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billvon 3,085
Because discriminating against blacks, gays, women, short people etc is equally silly to me. It's somewhat hypocritical, in my view, to claim one is OK but the other is certainly evil and vile. But again, the church can do whatever it wants. (Note that I am not saying the church is currently discriminating against blacks, if that was your concern.)
QuoteI am not really sure how you got that the site is stating it was NOT considered an illness. Look at this sentence right here:
" Only in 1973 did the American medical, psychiatric and legal professions begin to recognize that homosexuality is an orientation and not a choice, illness or crime."
That last bit "and not a choice, illness, or crime" indicates that before 73, it WAS considered one (or all) of those three.
Me thinks thou doth read too fast. ***
?? confused... that is what I was saying... it WAS considered an illness up to 73... now it's just an "orientation." What I was saying was that statement on the website is misleading... it posits that after 1973, the scientific community realized it was no longer an illness... well, that's not true... it was strong armed into changing the diagnosis from homosexuality being an illness to it being a diagnosis ONLY if you were uncomfortable with being gay, to NOT being a problem at all.
I would like some sources please. And not from anti-gay websites. if you will. Unbiased, independent information that this was part of the "gay agenda"
sinker 0
Quote[reply
Second, Paul told masters to treat their slaves justly and kindly (Eph 6:9; Col 4:1), implying that slaves are not mere property for masters to do with as they please.
And yet, if this is the only DIRECT reference, it does not CONDEMN slavery, but tells the masters to treat the slaves well. A slave that is treated fairly and kindly is STILL A SLAVE.
The other rationales are all interpretations by apologists.
why didn't paul outrightly condemn slavery? i don't know... i didn't live in that culture then... perhaps there were circumstances in that milieux that would have been more detrimental -perhaps to the lives of the slaves- if someone of paul's stature came out so vehemently against slavery. also, for something so deeply ingrained in the culture as slavery, perhaps paul knew that abolishing slavery could only happen in a slow, methodical way... i don't know... that doesn't denegrate the fact that scripture supports masters treating their slaves as equal to them and not as less than them.
-the artist formerly known as sinker
billvon 3,085
> being an illness to it being a diagnosis ONLY if you were
> uncomfortable with being gay, to NOT being a problem at all.
As it needed to be. Sometimes it takes some strong-arming. It took a lot of strong-arming to get women the vote. Heck, it took a civil war to finally end slavery. We often pay heavily for our rights; let's hope it doesn't take the same amount of strife/bloodshed to get to equality this time.
" Only in 1973 did the American medical, psychiatric and legal professions begin to recognize that homosexuality is an orientation and not a choice, illness or crime."
That last bit "and not a choice, illness, or crime" indicates that before 73, it WAS considered one (or all) of those three.
Me thinks thou doth read too fast. ***
?? confused... that is what I was saying... it WAS considered an illness up to 73... now it's just an "orientation." What I was saying was that statement on the website is misleading... it posits that after 1973, the scientific community realized it was no longer an illness... well, that's not true... it was strong armed into changing the diagnosis from homosexuality being an illness to it being a diagnosis ONLY if you were uncomfortable with being gay, to NOT being a problem at all.
-the artist formerly known as sinker
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