TracerBullet
New member
No one is being forced to participate in any ceremony and it's a blatant lie to say otherwise. Freedom of religion does not grant anyone the special right to discriminate.And the First Amendment protects the free exercise of religion even if you don't want it to and the freedom to abstain from ceremonies that offend one's faith are constitutionally protected whether you like it or not.
You are the one with the problem understanding the concept of fulfillment. Jesus fulfilled the law and established a new covenant. The law is fulfilled, all of it - not some of it, not this part and that part, all of it.I assume you think that Christians who don't sacrifice bulls on the day of atonement are "cherry picking" as well, right?
:doh:
If you don't understand the New Testament concept of fulfillment, then just admit it.
But don't erect straw men only to push them down and congratulate yourself on the hollow victory.
Doesn't' change the fact that your analogy is incredibly stupid.:chuckle:
I don't recall asking what you thought of it.
Repeating something stupid doesn't make it any less stupid.Right, and in the same way, a Christian baker should be able to say that same sex wedding cakes aren't on the menu.
See, what you don't want to admit is that the Jewish Deli doesn't serve bacon because doing so is religiously objectionable to the Jewish deli owner.
He or she has the right to prepare the menu in harmony with his or her religious convictions.
The Christian Baker should have the same right to take a same sex wedding cake off the menu as the Jewish deli owner has the right to take bacon off the menu.
Your deli owner doesn't sell bacon to anyone. He doesn't sell bacon to some people but not to others.
Your baker sells cakes. He doesn't get to say I'll sell anyone a cake...except black people. He doesn't get to discriminate against black people even if he claims it's against his religion to celebrate the black lifestyle.
You can believe what you want but your belief doesn't give you or anyone the right to discriminate against a minority. Wanting to legitimize such discrimination is an act of hate no matter what excuse you use to justify it.You must be new to the thread. Calling what Christians believe about same sex behavior "hatred" appears to be one of PureX's favorite arguments.
You can be as homophobic as you want but that doesn't give you or anyone the right to discriminateYou are similarly welcome to provide alternative interpretations to the texts that we conservative Christians stand on when we get accused of being "homophobic."
If someone directed the vile statement you posted at you and your family you wouldn't pretend for one second that it was anything but hateDoes being called a "bigot" for standing up for God's word qualify?