withoutaface said:
I personally believe that marriage should still abide by the laws of the religious base upon which it was established, and would like to see homosexuals enabled to participate in civil unions because such institutions offer the same rights while being removed from religion.
Your personal belief is also the most sensible and practical one. The gay marriage thread is too regularly hijacked by idiots who think that by legalising gay marriage, their religious marriage cerimonies will be inundated with homosexual couples demanding marriage.
This is not the case. The government cannot force independant religions into altering age-old doctrines to accomodate shifts in societal value. The government can though, alther the definition of marriage in regards to its own state 'marriages'. Peoples' idiocy immediately comes into effect with the word marriage. Marriage is currently applied to mean both the union of man and woman under a specific religious ceremony, as well as the legally binding union of man and woman under the state.
It is the religious origins of the word 'marriage' that confuse the religious groups into thinking a legalisation of gay marriage will force them and their religion to accept gays.
What needs to occur, is a strict definition between the two terms.
-'Marriage'- the ceremonyby which a couple is united under religious ceremony proclaiming their union, eg: a Catholic or Greek-Orthodox wedding. The religious pomp does not exclude this sort of union from being a legally binding wedding, it is still registered under the Birth, Death and Marriges authority. The only difference being, because the marriage is specific to a particular religion, any homosexual couples cannot claim rights to be married under that particular religion, because that is a decision for the leaders of that religion and one that cannot be influenced by government.
-'State Marriage'- also known as a 'Civil Union'. The same as a regular marriage, only the marrying couple forgoes any religious ceremony for whatever reason. It is under State Marriages that homosexual couples should be able to be legally united. Their marriage does not impinge on any religious values for no religion is present- only the state and the couple and the moment of legal marital binding.
Basically, we can't force religions to alter their doctrines to acept homosexual marriage. We can though, make marriage available to gays through the state marriage, where secularism will prevail.