guido said:
Why do you ask questions that you know the answer to. How are these people "protecting marriage in America" when they've made a mockery of the institution. That is the point of listing their private lives. Jesus speaks out against divorce 6 times in the Bible, and against adultery 12 times, but not once was Jesus quoted speaking out against homosexuality. If these people truly wanted to defend the institution of marriage, they really should start in their home lives.
Interesting. Usually the
Christians at AD get slammed for "bringing the Bible into every topic."
I've debated that topic countless times in many other threads. You can look up my responses there.
It would only go to further prove that the institution of marriage amongst male/female couples has losts its meaning....
Lists of people and their marital status, does nothing to to prove or disprove the rightness or wrongness of an amendment. An amendment needs to stand or fall on its own merits.
Instead of allowing "marriage" for homosexual couples, the focus should be on strengthening marriages between heterosexual men and women. Allowing "gay marriage" won't help strengthen straight marriages.
Lest we forget that the average divorce rate amongst American couples is over 50%?
BTW:
Divorce Rate: It's Not as High as You Think
By DAN HURLEY
The New York Times
April 19, 2005
How many American marriages end in divorce? One in two, if you believe the
statistic endlessly repeated in news media reports, academic papers and
campaign speeches.
The figure is based on a simple - and flawed - calculation: the annual
marriage rate per 1,000 people compared with the annual divorce rate. In
2003, for example, the most recent year for which data is available, there
were 7.5 marriages per 1,000 people and 3.8 divorces, according to the
National Center for Health Statistics.
But researchers say that this is misleading because the people who are
divorcing in any given year are not the same as those who are marrying, and
that the statistic is virtually useless in understanding divorce rates. In
fact, they say, studies find that
the divorce rate in the United States has
never reached one in every two marriages, and new research suggests that,
with rates now declining, it probably never will.
(read the rest of the article at:
http://www.divorcereform.org/nyt05.html )