healthinsp wrote:The bible tells me that it is neither my place nor responsibility to judge other people's moral values. What was immoral 50-100 years ago is common place today. I own my own small business, and I try to treat everyone with the same excellent customer service.
Because so many of us call ourselves believers in some part of JudeoChristianity, it is very difficult to articulate where and how our religious obligations and Constitutional obligations parry and thrust. My comment follows, and I am NOT proselytizing,
I love the Word of God too, and I agree with you that it is not my job to
condemn, but there are definitely scriptures that call us to judge. The problem is that in modern society, people tend to conflate those two words, but they are NOT the same. I
judge people all the time. I
discern whether or not what they are doing is righteous, and I make
judgements based on those
discernments. For example.... I discern that Obama does many unrighteous things, and is proud of his unrighteousness, and I judge him and find him wanting in the character department. But I do not condemn him to hades because that is God's job, not mine. In that regard, I am like the tax collector in Jesus's parable of the pharisee and the tax collector at the temple - "Lord, have mercy on me". But scripture tells us to be that way. We are told that we should practice discernment, and to judge. What scripture
forbids us to do is to condemn others. The pharisees who wanted to stone the adulteress were right in one way. They
discerned that what she did was sinful, and they
judged that she was unrighteous because of it and deserving of death because of it (as we are ALL deserving of death in our unrighteousness). What Jesus challenged them about was their right to
condemn her by stoning her to death, based on their discernment and judgement, because of their
own sinfulness - hence His statement, "let he who is free of sin cast the first stone", and they were convicted in themselves of their own sin, and it dampened their self-righteousness.
My Bible, both Old and New Testaments, very clearly defines homosexual behavior as sinful. My
Constitution on the other hand does not define it at all. My
biblical conclusion is that people have a constitutional right to be sinful before God, and that it is
my job to discern that, judge them,
AND PRAY FOR THEM. But I am most definitely NOT told to celebrate their sin......
or to participate in some way in that celebration.
And it is that last phrase where the difficult lies. I have a website design business, and my business is
strictly b2b. I will likely never be called on to design a website to celebrate a gay wedding, and if I ever am asked to do so, my answer will be, "I am sorry, I only do business websites, not personal ones." And that would be 100% factual. You cannot force me to build one, because it is entirely outside of my business model. It would be like being a person of color who goes to a dog groomer and insists on them giving him or her a haircut, and then sues the dog groomer on a racism charge because he or she wouldn't give a human a haircut. On the other hand, I have no problem building a website for a gay owned business..... as long as that business does not violate some
other standards that I have: I will NOT build a website for a pornographic business. I will NOT build a website for an "escort" business. I will NOT build a website for an online gambling business. I will NOT build a website for ..... well..... you get the idea. (This reminds me that I used to have this particular information on my own website, and I think that it dropped off at some point, and I need to put it back on there.)
So,
healthinsp, I am looking at your screen name, and I assume you have something to do with health, healthcare, health maintenance? I would
never advocate withholding health-related care from someone based on their personal sexual idiosyncrasies.
THAT would be immoral. We provide medical care to people on death row for the most horrible kinds of murders.....because it would be immoral not to. When you provide medical care to a person who needs it, you are NOT celebrating their sin.
But some businesses are inextricably wound up in matters of celebration. You cannot be a florist, a wedding planner, a baker, a musician, etc., without being put at risk of being called to violate your own moral/ethical/religious standards
if you do not have the option of refusing certain business opportunities because they violate those standards. I am a member of my church's worship team, and several of my friends on that team have their own band on the side. Basically, they're a "garage band", but they're pretty good at it, and they are sometimes hired (for pay) to perform at wedding receptions, dances, as entertainment at conferences, and stuff like that. They are all very devout Christians, and I am sure that if they were asked to entertain at a gay wedding, they would refuse. And by the way, all 5 of these guys tend to share my political viewpoint. None of us see how the Constitution would forbid gay marriage in and of itself, but neither do any of us want anything to do with it, and we belong to a church that would absolutely reject ever performing a gay marriage.
So, if you are going to
force people to violate their religious conscience because they are in one business category, but not in another, what you are going to find over time is that people of religious conscience will begin eliminating themselves from that business category which forces them to violate their conscience..........and that in itself IS unconstitutional. People have an absolute
right to not be forced into violating their own conscience by government. Even when we have a national military draft, we recognize the right of conscientious objection. My ex brother in law was a conscientious objector from the draft during the Vietnam war based on his being a Quaker. His own father, a career Army officer testified before the local draft board (in El Paso....the home of Fort Bliss), that he believed his son to be sincere in his objection to military service based on his religious inclinations.
This country has ALWAYS placed a premium on conscience.......until the radicals among the less than 3% (according to the CDC) of the self-identified LGBT population began to tyrannize the rest of us. They even tyrannize the majority of that 3% of the population. The rights of conscience have ALWAYS been an American value - almost uniquely so - until very recently.
What changed?
The answer is that in our two party system, one of the parties became the party dominated by a tightly knit cadre of leftist ideologues and bullies, and the other party became a party of weak sisters who go along to get along.
NEITHER party is particularly interested in liberty.
THAT is how the radical fringe of a small population, consisting of less than 3% of us, got control of the argument. The Word of God tells me to love others regardless of their color, or even regardless of their sin. But love, and celebration are not the same thing. When my son, whom I love more than any other mortal besides my wife, does something wrong (fortunately rarely), I don't stop loving him, but I DON'T celebrate his wrong. And I sure as hades won't bake him a cake to celebrate it. Being born dark skinned is not a choice or a sin. The science - just as with other frauds like "
man-made global warming" - is still very much in doubt about whether or not homosexuality is genetic. There are hypotheses, but no hard science yet to account for why 3% of us are that way. But in the end, the choice of two gay people to marry is exactly that - a choice.
NOBODY who objects on conscience should ever be forced by law to participate in someone else's CHOICE. Period. And gay marriage is not the only arena for this type of tyranny. No doctor should be forced against his or her religious conscience to perform an abortion
for any other reason than immediate medical necessity to save the mother's life. No prison guard should be forced against his/her religious conscience to be the one who pushes the button to initiate a lethal injection if his/her religious conscience does not permit them to take part in an execution...........JUST as we do not force people into military service if their religious obligations forbid it.
These are uniquely American values. When we no longer hold them, we are no longer America. THAT is why this kind of tyranny should be most vigorously resisted.......EVEN IF you agree that gays have a right to state-sanctioned marriage.
VMI77, are you trying to tell me that my son's groom and wedding cake toppers weren't cool? I thought they were awesome!

“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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