Gabriella,
BHS, it's not important enough to me to pursue it as I do not plan on writing to Robertson and reporting back.
Nor do I. I merely suggest that the author’s polemical intention and tenuous grip on reason make me cautious.
Given, what I have seen of human nature in the Brexit debate, I'm going with taking his word for it.
If that’s where you set the evidence bar, so be it.
I'm not talking about orientation. I was talking about behaviours and lifestyle - which are choices. Moral choices are usually about addressing behaviours.
What behaviours? Is going to bed with someone of the same gender a behaviour for example?
Are you saying if people say, the Church teaches XYZ belief they are being abusive to others. Or is it only the "fiery end" that tips it over into abuse, in your opinion. Is using the word "sin" in a debate abusive in your opinion?
I’m saying that it’s an abuse of position when they claim divine authority for "sinfulness", especially when done to people without the critical faculties to see through it – children for example.
In #3 he used the words "secular humanist" - a description of a person, not an -ism. Are you agreeing that he made no claim about an -ism in #3? I haven't read the other posts between you and Vlad as not sure what their relevance was to the article in the OP. If they are relevant to the OP I will have a read now.
In Reply 13 he said perfectly plainly, “
......as opposed to a secularism which would have religion removed from the public forum."
If he didn’t mean what he said, he was quite at liberty to say so. What he actually did when challenged on this falsehood though was to attempt a diversion with, “
Are you saying nobody has desired that or worked for it and that it never has been policy anywhere? Do you not wish for the eventual extinction of religion?”(Reply 20).
QED
In other words, your'e flogging a dead horse here Gabriella. Really.