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| #Post#: 2410-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Gay Marriage | |
| By: Piper Date: June 28, 2015, 2:01 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [font=trebuchet ms]Not sure if this is a secular or religious | |
| discussion. Just wonder if we should, or if we dare, discuss | |
| the legalization of gay marriage. | |
| The world is sure changing. I think homosexuality will be seen | |
| as even more acceptable. Already, on tv, I'm quite surprised by | |
| the number of explicit gay love scenes that are shown. I've | |
| inadvertently learned a few unsavory things. :-[ | |
| And what is this "pride" thing I keep seeing, and all the | |
| 'rainbow' washing over of Facebook avatars? Does that represent | |
| people are gay, or just that they support gay marriage? | |
| My question is this: Why must ANY of us flaunt our sexuality? | |
| Shouldn't such things at least be private? | |
| Must admit I was shocked to hear that marriage is no longer a | |
| man and a woman. Can't quite wrap my head around this. Not | |
| sure I should try. | |
| One Christian forum, I noticed, will not allow discussion of the | |
| right or wrong of gay marriage. Does this indicate many | |
| Christians believe it's acceptable? | |
| Would you attend a gay wedding ceremony? Can clergy really be | |
| expected to participate? Is it truly now seen as 'hate' if you | |
| disagree with gay marriage? Any good discussions on this topic | |
| on other Christian forums? | |
| I think I'm very confused. Or the whole world is. | |
| I'm definitely troubled. Should I be? | |
| Any thoughts?[/font] | |
| #Post#: 2414-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Poppy Date: June 28, 2015, 4:27 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Nancy, I believe that Christian marriage = one man one woman. | |
| Anything other than that, to me, is not Christian and not | |
| marriage. Gay people want to have equal rights to 'marry' even | |
| though they already have the right to a civil partnership. For | |
| those who are gay but not Christian I believe they are free to | |
| choose, but what is more worrying, to me, is that a growing | |
| number of Christians want to be openly gay and marry and a part | |
| of the church accepts that as okay. | |
| The church must make a stand against that which it believes to | |
| be ungodly and sinful whilst also having compassion on the | |
| people involved in sinful acts. Would the church accept | |
| unrepentant thieves or killers or liars or adulterers or | |
| paedophiles? Where should the line be drawn? Jesus loves the | |
| gay people like he loves all sinners but once we have come to | |
| repentance we ought to be willing to obey God and live according | |
| to his word. And as far as I understand it so many gay people | |
| are not willing. | |
| #Post#: 2417-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: bradley Date: June 28, 2015, 10:43 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| God promotes choice for all humans above His desire for | |
| godliness. So it should be allowed, but.... it should not be | |
| promoted as okay for christians and even worse for christian | |
| leaders. Now a man truly loving a man, or a woman loving a | |
| woman... there is NOTHING wrong with loving anyone, NOTHING. | |
| But the sexual portion is not accepted in traditional christian | |
| or hebrew faith. If they want to pick and choose what to | |
| believe out of scripture, thats between them and God, but they | |
| should not be allowed to be in positions of leadership or to | |
| teach others its okay within the christian church. | |
| #Post#: 2419-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Kerry Date: June 29, 2015, 9:43 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Piper link=topic=285.msg2410#msg2410 | |
| date=1435518088] | |
| And what is this "pride" thing I keep seeing, and all the | |
| 'rainbow' washing over of Facebook avatars? Does that represent | |
| people are gay, or just that they support gay marriage?[/quote] | |
| My guess it's people jumping on the bandwagon just the way | |
| Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama did. Both of them used to | |
| oppose it. That was when less than half the American people | |
| were in favor. When more people became in favor, then they | |
| also changed their views. From the Weekly Standard | |
| http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/hillary-flashback-no-new-york-should-not-re… | |
| "Let me ask you this about some domestic issues in New York | |
| State. This state is always the sort of the social beginnings of | |
| so much in this country," liberal host Matthews started. "People | |
| come here, a lot of immigrants. The New York Times recently | |
| began posting the celebrations of gay unions. Not just straight | |
| people getting married, but gay people who want to announce | |
| their unions. Do you think New York State should recognize gay | |
| marriage?" | |
| Clinton delivered a one-word response: "No." | |
| The crowd booed in response. | |
| If you are interested in how Obama's views have changed over | |
| time, Politifact | |
| http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/may/11/barack-obama/pre… | |
| />has an article. What he thought may have depended on the pol | |
| ls | |
| and what office he was running for. | |
| [quote]My question is this: Why must ANY of us flaunt our | |
| sexuality? Shouldn't such things at least be private?[/quote]I | |
| stopped watching television years ago, partly because of the | |
| pointlessl sexuality -- and that was heterosexual stuff then. | |
| Ratings now seem to depend on being "cutting edge" and doing | |
| more and more outrageous things. | |
| [quote]Can clergy really be expected to participate?[/quote]Some | |
| of them appear to be gay and getting married themselves. | |
| [quote]Is it truly now seen as 'hate' if you disagree with gay | |
| marriage? [/quote]I have seen some things said by religious | |
| people I would characterize as hateful. I think it is hateful | |
| for one person to try to impose his religion on others. I | |
| wouldn't want other religions dictating to me what I can or | |
| can't do -- so the Golden Rule tells me I shouldn't try to tell | |
| others what my religion tells me. | |
| Mike Huckabee, a minister himself, has suggested people defy the | |
| Supreme Court -- he says it violates the First Amendment. In | |
| other words, his religious freedom is somehow being suppressed | |
| if gays can marry. I think that's nutty. He also must not | |
| too devoted to the rule of law and order. If he likes | |
| something, fine. If he doesn't, he thinks it's fine to defy the | |
| Supreme Court. | |
| Ted Cruz wants a new amendment that puts the Supreme Court | |
| Justices up for election so voters can get rid of them if they | |
| don't like them. I felt like writing him a letter telling him | |
| it was Congress' job to get rid of Justices if they perform | |
| poorly by impeaching them. Of course, an amendment doesn't | |
| stand a ghost of a chance of passing. Cruz is trying to drum up | |
| votes since he's running for President. | |
| These people and others are stirring the pot, hoping to profit | |
| by spreading fear. Glenn Beck does it too, saying his radio | |
| program was in danger over gay marriage. | |
| #Post#: 2432-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Kerry Date: July 1, 2015, 5:57 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| A minister in Portland, Oregon had some interesting comments | |
| about "marriage" in the Bible. From Raw Story | |
| http://www.rawstory.com/2015/06/dead-wrong-about-the-bible-portland-pastor-anni… | |
| �I am an evangelical Christian pastor (and proud of it),� | |
| Phillips continues, �and I believe that the freedom bell of love | |
| and justice just pealed a little louder and the arc of history | |
| is bent a little closer to justice.� | |
| Phillips specifically calls out Rick Santorum and Mike Huckabee, | |
| Christian presidential candidates who vocally oppose marriage | |
| rights for couples of the same gender. | |
| �They�re dead wrong about the Bible and about their commitment | |
| to Marriage Exclusion,� Phillips argues. �Too often, religious | |
| conservatives will claim that marriage equality not only | |
| redefines holy matrimony, but is against biblical marriage. But | |
| the Bible has curiously malleable, sometimes contradictory, | |
| dramatically heterodox definitions of marriage.� | |
| The pastor goes on to cite numerous examples of | |
| biblically-endorsed marriage arrangements that do not consist of | |
| a monogamous, heterosexual couple committed in a union | |
| recognized by God. | |
| �There�s the definition of Biblical marriage in which a man must | |
| marry his deceased brother�s wife,� Phillips begins, �Then | |
| there�s the Biblical marriage definition that mandates a raped | |
| woman to be wed to her rapist, but only after the rapist pays | |
| the raped woman�s father 50 coins� Then there�s the complicated | |
| story where Moses and the Israelites conquer the Midianites and | |
| divide the spoils, including property, livestock and women, | |
| marrying conquered Midianite women off to the victorious | |
| soldiers. Sound like Game of Thrones? It�s in the Bible (see | |
| Numbers 31)� The Bible also defines marriage and family rules | |
| when it comes to slave ownership: the married slaves may | |
| eventually go free, but the children of that union must stay | |
| enslaved� The Bible allows for polygamy, too.� | |
| �Redefine marriage?� Phillips asks facetiously. �People of faith | |
| have been wrestling with this for years in our holy books and in | |
| our Spirit-led convictions.� | |
| Quite. Studying the history of marriage in Christianity is | |
| fascinating business too. Early Christians didn't get married | |
| inside churches. In fact, if anyone can document for me the | |
| first historical case of people being married inside a church, | |
| I'd consider it a favor since I've researched it and never could | |
| find out when and where. | |
| I do know that that in some towns when Christianity was | |
| replacing paganism, the new converts wanted their unions | |
| blessed by the clergy. They were used to visiting the temple | |
| of a fertility goddess. Priests refused. So the newly | |
| converted would sometimes stand on the steps of the church for | |
| their ceremonies -- without a priest being involved. | |
| Of course, today the Catholic Church says matrimony is one of | |
| the sacraments instituted by Jesus. Can that be right? I mean | |
| really now. Can that possibly be right? No one was properly | |
| married before Jesus invented the sacrament of matrimony? | |
| And just recently, Catholic teaching has evolved again. Now | |
| they call matrimony a "covenant." I said, "Huh?" when I read | |
| that. The idea of marriage being a covenant is a recent | |
| invention; but many Protestants now way that and so do many | |
| Catholics. It's certainly not Biblical, and it's not found in | |
| church history either. The first known reference to marriage | |
| as a covenant was in 1945 when Henri Mazeaud coined it. (See | |
| Google books | |
| https://books.google.com/books?id=KYpv4QRR_xIC&pg=PA21&lpg=PA21&dq=marriage+cov… | |
| The concept got resurrected by someone else later | |
| http://www.religioustolerance.org/mar_cove7.htm, | |
| and Louisiana | |
| passed a law about it. | |
| In 1995, Christopher Wolfe was a professor of political science | |
| at Marquette University and president of the American Public | |
| Philosophy Institute. He resurrected Mazeaud's concept in an | |
| article published in First Things during 1995 -- a conservative | |
| Catholic publication. He noted that the current law, which | |
| permits divorce, "...does not permit people to really bind | |
| themselves to a permanent and exclusive marriage, by reinforcing | |
| the personal commitment with the force of the law." Given the | |
| option, "...they might choose not just to "commit" themselves to | |
| their spouses, but to "bind" themselves to their spouses. Why | |
| should they be precluded from adopting such a strategy?" His | |
| proposal, which he was uncertain should be implemented, would | |
| still allow for marital separation. However, it would not allow | |
| remarriage for either party. 2 | |
| The first CM law became effective on 1997-AUG-15 in Louisiana. | |
| It was far less stringent than either of the proposals by | |
| Mazeaud or Wolfe. It required the couple to sign a statement of | |
| intent, recite a declaration and show that they had completed a | |
| course in premarital counseling. A divorce would be granted if | |
| fault could be proven on the part of one spouse: having | |
| committed adultery, being imprisoned for a felony, abandoned the | |
| matrimonial home for at least a year, or committed sexual or | |
| physical abuse on a family member. Alternatively, the couple can | |
| obtain a divorce if they had lived apart for a long interval. | |
| Now this idea can be found in the latest version of the | |
| Catechism | |
| http://www.vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/p2s2c3a7.htm. | |
| 1601 "The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman | |
| establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, | |
| is by its nature ordered toward the good of the spouses and the | |
| procreation and education of offspring; this covenant between | |
| baptized persons has been raised by Christ the Lord to the | |
| dignity of a sacrament." | |
| Compare that to the older version found in the Baltimore | |
| Catechism | |
| http://www.catholicity.com/baltimore-catechism/lesson35.html. | |
| 457. What is the sacrament of Matrimony? | |
| Matrimony is the sacrament by which a baptized man and a | |
| baptized woman bind themselves for life in a lawful marriage and | |
| receive the grace to discharge their duties. | |
| And God created man to his own image; to the image of God he | |
| created him. Male and female he created them. And God blessed | |
| them, saying "Increase and multiply, and fill the earth." | |
| (Genesis 1:27-28) | |
| #Post#: 2433-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Kerry Date: July 1, 2015, 7:53 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| We hear a lot of talk about marriage being one man and one woman | |
| too; but did you know Martin Luther thought it might be one man | |
| and two women? | |
| From Wikipedia | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_I,_Landgrave_of_Hesse: | |
| Philip I of Hesse, (13 November 1504 � 31 March 1567), nicknamed | |
| der Gro�m�tige (the "magnanimous") was a leading champion of the | |
| Protestant Reformation and one of the most important of the | |
| early Protestant rulers in Germany. | |
| Isn't that interesting? Now for the details about his two | |
| wives. | |
| Within a few weeks of his 1523 marriage to the unattractive and | |
| sickly Christine of Saxony, who was also alleged to be an | |
| immoderate drinker, Philip committed adultery; and as early as | |
| 1526 he began to consider the permissibility of bigamy. | |
| According to Martin Luther, he lived "constantly in a state of | |
| adultery and fornication." | |
| Philip accordingly wrote Luther for his opinion about the | |
| matter, alleging as a precedent the polygamy of the patriarchs, | |
| but Luther replied that it was not enough for a Christian to | |
| consider the acts of the patriarchs, rather that he, like the | |
| patriarchs, must have special divine sanction. Since such | |
| sanction was clearly lacking in this case, Luther advised | |
| against bigamous marriage, especially for Christians, unless | |
| there was extreme necessity, as, for example, if the wife was | |
| leprous, or abnormal in other respects. Despite this | |
| discouragement, Philip gave up neither his project to secure a | |
| bigamous marriage nor his life of sensuality, which kept him for | |
| years from receiving communion. | |
| Philip was affected by Melanchthon's opinion concerning the case | |
| of Henry VIII, where the Reformer had proposed that the king's | |
| difficulty could be solved by his taking a second wife better | |
| than by his divorcing the first one. To strengthen his position, | |
| there were Luther's own statements in his sermons on the Book of | |
| Genesis, as well as historical precedents which proved to his | |
| satisfaction that it was impossible for anything to be | |
| un-Christian that God had not punished in the case of the | |
| patriarchs, who in the New Testament were held up as models of | |
| faith. It was during an illness due to his excesses that the | |
| thought of taking a second wife became a fixed purpose. | |
| It seemed to him to be the only salve for his troubled | |
| conscience and the only hope of moral improvement open to him. | |
| He accordingly proposed to marry the daughter of one of his | |
| sister's ladies-in-waiting, Margarethe von der Saale. While the | |
| landgrave had no scruples in this matter whatsoever, Margarethe | |
| was unwilling to take the step unless they had the approval of | |
| the theologians and the consent of the elector of Saxony, John | |
| Frederick I, and of Duke Maurice of Saxony. Philip easily gained | |
| his first wife's consent to the marriage. Bucer, who was | |
| strongly influenced by political arguments, was won over by the | |
| landgrave's threat to ally himself with the Emperor if he did | |
| not secure the consent of the theologians to the marriage, and | |
| the Wittenberg divines were worked upon by the plea of the | |
| prince's ethical necessity. | |
| Thus the "secret advice of a confessor" was won from Luther and | |
| Melanchthon (on 10 December 1539), neither of them knowing that | |
| the bigamous wife had already been chosen. Bucer and Melanchthon | |
| were now summoned, without any reason given, to appear in | |
| Rotenburg an der Fulda, where, on 4 March 1540, Philip and | |
| Margarethe were united. The time was particularly inauspicious | |
| for any scandal affecting the Protestants, for the Emperor, who | |
| had rejected the Frankfort Respite, was about to invade Germany. | |
| A few weeks later, however, the whole matter was revealed by | |
| Philip's sister Elisabeth, and the scandal caused a painful | |
| reaction throughout Germany. Some of Philip's allies refused to | |
| serve under him, and Luther, under the plea that it was a matter | |
| of advice given in the confessional, refused to acknowledge his | |
| part in the marriage. | |
| So who was Melanchthon who also thought bigamy was fine? He | |
| was another founder of Protestantism. From Wikipedia | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philipp_Melanchthon: | |
| Philipp Melanchthon (/məˈl�ŋkθən/; 16 | |
| February 1497 � 19 April 1560), born Philipp Schwartzerdt | |
| (German: [ˈʃvaɐ̯ts.eːɐt]), was a | |
| German reformer, collaborator with Martin Luther, the first | |
| systematic theologian of the Protestant Reformation, | |
| intellectual leader of the Lutheran Reformation, and an | |
| influential designer of educational systems. He stands next to | |
| Luther and Calvin as a reformer, theologian, and molder of | |
| Protestantism. Along with Luther, he is the primary founder of | |
| Lutheranism. They both denounced what they believed was the | |
| exaggerated cult of the saints, asserted justification by faith, | |
| and denounced the coercion of the conscience in the sacrament of | |
| penance by the Catholic Church, that they believed could not | |
| offer certainty of salvation. In unison they rejected | |
| transubstantiation, the belief that the bread from the Lord's | |
| Supper becomes Christ's body when consumed. Melanchthon made the | |
| distinction between law and gospel the central formula for | |
| Lutheran evangelical insight. By the "law", he meant God's | |
| requirements both in Old and New Testament; the "gospel" meant | |
| the free gift of grace through faith in Jesus Christ. | |
| #Post#: 2437-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Kerry Date: July 1, 2015, 3:57 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Let me drone on about things almost nobody cares about. | |
| What about churches that say having women as clergy is okay? | |
| They cite this verse. | |
| Galatians 3:28 There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither | |
| bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all | |
| one in Christ Jesus. | |
| Can that be right? If that verse means being male or female | |
| doesn't matter when it comes to who should be a minister, then | |
| why it should matter what the sex is of people who want to | |
| marry? Can you have it both ways? I don't think so. If you | |
| can justify women preachers with that verse, why can't you | |
| justify gay marriage the same way? | |
| #Post#: 2438-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: bradley Date: July 1, 2015, 10:33 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Although I believe some women are truly called by God to preach, | |
| I believe He does it to shame men, who should be doing it more. | |
| Just like Jesus wanted to give the bread to the jews first. | |
| God prefers men to accept the calling, but you work with the | |
| workers who show up to work. | |
| #Post#: 2439-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Kerry Date: July 2, 2015, 5:14 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=bradley link=topic=285.msg2438#msg2438 | |
| date=1435808005] | |
| Although I believe some women are truly called by God to preach, | |
| I believe He does it to shame men, who should be doing it more. | |
| Just like Jesus wanted to give the bread to the jews first. | |
| God prefers men to accept the calling, but you work with the | |
| workers who show up to work.[/quote] | |
| We could also say that gay marriages are permissible to shame | |
| heterosexuals. | |
| About the bread and the woman Jesus called a dog -- it does not | |
| say specifically Jews are the children and Gentiles are the | |
| dogs. We would have to read between the lines to get that; and | |
| I don't read it that way. No, I read it with Jesus being right | |
| in calling her a dog. He never called any other Gentiles dogs | |
| when they came to him. Indeed he commended the faith of the | |
| centurion, saying he had not seen faith like that in Israel. | |
| I think the woman was of the spiritual heritage of Jezebel who | |
| was from that area. Jezebel who was eaten by dogs! When | |
| Jesus called the woman that, I think she accepted the truth | |
| about herself and repented on the spot. Thus she was no longer | |
| a dog. | |
| There is another similarity between that woman and Jezebel. | |
| Their daughters are important. The woman asks for help, not | |
| for herself, but for her daughter who she says has a devil. | |
| Now consider that all of Ahab's sons were killed, but one his | |
| daughters married into the Messianic line. I read between the | |
| lines myself now to assume the daughter was Jezebel's. This | |
| would make Jesus himself a descendant of Jezebel -- and we learn | |
| something about impurities in blood lines as it applies to male | |
| and female. We see the same thing with cursed tribes that were | |
| the result of the incest between Lot and his daughters. The men | |
| in those tribes were cursed spiritually and could never become | |
| full members of Israel; but women could convert and did -- and | |
| both tribes also married into the Messianic line. First Ruth | |
| did, restoring Moab, and then we see a daughter of Ammon | |
| marrying into it. | |
| Men's spiritual nature is not quite the same as women's. Women | |
| can change their spiritual nature completely in a way most men | |
| cannot. Now this ability to change has disadvantages too. If | |
| you take a truly righteous man and make him a minister, he may | |
| fall into sin -- but there will still be something righteous | |
| about him pressuring him to repent. If you take a righteous | |
| woman, she can be seduced into falling away from her | |
| righteousness much more easily by appeals to her emotions. | |
| Women often can do wrong things while having very good reasons. | |
| Some men do that too, but I'd say it a more common failing among | |
| women. | |
| #Post#: 2441-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Gay Marriage | |
| By: Amadeus Date: July 2, 2015, 11:11 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [font=courier]Forgetting all of man's arguments for and against | |
| same sex marriage, consider God. [First of all, of course, does | |
| He exist?] Assuming we believe He exists and is described in | |
| scripture what does God want of man? | |
| Why did God create men and women? Does He want people to marry | |
| with one only of each gender or does He want something else? | |
| "And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and | |
| multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have | |
| dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, | |
| and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth." Gen | |
| 1:28 | |
| "And God blessed Noah and his sons, and said unto them, Be | |
| fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth." Gen 9:1 | |
| "And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he | |
| which made them at the beginning made them male and female, | |
| And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, | |
| and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh? | |
| Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore | |
| God hath joined together, let not man put asunder." Matt 19:4-6 | |
| Man began doing his own thing rather than God's thing according | |
| to scripture from the very first. We (men) can rewrite the rules | |
| and have certainly done so many times over. Jesus clearly | |
| pointed this out, I believe, in the above verses and others. | |
| Jesus also made it clear that it was God's will that was to be | |
| preeminent in order to please God. | |
| Some people are not to marry as the context of Matthew 19 | |
| indicates, but among those who do marry are they not supposed to | |
| please both God and man? Man, I believe, has failed generally in | |
| this as in so many other things he has put his hands on... | |
| We can bring in a lot of arguments, but what really matters for | |
| the God I know is what matters to Him. | |
| If we stand in the place Paul seems to recommend without a | |
| spouse doesn't he mean we are to find comfort and love in the | |
| arms of God alone? Without regard to gender, have most of us | |
| have done such a good job of pleasing both our partners and our | |
| God? | |
| "For I would that all men were even as I myself. But every man | |
| hath his proper gift of God, one after this manner, and another | |
| after that. | |
| I say therefore to the unmarried and widows, It is good for them | |
| if they abide even as I. | |
| But if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to | |
| marry than to burn." I Cor 7:7-9 | |
| So is marriage about pleasing the man (and/or the woman) or is | |
| it about something else? What does God really want of us? | |
| Can anyone please God in a marriage to a person of the opposite | |
| gender? Can anyone please God in a connection with a same gender | |
| person? The answer in both cases, for man alone, is no. We must | |
| go to God for help. We must please God. First things first. | |
| "But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; | |
| and all these things shall be added unto you." Matt 6:33 | |
| He might add a spouse of the opposite gender to someone, but if | |
| a same sex relationship would not please God, why would He | |
| bless such a relationship? People may get what they want in the | |
| flesh by making their choices, but in the end of the matter | |
| without God what do they have? | |
| [/font] | |
| ***************************************************** | |
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