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Okay, this question is from a debate that my friends and I had my freshman year of college regarding homosexual marriage and whether or not it should be legalized.
A little background information about my friends and I: All of us are Christian in one way or another. I go to a non-denominational church, two of my friends (twins) go to a Biblical focused church, and another one of my friends goes to a Christian church, though I do not know the denomination.
Now the question is: Should gay marriage be legalized? Now myself, my Catholic friend, and the last friend I mentioned were indifferent and felt like "why not?" in regards to legalizing gay marriage. The way we saw it was: "Yes, homosexuality is a sin, but legalizing gay marriage will not produce more gay people, it will simply allow the gay people that already exist equal rights that the rest of us enjoy." We also argued that since we are all sinners, who are we to refuse rights to a group simply because they sin?
Now my twin friends had none of that. They agreed that we all sin and all sin should be considered equal, but in the same breath they said homosexuality is different. I was confused by that, and they didn't really explain it.
What do you all think? To clarify, the first group of us aren't ardent supporters of legalizing gay marriage, we just don't necessarily see the harm in it. Thoughts?
A little background information about my friends and I: All of us are Christian in one way or another. I go to a non-denominational church, two of my friends (twins) go to a Biblical focused church, and another one of my friends goes to a Christian church, though I do not know the denomination.
Now the question is: Should gay marriage be legalized? Now myself, my Catholic friend, and the last friend I mentioned were indifferent and felt like "why not?" in regards to legalizing gay marriage. The way we saw it was: "Yes, homosexuality is a sin, but legalizing gay marriage will not produce more gay people, it will simply allow the gay people that already exist equal rights that the rest of us enjoy." We also argued that since we are all sinners, who are we to refuse rights to a group simply because they sin?
Now my twin friends had none of that. They agreed that we all sin and all sin should be considered equal, but in the same breath they said homosexuality is different. I was confused by that, and they didn't really explain it.
What do you all think? To clarify, the first group of us aren't ardent supporters of legalizing gay marriage, we just don't necessarily see the harm in it. Thoughts?