jmdrake
Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2007
- Messages
- 52,002
This is the biggest farce ever.
Ever heard a baptist try to explain how all of the 'wine' in Jesus' day was non-alcoholic?
I fail to see the relevance. In order to argue that the wine in Jesus' day was non alcoholic you have to interpret the verse differently than what is obvious. But, how exactly do you interpret Romans 1 such that Paul is talking against something other than homosexuality?

Christians weren't always this puritanical... it mostly started with.. lets see... oh! The Puritans.
So....Roman Catholics were fine with homosexuality until the Puritians forced them to...well...purify? Reference?
Previously Christians were only anti-gay when they were also being anti-jew, anti-women and other things, which generally happened in short bursts of social frenzy.
Reference?
The Roman Christians were very comfortable with homosexuality, it was all sex that was generally looked down upon as a waste of time given the imminent return of Christ, and then mostly by those that had come from the Pharisaical line, like Paul.
So when exactly is it that you believe Christians started listening to Paul? You think that didn't happen until the Puritans? Reference?
So yeah, tell me again how the *massive* quantities of fine wine Jesus provided to a party, that had already been drinking for 3 days straight, was non-alcoholic.
Strawman non sequitur. If you are going to make the claim that most of Christendom saw homosexuality as an acceptable lifestyle you'll have to do better than "Well some Christians don't like alcohol."
Huckabee, like most prominent Americans, has a completely ahistorical outlook on life.
If by "historical outlook" you mean "Made up by me at the spur of the moment" then....okay. But for the sake of argument let's assume that all of the popes from Constantine on down and all of the bishops in the Eastern Orthodox Church and Martin Luther and John Calvin and the Hugonots and the Waldensees and every Christian sect other than the Puritans all sanctioned gay marriage. First off it's laughable to believe that the Puritans had that much influence on the entire Christian world. But second, so what? There are Christians that believe women should cover their heads. That's a tiny minority at this point. Why not leave them to their beliefs? So what if you don't believe that? Should you tell a college or university of head covering Christians that they must hire female professors who didn't cover their heads? Really, there are two issues at stake. One is how to divide up federal benefits. The libertarian position on that is easy. No federal benefits or penalties for anyone. (For income tax purposes marriage can be a benefit or a penalty. If both spouses make the same amount it's a penalty.) The stickier question is should the government be able to force people to violate beliefs that you find unreasonable just because of political correctness? I say no. I would think most libertarians would say no, but I'm beginning to wonder on the gay marriage issue. (Or rather there are some pretend libertarians.)
Anyway, we shall see what happens.