So we are talking about the banning of Holy matrimony here by legislation.
Sometimes I would love to try to work out the process that gets you from what people write to what you read into it - no, no-one is talking about banning anything. What we're talking about is removing the civil, legal element from the Church's marriage ceremony so that you can holy it up the wazoo as much as you'd like, but it's nothing to do with the state, and therefore the state is not engaged in discriminating against certain classes of people.
I can't see how that can be policed. I think you would have to sell that to people. What do you mean, all of their ceremonies are just blessings are you suggesting secular authorities have the capacity to determine the nature of church ceremonies and which can or cannot go ahead?
No, I'm suggesting that the secular authorities don't give the Church the power to conduct civil procedures tied in with their religious ceremonies - if you want to get married in a church you get a registrar to attend the church to do the civil bit, or you do the legal bit somewhere else and have your fancy shindig in the church, or you have a big ceremony in the park with your friends, and get your church to bless your union quietly on Friday before you leave on your honeymoon.
I can see Humanists calling for jailtime for priests on this one.
But, then, you can see antitheists everywhere, so....
So pubs, hotels(Not established) etc can be venues for weddings and churches no longer?
No. Just like having your wedding in a pub doesn't meant that the landlord gets to authorise your ceremony, so getting married in a church wouldn't mean the vicar gets to do it either. You have a civil registrar and registration process that is functionally independent of your religious ceremony, and then if you want to arrange for those to be conducted at the same time you do so in exactly the same way as civil ceremonies in private establishments have been doing for years now.
I can see the law of unintended consequences coming back on this assault on what is a staple of British culture, Outrider,
There's always a possibility of unintended consequences; it's a possibility, though, pitched against the actual unequal treatment we currently have. This wouldn't in any way stop the internal wranglings of the church, where gay Christians and traditionalists (to be generous) are at odds about what path the church should take - given that I don't see that being resolved any time soon (and neither, it seems, does Archbishop Welby), I think the state needs to make this no longer the state's problem.
You obviously see prostration in gratitude before the chairman of HumanistUK for his benificence.
I'm still in the queue, it seems Archbishop Welby got there before me...
O.