hrothgar, on 2011-July-01, 08:18, said:
I would very much prefer to see near complete separate between church and state, meaning that:
1. Marriage should be a strictly religious sacrament []
2. Marriage is defined by the relationship between a man, his wife, and their church. Or, alternatively, between a man, his wife, his wife, his wife, his concubine, his concubine, and their church. Or, even between a woman, her wife, their husband, a goat, and their ever evolving concept of the spiritual. I couldn't care less how the Catholic Church decides to define marriage. At the same time, the Catholics don't get any say in what labels some some other church - say a group of fundamentalist Mormans who believe in plural marriage - decide that they want to use the term "marriage". So what? Who cares?
I agree fully with this, if it weren't for one detail in vocabulary: Why should the religious/spiritual, etc. side get the use of the term "marriage"?
For me the term "marriage" has a very secular meaning and religion is not involved in the term at all. I am not a native English speaker, but I know that I got
married in front of a judge, who signed my
marriage license which contains the "Great Seal of the State of Michigan". No priest, minister, imam or rabbi was involved.
If the church wants to take a secular institution, like marriage, and add their own rites to it then that is fine with me. They can say: "This is how we celebrate a marriage."
But that doesn't grant the church, or any religion, the right to monopolize the term "marriage". If they want to monopolize a term, they can come up with their own word and register it as a trademark or brand name. Then they can do whatever they like with that word. If they decide that people with blue eyes are not allowed to
co-sacristate with people whose index finger is shorter than their ring finger, then that is up to them (as long as it is not forbidden by anti discrimination laws).
It is not as if the State of New York has told the catholic church how or who they should baptize or give the holy communion. That would be entirely different.
Note further that in many countries a church marriage is not recognized by the secular society (see e.g. the marriage of Prince Albert of Monaco). The US secular society is already quite friendly to the church by recognizing marriages that have been performed by the church. But if the church claims the monopoly on the term "marriage" then they are overplaying their hand.
Rik
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