some other churches. Unless, you mean a specific church
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