No i'm not you made that up.
I've made what up, the institutional homophobia of the Christian church?
If God want's someone in he'll let them in.
Isn't Jesus' message supposed to be that he'll take all who come genuinely with love in their heart?
He is sovereign.
UK Law might not consider that to be the case.
Gay people have marriage and same sex marriages and even church weddings.
And yet churches can still discriminate (legally, currently) against them and choose to exercise the state's duty to officiate a marriage but not include those categories of people.
I suppose what I am saying is that the views of Christians who hold a different view of this issue are far, far, far more important than that of any shit stirring antitheism masquerading concern for anything or anyone other than there own agenda.
You're concerned about the theological integrity of believers and belief; I, and others like me, are concerned about the continued discrimination against segments of the populace because of intrinsic elements of their nature. You are asking people to put someone's choice about their special friend on the same level as access to public services for all. Your faith, at the end of any day, is a choice, and someone else's marriage has absolutely no effect on you or your beliefs whatsoever.
If the church wants to continue with the function of conducting state sanctioned marriages, I don't see that it should have the right to discriminate, regardless of how profoundly people believe; my belief in equality is equally as profound. Humanists, currently, have to have a registrar conduct the 'legal' parts of a wedding if they officiate, if the church wants to follow that system and the state no longer grants them the authority to act on their behalf, that would be an acceptable compromise, to me. Not ideal, but acceptable.
Indeed, I've spent far to long indulging your two weak points. Your desire to eliminate the term holy only to resurrect it if there's a possible 'nick' in it, and secondly you don't realise your extreme position.
My position isn't extreme, equality for homosexuality is pretty much the expected standard, it's embedded in the UN Charter on Human Rights, in the European Convention on Human Rights, in a multitude of legislative regimes around the world. As to whether 'holy' has any validity, of course it's nonsense, but that doesn't stop me picking up inconsistencies in arguments that are attempting to rely on it.
As to those being my 'weak' points - if they were that weak you'd have overcome them, but you haven't. I do like the attempt to channel 'The Art of War', though: where you are strong, appear weak, and where you are weak, appear strong.
O.