Yes, within the law but no, it still has no monopoly on it
But it's the only one that matters to everyone.
But not all about the legal status.
Pretty much it is, yeah. It's about the fact that the state says marriage is open to all sexualities, but the church operating on behalf of the state doesn't comply with that. It's about the state saying that all religions are equal, but then affording the Church of England the right to conduct legally binding weddings but not other religions.
There is a broader point about whether the Church of England should have a privileged position in the Lords, and whether religions should have exemptions from Equalities legislation that are linked but not directly a matter for this conversation, but again they are about the law.
Well I think there would be a whole tsunami of unintended consequences for everyone were anybody to try it , with the perpetrators wondering whether it was all worth it just for an afternoon at one's favourite church.
Ah, the slippery slope argument. There might well be unintended consequences, some of them might even be deleterious. They can be dealt with as and when they arise, that's why Parliament hasn't stopped already, the world moves on. That something might happen in the future is no reason to not do the right thing now.
Unfortunately antitheists are going to have their motives questioned on something like this, that goes with the territory i'm afraid.
Well, as soon as we find one we can ask them about their motivation.
And rather than getting the church off the states books from the Humanist point of view and disestablishing to avoid coercion.
Coercion? You mean people pointing out the inequalities and immoralities of state-sponsored discrimination? Can I just remind you that ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY JUSTIN WELBY has been raising this as a way out this particular aspect of the problem, and that the general synod that's happening right now is attempting to resolve the entirely internal CofE discussions about whether this discrimination is justified or justifiable, and whether it's worth fracturing Christianity into even more even smaller sects over it. This isn't coercion, this is the church attempting to catch up to the rest of the world.
The Humanist aim is to make the church change scripture and enforce clergy whatever happens regarding disestablishment.
Really? I looked on Humanist UK's website and I didn't see that listed in their goals... I don't doubt there are individual humanists who'd like to see the Church change it stance on any number of things; there are Christians - both inside and outside of the CofE - who'd like to see the church changes some of its stances. Indeed, I refer you again to the general synod which is happening right now where that's being considered.
I think you're perhaps misattributing the motivation here, though - they aren't ideologically opposed to the Church, or the idea of religions, but rather they are in favour of equality and don't necessarily see choices like religion (or, say, gender identity in some instances) as being on a par with traits which are not chosen like sexuality. They'd therefore like to see the exemptions afforded to reliigions downgraded - I can see their point, but rather think that where there is an opposition between religion and other protected characteristics the religions should be free to establish expectations for their own activities and those who volunteer to join them. It then becomes and internal issue for, for instance, the general synod.
You left a piece of dangling innuendo about christians having been played by the church. What do you mean, How have they been played?
I'm sure you've had the innumerable scientific, moral and practical internal discords of Christian belief expressed to you in the past, which are actively touted by the various churches in different combinations - it would be a massive derail of this thread to start listing them here.
O.