rcrocket wrote:I try not to be stupid. Basically, your answer is "yes," the Church should refuse to admit practicing homosexuals because the Church is wrong in everything else, so why not just seal the deal and be wrong in that?
Sophistry is dishonesty at worst, disingenuousness at best. Either one is a rhetorical failure.
Let's see if Thama has the moral courage to answer my question.
Boy oh boy. I was under the impression that reading comprehension was a forté of attorneys. I do wonder how you managed to pass your state bar, or are the standards really that pathetic out West?
I did answer your question. Go back and read the damn thing, and try to spend more time on it than you do on your briefs.
However, I sense that you'd like a more detailed discussion than a simple "should/shouldn't". From a theological standpoint, this is clearly a difficult matter for the Church, as the statements on the 1950s-esque nature of the family have been broadly recorded as statements from the First Presidency and as doctrinal as anything in the Church. It's even more problematic than the matter of blacks in the priesthood, though the Church managed to deal with that piece of backwards bigotry pretty well.
It's a sad example of the dilemma that all dogmatic religions face, when over time what is good theologically comes to be at odds with what is good morally. That's when you shake out the good religions from the bad, and the good, decent believers from the spiteful, hidebound fundies. I was momentarily encouraged that Mormonism might manage to be one of the good ones, eventually. I'm not so hopeful anymore.