macgamer wrote:So here is the Catholic case in review:
* For sex to be moral it must be unitive and procreative, between a married man and woman. Homosexual acts demonstrate neither of those necessary qualities and hence is immoral.
Conveniently, catholics oppose marriage equality, and thus they deny to gay couples half of their considered preconditions for 'moral' sex. Gaming the system much?
Secondly, you have simply restated your belief as its own support. This proves nothing. We might as well ask how you came to be in St Andrews and receive the reply, "I am here, so here I am!"
The words "for sex to be moral" could just as easily be "for sex to be immoral." All we have as the basis for this claim of morality is your own say-so, an entirely inadequate basis for claims of morality, especially since you would doubtless lay claim to a universal morality above the wishes or actions of man. If you wish to recourse to the "god says so" argument to back up the bald assertion that "for sex to be moral it must be..." then we can address that below.
macgamer wrote:* This is justified by natural law (the biological function of sex is procreation, the biological function of sexual attraction is to bring two complementary members of the same species together to achieve this end) and scripture interpreted within the tradition of the Church. [Jesus did not write the Bible, God inspired its various authors. The New Testament was written by members of the Church. The Church selected the books which make up the Biblical canon. This was latterly messed up by reformers striving to make the bible accord with their views.]
The biological function of sex is procreation. On that we agree. But it is not possible to assert that the only biological function of sexual attraction is procreation (witness the homosexual behaviour in virtually every animal species studied). Outside of pure biology, the function of sex, although it may be purely procreation in some organisms, is a multifaceted thing; sex plays important social, pair-bonding and hierarchical roles in some organisms with more complex social structures and larger brain capacity, which means that unless you confine yourself purely to biology (which you don't, by bringing in a moral element) your insistence that the purpose of sexual attraction is purely to bring males and females together is demonstrably false.
Further, your assertion that the biological function of sex is implicitly the
only function of sex is guilty of arguing from the specific to the general, without any support. Indeed, not only is there no evidence to support your contention, but there is evidence which proves it to be false, namely the other functions of sex that I noted above. Indeed, several species of animal have sex for fun: dolphins do oral, for example, and various primates are proverbially notorious for masturbating while small children are visiting the zoo. Here then is sex in the natural world which is plainly being done for anything but procreation. It rather stands your argument on its head.
You have labelled as 'natural law' a biological argument (and a tenuous one at that), rather than what other people commonly recognise as natural law, namely the philosophical arguments of thinkers like Aquinas. 'Natural law' is not 'what happens in nature is law' otherwise the church wouldn't bother with marriage, because none of the animals bother with that. Or were you unable to find anything in the philosophy of natural law that supports your position as you wish it to? I reiterate my earlier ultra-brief summary of Aquinas' (the church's chosen natural law philosopher) writings: "Good is to be sought, evil avoided." Please explain how this, or indeed any other part of his writings, is meant to be taken as a logical proof of the immorality of homosexuality. And let's not have another self-referential, circular argument to the effect that 'the church says gay sex is evil, and Aquinas says evil is to be avoided, so natural law backs up the church with logic!' It only supports the church's position if natural law can arrive at the conclusion "homosexual sex is immoral"
without church input. Otherwise it is just another church argument dressed up in different clothes.
Was the bible messed up by reformers before or after the early church changed its mind on allowing priests to marry? I offer this fact as proof that the church has changed its policy on matters of sex and morality before. It is not, therefore, a monolith, and you cannot reasonably claim that church tradition is infallible, unless you also assert that the definition of infallibility has changed over time, which makes the entire position absurd.
And while we're on the subject of infallible popes being the divinely appointed vicars of Christ on Earth, were the Borgia Popes being infallible when they hired all the prostitutes in Rome and had them as entertainment at dinner for the assembled churchmen and dignitaries, who were probably amused to see the women carry walnuts from one side of the hall to the other. Without using their hands. Most tellingly, in the Vatican this form of entertainment was so routine as to be almost not worth mentioning. But we have historical record of it. An interesting example of the uses to which the authority of Jesus himself "to teach infallibly on faith and morals" has been put, as it has been passed down through the popes.
You're on shaky ground if you wish to assert that the church as a whole or the pope in particular has carried on without alteration the traditions of Jesus passed down through the last 2000 years. Some of the alterations have been, if you will allow me to spell it out, downright hilarious.
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:In any case, your initial premise is flawed: the function of (heterosexual vaginal intercourse) is procreation, among other things. This says nothing about any other form or orientation of intercourse. The idea that homosexuality (not SSA) is a disorder does not follow on from a lack of procreation. Homosexuality is like having green eyes in that people are born with one or the other or both.
Same sex attraction (SSA) is a trait in a way that homosexuality or sexual orientation is not. SSA is about the attraction distinct from sexual practice or identity. There cannot be a gene for sexual behaviour or identity, there can be a gene for a trait which influences sexual behaviour or identity. SSA is a legitimate term in this discussion.
In so far as you recognise here that sexual orientation is inborn, we, and the scientific community, are in agreement. Beyond that, all bets are off. SSA is not a legitimate term for this, or any other discussion. It is a term used by radical, fringe bigots who have been soundly, repeatedly and blisteringly condemned by the scientific, medical and psychological communities, and particularly their use of so called 'gay cure' reparative therapy has been repeatedly denounced as at best ineffective, and at worst likely to increase drastically the risk of suicide for those subjected to it. There is no need to use one of their terms when the word 'homosexuality' (n. the state of being homosexual [homosexual: n a person who is sexually attracted to the same sex.]) is perfectly adequate, and indeed seems to be completely interchangeable with your term, with the exception that the term homosexuality does not have very heavily bigoted and pejorative overtones. It is exceedingly difficult to see any reason for your continued use of SSA beyond ignorance or a wilful effort to provoke. Again, your claim that 'homosexuality' is a loaded term will be thrown back at you; SSA is a loaded term, the more so because it carries very strong and non-neutral connotations.
macgamer wrote:Let us suppose there is a co-dominant gene for sexual attraction, certain allelic combinations produce the three major sexualities:
AA = Heterosexuality / Opposite sex attraction
Aa = Bisexuality / Either sex attraction
aa = Homosexuality / Same sex attraction
Supposing that SSA is a recessive trait would make sense given its strong influence in the sexual fitness of those that express such a phenotype. The SSA trait is much more analogous to sickle cell anaemia whereby there is a fitness improvement in those heterozygous individuals compared to dominant homozygotes.
This is hilarious, what else can I say? To spend so long arguing that homosexuality is immoral and maladaptive only to voluntarily, and of your own free will, imply that bisexuals are a "fitness improvement" on heterosexuals, is positively sublime. I expect you to be knighted for services to comedy any minute!
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:Please provide a citation to any legal document you care to use which states that children have a right to a father and mother.
Marriage is the legal document which entitles children, the products of marriage, to a mother and father. No-fault divorce gradually eroded the sense of the primary purpose of marriage: to create a family. It should not need a legal document to entitle children to a mother and a father. A mother and a father are needed to create new life even if fertilisation is
in vitro. The removal of the anonymity of sperm donors is an acknowledgement of that fact. The amount of legislation a government passes is inversely proportional to its efficacy. Legal positivism - boo!
No, marriage is not a legal document. It is a legal undertaking which, in this jurisdiction at least, joins a man and woman together, in the same way that civil partnership joins two men or two women together. The product of marriage is a married couple. That's it. You can have marriage without children, and children without marriage. You have confused the legal document with the religious ceremony. The catholic religious ceremony of marriage has as part of it the purpose of having children, but this has nothing to do with a legal marriage. Marriage may be a religious rite, but it is now primarily a legal undertaking: observe that marriages which take place with no religious ceremony are still marriages, but the religious ceremony does not produce a married couple until the legal paperwork is done.
And I note that you haven't pursued your assertion that a mother and father are essential because of their "unique roles." Was that particular position too 1950s even for you to try to defend?
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:I note that you have not, so far, advocated killing gays and lesbians. Why are you being inconsistent?
The bible is inconsistent that is why we today cannot just pick it off the shelf and understand it from our 21st century outlook. It needs to be interpreted using the knowledge passed down from the Church fathers.
Ah, now we are getting near the crux of the matter. Its interesting that you prefer to see the bible as inconsistent, rather than see your own position as inconsistent. "Pride goeth..." comes to mind.
But what is inconsistent about the bible saying that "if man lieth with man... it is an abomination" and slightly later explicitly stating that the punishment for that abomination shall be death? It seems perfectly straight-forward to me. If, as you have done, you disallow one passage as needing to be interpreted (which seems to mean ignored, as you use it), then why not disallow all the passages on that subject on the basis of interpretation/ignoring them? And if you are going to say that church tradition has provided the knowledge to interpret this, you're out of luck. Church tradition has changed: priests were formerly allowed to be married, but no longer are. If the church can change its mind on this, what else can it change its mind on? For that matter, the church might change it back again, at least as far as allowing CofE clergy to join the church, and bring their wives with them. If they end up with one of the CofE clergy who has a civil partnership, they'll be in a right mess!
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:My original point stands: there is no record, in the bible or anywhere else, of Jesus making any comment on homosexuality.
It would have been nice if Jesus had written down a catechism alas he did not. Instead he instructed his apostles who wrote down some of his sermons and sayings. He crucially became the incarnate Word of God and made Himself the Supreme and Universal Sacrifice once and for all for our sins.
Thanks for conceding the point that the incarnate Word of God didn't leave any record of pronouncements on homosexuality.